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December 01, 2014

  • Date:31WednesdayDecember 2014

    Efficient Training of Structured SVMs via Soft Constraints

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    Time
    11:15 - 11:15
    Location
    Jacob Ziskind Building
    LecturerOfer Meshi
    Toyota Technological Institute at Chicago
    Organizer
    Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:31WednesdayDecember 2014

    Efficient Training of Structured SVMs via Soft Constraints

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    Time
    11:30 - 11:30
    Location
    Jacob Ziskind Building
    LecturerOfer Meshi
    Toyota Technological Institute at Chicago
    Organizer
    Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:31WednesdayDecember 2014

    POPULAR LECTURES - IN HEBREW

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    Time
    12:00 - 12:00
    Title
    TBD
    Location
    Dolfi and Lola Ebner Auditorium
    LecturerDr. Michal Schwartz
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:31WednesdayDecember 2014

    Experience-dependent plasticity in amputees

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    Time
    12:30 - 12:30
    LecturerDr.Tamar Makin
    FMRIB Centre, Nuffield Dept of Clinical Neuroscience University of Oxford
    Organizer
    Department of Brain Sciences
    Contact
    AbstractShow full text abstract about Abstract: Arm amputation provides a powerful model for study...»
    Abstract: Arm amputation provides a powerful model for studying plasticity, as it results in massive input and output loss consequential to losing a hand. Amputation also leads to profound changes in behaviour, driven by individuals’ need to compensate for severe disability (adaptive behaviour). Despite this strong behavioural pressure, research on amputation has been largely restricted to deprivation-driven (and supposedly passive) brain reorganisation, with little regard for the potential interaction between deprivation and behavioural related plasticity. As a consequence, sensory deprivation is widely held to cause maladaptive plasticity, resulting in phantom pain. Using a range of neuroimaging approaches I examine the extent to which experience modulates brain structure and function in amputees and individuals with congenital hand absence. I present evidence to challenge the proposed link between cortical reorganisation and phantom pain, and instead demonstrate preservation of topographic representations of the missing (‘phantom’) hand. I will show that phantom pain is associated with maintained representation of the phantom hand as opposed to brain plasticity, with potential implications on future treatment. Instead I provide new evidence that adaptive behaviour leads to extensive reorganisation, such that the limb engaging in compensation for disability takes over the cortical territory of the missing hand. In amputees, this process of adaptive plasticity occurs well beyond the traditionally conceptualised “critical period”. Finally, I provide new evidence for the relationship between lateralised limb-use patterns and lateralised structural and functional organisation in the resting brain. Based on this evidence, I suggest that plasticity in amputees is experience-dependant, and is not inherently maladaptive.
    Lecture
  • Date:31WednesdayDecember 2014

    Developing Enzyme Drugs to Prevent and Treat Nerve-Gas Intoxications

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    Time
    14:00 - 14:00
    Location
    Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture Hall
    LecturerDr. Moshe Goldsmith
    Department of Biological Chemistry, WIS
    Organizer
    Department of Molecular Chemistry and Materials Science
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    Lecture
  • Date:01ThursdayJanuary 2015

    Faculty Day - Chemistry

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    Time
    All day
    Location
    Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture Hall
    LecturerPlease see program link
    Organizer
    Faculty of Chemistry
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    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:01ThursdayJanuary 2015

    Avoidance Coupling

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    Time
    11:05 - 11:05
    Location
    Jacob Ziskind Building
    LecturerOhad Feldheim
    University of Minnesota
    Organizer
    Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science
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    Lecture
  • Date:01ThursdayJanuary 2015

    Quantum Design in Carbon Nanotubes

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    Time
    11:15 - 12:30
    Location
    Edna and K.B. Weissman Building of Physical Sciences
    LecturerProf. Shahal Ilani
    WIS
    Organizer
    Faculty of Physics
    Contact
    AbstractShow full text abstract about Recent years have seen the development of several experiment...»
    Recent years have seen the development of several experimental systems capable of tuning local parameters of quantum Hamiltonians, including ultracold atoms, trapped ions, superconducting circuits and photonic crystals. These systems excel in studying the physics of bosons in disorder-free settings. A solid state analog, in which Hamiltonians of interacting electrons are designed and studied, remains a major open challenge, since in conventional solids electrons exist inside an imperfect host material that generates uncontrolled disorder. In this talk, I will describe our newly-developed platform for realizing in suspended carbon nanotubes such disorder-free, locally-tunable electronic systems. This platform bcomes possible due to a new technique for nano-assembly of carbon nanotubes on complex electrical circuits without damaging their pristine electronic behavior. I will demonstrate how these systems enable us to modify the fundamental interactions in the solid-state, using two specific examples: The engineering of an artificial, tailorable coupling between electrons and phonons, and the creation of attraction between electrons using only their repulsion – a problem that has been open for half a century. These new interactions pave the way for the formation, in engineered solids, artificial superconductivity that is very different from that found in nature.

    Lecture
  • Date:01ThursdayJanuary 2015

    Towards Dense Correspondences Between Any Two Images

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    Time
    12:15 - 12:15
    Location
    Jacob Ziskind Building
    LecturerTal Hassner
    Open University of Israel
    Organizer
    Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science
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    Lecture
  • Date:01ThursdayJanuary 2015

    New strategies for Improving Melanoma Immunotherapy

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    Time
    14:00 - 14:30
    Location
    Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
    LecturerAdi Sharbi-Yunger
    Lea Eisenbach lab
    Organizer
    Department of Systems Immunology
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:01ThursdayJanuary 2015

    Degrade or not Degrade... Influenza infection fate is governed by the balance of extra cellular matrix remodeling: Applications for therapy

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    Time
    14:30 - 15:00
    Location
    Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
    LecturerDalit Talmi-Frank
    Dr. Ido Amit & Prof. Irit Sagi
    Organizer
    Department of Systems Immunology
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    Lecture
  • Date:01ThursdayJanuary 2015

    Peletron meetings

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    Time
    16:00 - 18:00
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:04SundayJanuary 201508ThursdayJanuary 2015

    The 3rd Seminar on Integrative Perspectives on Musculoskeletal Development

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    Time
    All day
    Location
    Ein Gedi, Israel
    Chairperson
    Elazar Zelzer
    Homepage
    Contact
    Conference
  • Date:04SundayJanuary 2015

    Tropical Plumes over the Middle East: Climatology and synoptic conditions

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    Time
    11:00 - 11:00
    Location
    Sussman Family Building for Environmental Sciences
    LecturerUri Dayan
    Hebrew University of Jerusalem
    Organizer
    Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences
    Contact
    AbstractShow full text abstract about A 10-yr climatological study of Tropical Plumes (TPs) observ...»
    A 10-yr climatological study of Tropical Plumes (TPs) observed over the Middle East was undertaken. Several tools were used to identify and analyze these mid-tropospheric elongated cloudbands: satellite images, reanalysis and radiosonde data, backward trajectories, and cluster analysis. In order to conduct an in-depth examination of the synoptic conditions controlling this tropical–extratropical phenomenon, a dual methodology was adopted. In the first analysis, the identified 45 plumes were classified to precipitative and non-precipitative. In the second analysis, backward trajectories of the plumes were clustered in order to detect their moisture origins and pathways. In addition to the well documented south-western plumes originating in West Africa, a more southern pathway was identified, in which moisture was transported from Central to East African sources. The ‘south-western’ plumes are associated with a southwards penetration of mid-latitude troughs, associated with an intensified thermal wind and a longer jet streak, extending as far as Northwestern Africa. In the ‘southern’ category the Sub-Tropical Jet is associated with an anticyclonic flow over the south of the Arabian Peninsula, serving as an essential vehicle advecting moisture from tropical origins. This moisture pathway is considerably shorter than the south-western one. Several conditions favor precipitation induced by TPs over the domain: a northward migration of the jet streak resulting in a weakening of the wind speed over the target area, a deeper trough at the 500 hPa level and a shorter moisture corridor.
    Lecture
  • Date:04SundayJanuary 2015

    Emerging roles of astrocytes in driving chronic CNS inflammation

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    Time
    11:00 - 11:00
    Location
    Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
    LecturerDr. Lior Mayo
    Center for Neurologic Diseases, Brigham and Women's Hospital Harvard Medical School
    Organizer
    Department of Systems Immunology
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    Lecture
  • Date:04SundayJanuary 2015

    Polyamines and cellular differentiation

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    Time
    13:00 - 13:00
    Location
    Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
    LecturerShirly Brenner
    Chaim Kahana's group, Dept. of Molecular Genetics, WIS
    Organizer
    Department of Molecular Genetics
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:04SundayJanuary 2015

    Forrelation: A Problem that Optimally Separates Quantum from Classical Computing

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    Time
    13:00 - 13:00
    Location
    Jacob Ziskind Building
    LecturerScott Aaronson
    MIT
    Organizer
    Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:04SundayJanuary 2015

    How the Genome Folds:Now In the Loop

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    Time
    13:30 - 13:30
    Location
    Wolfson Building for Biological Research
    LecturerMiriam Huntley
    Harvard University
    Organizer
    Department of Systems Immunology
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:04SundayJanuary 2015

    Regulation of excitatory-inhibitory balance in cortical circuits by sensory-induced gene programs

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    Time
    14:30 - 14:30
    Location
    Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture Hall
    LecturerProf. Ivo Spiegel
    Dept of Neurobiology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA
    Organizer
    Department of Brain Sciences
    Contact
    AbstractShow full text abstract about Abstract: The ability to adapt to and learn from sensory exp...»
    Abstract: The ability to adapt to and learn from sensory experiences is crucial for an animal’s survival and underlies many of our cognitive capabilities, and a central question in neurobiology thus concerns the place within a neural circuit where these adaptions happen and the molecular mechanisms that mediate them. Neural circuits in the neocortex adapt to sensory experience by the induction of genes that function at synaptic sites to regulate circuit activity and to maintain the balance between excitation and inhibition (E/I balance). While the molecular mechanisms associated with the modulation of specific synapses has been studied extensively in excitatory neurons, far less is known about how sensory experience regulates synaptic inputs to inhibitory neurons and how these mechanisms might regulate E/I-balance in cortical circuits. In my talk, I will discuss our recent findings regarding the nature of the gene programs that are induced by sensory experience in cortical inhibitory neurons and the molecular mechanisms through which these gene programs modulate specific synaptic inputs to functionally distinct inhibitory neuron subtypes and thereby regulate E/I-balance within cortical circuits. Our experiments reveal that experience-induced gene programs in cortical neurons are far more subtype-specific than previously appreciated and that these gene programs are adapted to the function of each neuronal subtype within the circuit in a manner that mediates circuit homeostasis and plasticity in the neocortex.
    Lecture
  • Date:05MondayJanuary 2015

    From 1D to 3D and back: Explaining and exploiting genome structure

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    Time
    10:30 - 10:30
    Location
    Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
    LecturerDr. Noam Kaplan
    Program in Systems Biology, University of Massachusetts Medeical School, USA
    Contact
    Lecture

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