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April 23, 2012
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Date:06MondayMay 2013Lecture
A mini symposium - Plant development and evolution
More information Time 14:30 - 14:30Title "Small RNA and Lipid Signals that Flatten the Leaf"Location Ullmann Building of Life SciencesLecturer Professor Marja Timmermans
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, NY, USAOrganizer Department of Plant and Environmental SciencesContact -
Date:06MondayMay 2013Lecture
Movement vigor, impulsivity, and the cost of waiting in the human brain
More information Time 14:30 - 14:30Location Nella and Leon Benoziyo Building for Brain ResearchLecturer Prof. Reza Shadmehr
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.Organizer Department of Brain SciencesContact Abstract Show full text abstract about There is consistency in how health people move their eyes, a...» There is consistency in how health people move their eyes, arms, and legs. What is good about this way of moving, and why has our brain settled on this pattern? Here, I focus on the control of eye movements and suggest that the purpose of any movement is to acquire a more rewarding state. I suggest that the way the brain discounts reward in time strongly affects why we move the way that we do. This framework has the potential to explain why disorders that affect processing of reward in the brain, like Parkinson's disease, depression, and Schizophrenia, result in changes in control of movements. -
Date:06MondayMay 2013Lecture
A mini symposium - Plant development and evolution
More information Time 15:30 - 15:30Title "Petunia pollination syndromes"Location Ullmann Building of Life SciencesLecturer Professor Cris Kuhlemeier
Institute of Plant Sciences, University of Bern, SwitzerlandOrganizer Department of Plant and Environmental SciencesContact -
Date:06MondayMay 2013Lecture
מפגשים בחזית המדע
More information Time 19:15 - 21:00Location Davidson Institute of Science EducationOrganizer Science for All UnitHomepage Contact -
Date:07TuesdayMay 2013Lecture
Environmental stress response and epigenetic regulation in the unicellular parasite Entamoeba histolytica
More information Time 10:00 - 10:00Location Wolfson Building for Biological ResearchLecturer Prof. Serge Ankri
The Ruth and Bruce Rappaport Faculty of Medicine Technion, HaifaOrganizer Department of Biomolecular SciencesContact -
Date:07TuesdayMay 2013Lecture
Are you conducting human genetic research or clinical diagnostic work? DNA & RNA from saliva
More information Time 10:00 - 11:30Title Learn how you can enable discovery with DNA from saliva using Oragene DNALocation Herman Mayer Campus Guesthouse. Maison de FranceOrganizer Department of Biomolecular SciencesHomepage Contact -
Date:07TuesdayMay 2013Lecture
Analysis of the Ribosome Flow Model
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Location Jacob Ziskind BuildingLecturer Michael Margaliot
Tel Aviv UniversityOrganizer Faculty of Mathematics and Computer ScienceContact -
Date:07TuesdayMay 2013Lecture
"Chemical Love at Surfaces: Optimization towards the one and only!"
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Title Organic Chemistry departmental seminarLocation Helen and Milton A. Kimmelman BuildingLecturer Prof. Han Zuilhof
from the Lab. of Organic Chemistry at Wageningen University, Wageningen, The NetherlandsOrganizer Department of Molecular Chemistry and Materials ScienceContact -
Date:07TuesdayMay 2013Lecture
Adhesion molecules maintain the molecular organization of the axonal membrane
More information Time 12:00 - 12:00Location Wolfson Building for Biological ResearchLecturer Veronique Amor Organizer Department of Molecular Cell BiologyContact -
Date:07TuesdayMay 2013Lecture
TBD
More information Time 13:30 - 13:30Location Wolfson Building for Biological ResearchLecturer Dr. Yael Klionsky
Yair Reisner's labOrganizer Department of Systems ImmunologyContact -
Date:08WednesdayMay 2013Lecture
“London's Leonardo or Robert Hooke has been incredibly unlucky, but don't bet against him”
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Location Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture HallLecturer Prof. J.M. McBride
Yale UniversityOrganizer Department of Molecular Chemistry and Materials ScienceContact -
Date:08WednesdayMay 2013Lecture
Nanopore tools for single molecule genomics
More information Time 12:00 - 12:00Location Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical ResearchLecturer Prof. Amit Meller
Faculty of Biomedical Engineering The Russell Berrie Nanotechnology Institute Technion, Israel Institute of TechnologyOrganizer Department of Systems ImmunologyHomepage Contact -
Date:09ThursdayMay 2013Colloquia
Engineering exotica: Majorana fermions and beyond from ordinary materials
More information Time 11:15 - 12:30Location Edna and K.B. Weissman Building of Physical SciencesLecturer JASON ALICEA
CaltechOrganizer Faculty of PhysicsContact Abstract Show full text abstract about When many interacting degrees of freedom come together, qual...» When many interacting degrees of freedom come together, qualitatively new phenomena and organizing principles emerge that have no analogue in few-particle systems. In this talk I will describe how this "more is different" paradigm in a sense applies also at the macroscale. Indeed, in recent years condensed matter physicists have developed methods of combining ordinary, large-scale materials to design exotic states of matter that are either difficult or impossible to realize by relying solely on a system's intrinsic dynamics. As a particularly exciting illustration, I will focus on means of engineering phases that support "non-Abelian anyons": emergent particles that carry the most exotic form of exchange statistics that nature in principle permits. Such particles are interesting in their own right, and may also prove key to overcoming one of the grand challenges in the field—the synthesis of a scalable quantum computer. -
Date:09ThursdayMay 2013Lecture
Feature Matching with Bounded Distortion
More information Time 12:00 - 12:00Location Jacob Ziskind BuildingOrganizer Faculty of Mathematics and Computer ScienceContact -
Date:09ThursdayMay 2013Cultural Events
A WALL OF GLASS
More information Time 20:30 - 20:30Title Beit Lessin TheaterLocation Michael Sela AuditoriumContact -
Date:11SaturdayMay 2013Cultural Events
Ori Hezekiah
More information Time 21:00 - 21:00Title Stand-upLocation Michael Sela AuditoriumContact -
Date:12SundayMay 201313MondayMay 2013Conference
WIS-Australia Symposium on Metabolic Syndroms
More information Time 08:00 - 16:45Location The David Lopatie Conference CentreChairperson Alon ChenContact -
Date:12SundayMay 201313MondayMay 2013Conference
Weizmann-Australia Symposium on Obesity and Metabolic Disorders
More information Time 08:00 - 18:00Location The David Lopatie Conference CentreChairperson Alon ChenHomepage Contact -
Date:12SundayMay 2013Lecture
Our Eyes Beneath The Sea: Advanced Optical Methods For Marine Science
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Location Sussman Family Building for Environmental SciencesLecturer Tali Treibitz
Scripps Institute of OceanographyOrganizer Department of Earth and Planetary SciencesContact Abstract Show full text abstract about The ocean covers 70% of the earth surface, and influences al...» The ocean covers 70% of the earth surface, and influences almost every aspect in our life, such as climate, fuel, security, and food. All over the world, including Israel, depleting resources on land are encouraging increased human activity in the ocean, for example: gas drilling, desalination plants, port constructions, aquaculture, bio-fuel, and more. These expanded activities influence the delicate ecology that is already threatened by global warming and ocean acidification, and present a risk of over-exploitation. The ocean is a complex, vast, foreign environment that is hard to explore and therefore much about it is still unknown. Interestingly, only 5% of the ocean floor has been seen so far. As human access to most of the ocean is very limited, optical imaging systems can serve as our eyes in those remote areas. However, optical imaging underwater is challenging due to intense pressures at depth, strong color and distance dependent attenuation, refraction at the interface air/water, and the ever-changing and rugged conditions of the natural ocean. In this talk I describe several imaging systems I developed and show how they can be used to solve acute scientific problems. These include an underwater in-situ high-resolution benthic microscope and systems for in-situ wide-scale multispectral and fluorescence imaging. -
Date:12SundayMay 2013Lecture
An Optimal Randomized Online Algorithm for Reordering Buffer Management
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Location Jacob Ziskind BuildingLecturer Noa Avigdor-Elgrabli
TechnionOrganizer Faculty of Mathematics and Computer ScienceContact
