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פברואר 01, 2019
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Date:22ראשוןדצמבר 2019הרצאה
Study of S isotope values of specific organic and inorganic S compounds in immature organic rich sediments
More information שעה 11:00 - 11:00מיקום בניין משפחת זוסמןמרצה Lubna Shawar
The Hebrew University of Jerusalemמארגן המחלקה למדעי כדור הארץ וכוכבי הלכתצרו קשר תקציר Show full text abstract about The preservation of the organic matter (OM) occurs as a resu...» The preservation of the organic matter (OM) occurs as a result of post-depositional abiotic sulfurization, condensation and polymerization processes that convert the OM into stable macromolecular material termed kerogen. Different sulfurization processes, pathways and rates affect the 34S values of organic and inorganic S compounds. These sulfurization processes are affected by the redox conditions and paleo-environmental conditions (e.g. organic matter and Fe availability). Therefore, studying the organic and inorganic S distribution and their associated 34S values could be useful for understanding the paleo-environmental history associated with the deposition of ancient organic rich sediments. Until recently, only bulk phases of S could be measured for their 34S values, usually excluding organic S. A new method was developed that allows for S isotope analysis of specific organic S compounds (OSCs) at the sub- nanogram level. In my talk I will give an overview about the utility of compound specific S isotope analysis (CSSIA) for the study of different geochemical environments (e.g., immature organic rich sediments). Applying CSSIA to immature organic rich sediments from the Monterey and Ghareb formations I will show the combination of biomarkers and their S isotope composition in a single analysis. This provides a more detailed and in-depth understanding of the S and C cycles than bulk measurements of organic and inorganic S species alone. -
Date:22ראשוןדצמבר 2019הרצאה
Special guest seminar with Moran Dvela-Levitt
More information שעה 12:00 - 13:00כותרת “A novel mechanism and therapeutic strategy for protein-misfolding diseases”מיקום בניין ארתור ורושל בלפר למחקר ביורפואימרצה Moran Dvela-Levitt
Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School at Brigham and Women's Hospital and The Broad Institute of MIT and Harvardמארגן המחלקה לגנטיקה מולקולריתצרו קשר תקציר Show full text abstract about Protein homeostasis is critical for cellular function and su...» Protein homeostasis is critical for cellular function and survival. Dysregulation of the cellular protein homeostasis can lead to a build-up of misfolded proteins and facilitate the manifestation of a variety of pathological disorders including neurodegeneration, cancer and inflammation.
Where and how the misfolded proteins accumulate, however, has remained a mystery. In studying MUC1 kidney disease (a rare kidney disorder), we have found that some of these pathologies may share a single, previously unrecognized cellular mechanism: a jam at a specific step in the secretory pathway involving a cargo receptor called TMED9. A small molecule called BRD4780 can break the jam and restore cells to normal function, providing a promising potential for therapeutic developments.
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Date:22ראשוןדצמבר 2019הרצאה
New tools to quantify topological complexity by knot polynomials
More information שעה 13:15 - 13:15מיקום בניין הפיזיקה ע"ש עדנה וק.ב. וייסמןמרצה Renzo L. Ricca
U. Milano-Bicoccaמארגן מרכז לפיזיקה ביולוגית עש קלורצרו קשר -
Date:23שנידצמבר 2019הרצאה
A visual motion detector: From the connectome to a theory of transformation learning
More information שעה 12:45 - 12:45מיקום אולם הרצאות ע"ש גרהרד שמידטמרצה Dr. Dmitri "Mitya" Chklovskii
Simons Foundation's Flatiron Institute and NYU Medical Centerמארגן המחלקה למדעי המוחצרו קשר תקציר Show full text abstract about Learning to detect content-independent transformations from ...» Learning to detect content-independent transformations from data is one of the central problems in biological and artificial intelligence. An example of such problem is unsupervised learning of a visual motion detector from pairs of consecutive video frames. Here, by optimizing a principled objective funciton, we derive an unsupervised algorithm that maps onto a biological plausible neural network. When trained on video frames, the neural network recapitulates the reconstructed connectome of the fly motion detector. In particular, local motion detectors combine information from at least three adjacent pixels, something that contradicts the celebrated Hassenstein-Reichardt model. -
Date:23שנידצמבר 2019הרצאה
New directions for diffusive processes: defect formation through a nonequilibrium phase transition, open quantum systems and uncertainty relations in mesoscopic systems
More information שעה 14:15 - 14:15מיקום בניין הפיזיקה ע"ש עדנה וק.ב. וייסמןמרצה Ohad Shpielberg
College de Franceמארגן המחלקה לפיזיקה של מערכות מורכבותצרו קשר תקציר Show full text abstract about The macroscopic fluctuation theory gives an efficient hydrod...» The macroscopic fluctuation theory gives an efficient hydrodynamic description for classical nonequilibrium diffusive systems. In this talk, we would cover how it can be applied and generalised in three directions:
a. Towards a theory for open quantum diffusive systems, comparable to the macroscopic fluctuation theory.
b. Defect formation as a system is (slowly) driven in time through a continuous phase transition can be described by a scaling theory - the Kibble-Zurek Mechanism. The macroscopic fluctuation theory allows to explore the exact evolution of defects for a large set of cases. Thus, we are in a position to go beyond the scaling arguments of the Kibble-Zurek Mechanism.
c. The recently discovered thermodynamic uncertainty relations define a transport efficiency in thermal systems showing that the mean current, current fluctuations and dissipation are intimately linked. Here we will briefly show how this idea can be extended to (athermal) mesoscopic coherent processes.
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Date:24שלישידצמבר 2019הרצאה
mitoCPR– a stress response that maintains mitochondrial homeostasis
More information שעה 10:00 - 11:00מיקום בניין לביוכימיה על שם נלה וליאון בנוזיומרצה Dr. Hilla Weidberg
Dept.of Cellular & Physiological Sciences. The University of British Columbiaמארגן המחלקה למדעים ביומולקולרייםצרו קשר -
Date:24שלישידצמבר 2019הרצאה
Water-use strategies leading to resilience of pine trees to global climatic change
More information שעה 10:30 - 10:30מיקום בניין משפחת זוסמןמרצה Yakir Preisler
Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences Weizmann Institute of Science Department of Plant Sciences and Genetics in Agriclture The Hebrew University of Jerusalemמארגן המחלקה למדעי כדור הארץ וכוכבי הלכתצרו קשר -
Date:24שלישידצמבר 2019הרצאה
Balancing flexibility and stability in tomato leaf patterning
More information שעה 11:30 - 12:30מיקום בניין לביוכימיה על שם נלה וליאון בנוזיומרצה Prof. Naomi Ori
Plant Sciences and Genetics in Agriculture, The Robert H. Smith faculty of Agriculture, food and environment, The Hebrew University of Jerusalemמארגן המחלקה למדעי הצמח והסביבהצרו קשר -
Date:24שלישידצמבר 2019הרצאה
How do We Recognize Faces? Insights from biological and artificial face recognition systems
More information שעה 12:30 - 12:30מיקום אולם הרצאות ע"ש גרהרד שמידטמרצה Prof. Galit Yovel
School of Psychological Sciences Sagol School of Neuroscience Tel Aviv Universityמארגן המחלקה למדעי המוחצרו קשר תקציר Show full text abstract about Face recognition is a computationally challenging classifica...» Face recognition is a computationally challenging classification task that requires generalization across different views of the same identity as well as discrimination across different identities of a relatively homogenous set of visual stimuli. How does the brain resolve this taxing classification task? It is well-established that faces are processed by specialized neural mechanisms in high-level visual cortex. Nevertheless, it is not clear how this divergence to a face-specific and an object-general system contributes to face recognition. Recent advances in machine face recognition together with our understanding of how humans recognize faces enable us to address this question. In particular, I will show that a deep convolutional neural network (DCNN) that is trained on face recognition, but not a DCNN that is trained on object recognition, is sensitive to the same view-invariant facial features that humans use for face recognition. Similar to the hierarchical architecture of the visual system that diverges to a face and an object system at high-level visual cortex, a human-like, view-invariant face representation emerges only at higher layers of the face-trained but not the object-trained neural network. This view-invariant face representation is specific to the category of faces that the system was trained with both in humans and machines. I will therefore further emphasize the important role of experience and suggest that human face recognition depends on our social experience with familiar faces (“supervised learning”) rather than passive perceptual exposure to unfamiliar faces (“unsupervised learning”), highlighting the important role of social cognition in face recognition. -
Date:24שלישידצמבר 2019הרצאה
Depsipeptides and RNA: from molecules to early interactome
More information שעה 14:00 - 15:00מיקום בניין הלן ומילטון קימלמןמרצה Dr. Moran Frenkel-Pinter
NASA Postdoctoral Fellow | Hud, Grover and Williams Labs NSF/NASA Center for Chemical Evolution Georgia Institute of Technology | School of Chemistry and Biochemistry 901 Atlantic Drive | Atlanta, GA 30332מארגן המחלקה לביולוגיה מבנית וכימיתצרו קשר -
Date:25רביעידצמבר 2019הרצאה
“2D, 3D, 4D printing: The next industrial revolution”
More information שעה 11:00 - 12:00מיקום בניין פרלמן למדעי הכימיהמרצה Prof. Shlomo Magdassi
The Institute of Chemistry , The Hebrew University of Jerusalemמארגן המחלקה לכימיה מולקולרית ולמדע חומריםצרו קשר תקציר Show full text abstract about Additive manufacturing, which is fabrication through pri...»
Additive manufacturing, which is fabrication through printing processes, has gained a lot of interest in the academy and industry, and is considered as the next industrial revolution. The synthesis and formulations of new inks compositions will be presented, along with their applications in various fields. New materials and processes for 2, 3, and 4D printing will be introduced, for fabrication of objects composed of hybrid materials, ceramics, glass, shape memory polymers, elastomers and hydrogels. Examples of applications of these materials will be presented, such as in soft robotics, drug delivery systems, 3D electrical circuits, responsive connectors, and medical devices.
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Date:26חמישידצמבר 2019סימפוזיונים
The Large Synoptic Survey Telescope: Status Update and Prospects for Science
More information שעה 11:15 - 12:30מיקום בניין הפיזיקה ע"ש עדנה וק.ב. וייסמןמרצה Steven M. Kahn
Stanford University/SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory/LSST Project Officeמארגן הפקולטה לפיזיקהצרו קשר תקציר Show full text abstract about The Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) is a large-apertu...» The Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) is a large-aperture, wide-field ground-based telescope designed to provide a time-domain imaging survey of the entire southern hemisphere of sky in six optical colors (ugrizy). Over ten years, LSST will obtain ~ 1,000 exposures of every part of the southern sky, enabling a wide-variety of distinct scientific investigations, ranging from studies of small moving bodies in the solar system, to constraints on the structure and evolution of the Universe as a whole.
The development of LSST is a collaboration between the US National Science Foundation, which is supporting the development of the telescope and data system, and the US Department of Energy, which is supporting the development of the 3.2 gigapixel camera, the largest digital camera ever fabricated for astronomy. Approved in 2014, LSST is now well into construction, and is on track to beginning operations in 2022. I will review the design and technical status of the Project, and provide an overview of some of the exciting science highlights that we expect to come from this facility.
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Date:26חמישידצמבר 2019הרצאה
Hyperactive FOXA1 Signaling in Breast Cancer Endocrine Resistance and Metastasis - When Genomics Meet Epigenomics
More information שעה 14:00 - 15:00מיקום בניין ע"ש מקס ולילאן קנדיוטימרצה Dr. Rachel Schiff מארגן המחלקה לאימונולוגיה ורגנרציה ביולוגיתצרו קשר -
Date:29ראשוןדצמבר 201931שלישידצמבר 2019הרצאה
Hanukkah Workshop in Representation Theory
More information שעה כל היוםמיקום בניין יעקב זיסקינדמארגן המחלקה למתמטיקהדף בית צרו קשר -
Date:29ראשוןדצמבר 2019הרצאה
Bistable behavior of nonpsherical colloids near a charged surface
More information שעה 11:00 - 12:00מיקום בניין פרלמן למדעי הכימיהמרצה Prof. Yoav Tsori
Department of Chemical Engineering, Ben Gurion Universityמארגן המחלקה לכימיה מולקולרית ולמדע חומריםצרו קשר תקציר Show full text abstract about We investigate theoretically a model system of colloids in...»
We investigate theoretically a model system of colloids in water. The colloid size is neither very small compared to the Debye length, nor very large. We look at the orientation of the colloid near a surface, and find bistable behavior. This may have implications for flow in microfluidic channels, and for crystallization near surfaces.
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Date:29ראשוןדצמבר 2019הרצאה
Seminar for thesis defense, Nofar Mor
More information שעה 15:00 - 16:00כותרת “Deciphering Mbd3/NuRD function during early differentiation and Cell Reprogramming”מיקום בניין ארתור ורושל בלפר למחקר ביורפואימרצה Nofar Mor מארגן המחלקה לגנטיקה מולקולריתצרו קשר -
Date:30שנידצמבר 2019הרצאה
NMR structure and dynamics studies of oligo- and polysaccharides
More information שעה 09:00 - 10:00מיקום אולם הרצאות ע"ש גרהרד שמידטמרצה Dr. Daron Freedberg
Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, U.S. Food and Drug Administrationמארגן המחלקה לכימיה מולקולרית ולמדע חומריםצרו קשר תקציר Show full text abstract about Glycans are ubiquitous in nature and participate in a wide v...» Glycans are ubiquitous in nature and participate in a wide variety of biological processes, that span from mediating cell-cell interactions to modulating protein stability and folding. Glycan involvement in diverse biological functions can be rationalized by the equally extensive potential for structural diversity. They vary not only in monosaccharide composition and primary sequence, like proteins and nucleic acids, but also the monosaccharides can vary in ring sizes, linkage types, and functional group modifications. Therefore, their structural complexity has the potential for encoding a myriad of functions. However, it is this “structural richness” that hampers progress in stablishing structure-function relationships, simply because tools and strategies for structure determination are lacking.
We are delineating three-dimensional glycan solution structure to gain insight into how they function, which should facilitate development of glycan-based vaccines, drug delivery systems, and antibiotics of the future. To this end, we use heteronuclear multidimensional NMR to determine conformations and dynamics of 15N, 13C enriched oligo- and polysaccharides. We have detected interresidue hydrogen bonds and used RDCs to delineate the relative orientations of the rigid monosaccharide building blocks. However, RDC measurements are fraught with errors from strong coupling effects. Thus, we have developed methods to accurately measure one-bond 1H-13C splittings and 13C-13C splittings as well as RDCs. I will illustrate the application of these methods for bacterial polysaccharide model systems and show how we applied them to support the two-residue per turn helical structure of 2-8 tetrasialic acid and the smaller conformationally stable dimer in solution at low temperatures.
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Date:30שנידצמבר 2019הרצאה
The Braginsky Center for the Interface between the Sciences and the Humanities
More information שעה 11:00 - 11:00כותרת What have we learned from the Archimedes Palimpsest?מיקום אולם הרצאות ע"ש גרהרד שמידטמרצה Prof. Reviel Netz
Department of Classics, Stanford Universityמארגן מרכז על-שם ברגינסקי לשילוב בין מדעי הטבע למדעי הרוחצרו קשר -
Date:30שנידצמבר 2019הרצאה
A mechanism for positive lapse-rate feedback in polar regions
More information שעה 11:00 - 11:00מיקום בניין משפחת זוסמןמרצה Prof. Rodrigo Caballero
Department of Meteorology (MISU) Stockholm Universityמארגן המחלקה למדעי כדור הארץ וכוכבי הלכתצרו קשר תקציר Show full text abstract about Observations and climate simulations show that polar regions...» Observations and climate simulations show that polar regions warm faster than the rest of the globe in response to radiative forcing. Feedback diagnostics in models show that a large fraction of this enhanced polar warming is due to strong positive lapse-rate feedback. However, there is little mechanistic understanding for why this feedback is positive and what controls its strength. Here, I discuss a mechanism for high-latitude lapse rate feedback and show it functioning in a set of simplified GCM simulations. The mechanism hinges crucially on low cloud response. In this sense, high-latitude lapse-rate feedback is a cloud feedback in disguise. -
Date:30שנידצמבר 2019הרצאה
Special Guest Seminar with Dr. Onn Brandman
More information שעה 14:00 - 14:00כותרת “Cellular Stress Responses at the molecular and systems levels”מיקום בניין ארתור ורושל בלפר למחקר ביורפואימרצה Dr. Onn Brandman
Department of Biochemistry, Stanford University, USAמארגן המחלקה לגנטיקה מולקולריתצרו קשר
