Veranstaltungsarchiv

Gastgeber: Max Planck School of Cognition

Professor Christian F. Doeller | Structuring experience in cognitive spaces

MPSCog Cognition Colloquium
Please join online: https://zoom.us/j/93526030034?pwd=ZkJnYlFVOEthU2lDeE5nVmV6TlZLZz09 (Meeting ID: 935 2603 0034 / Passcode: 250171) [mehr]

Dr Mariya Toneva | In search of model organisms for language in the human brain: Text vs speech language models

MPSCog Cognition Colloquium
Please join online: https://zoom.us/j/93526030034?pwd=ZkJnYlFVOEthU2lDeE5nVmV6TlZLZz09 (Meeting ID: 935 2603 0034 / Passcode: 250171) [mehr]

Professor Arno Villringer | Heart-brain interactions: Of love and death

MPSCog Cognition Colloquium
Please join online: https://zoom.us/j/93526030034?pwd=ZkJnYlFVOEthU2lDeE5nVmV6TlZLZz09 (Meeting ID: 935 2603 0034 / Passcode: 250171) [mehr]

Professor Katrin Amunts | Cytoarchitectonics – Decoding functional specialization, brain parcellation, and variation

MPSCog Cognition Colloquium
Join via https://zoom.us/j/93526030034?pwd=ZkJnYlFVOEthU2lDeE5nVmV6TlZLZz09 [mehr]

Professor John-Dylan Haynes | Predicting free choices in real time: What does(n’t) brain decoding tell us about the problem of free will?

MPSCog Cognition Colloquium

Professor Nikolaus Weiskopf | Characterizing brain microstructure using magnetic resonance imaging: Towards in-vivo histology

MPSCog Cognition Colloquium

Professor John-Dylan Haynes |

MPSCog Cognition Colloquium

Professor Caroline F. Rowland | How humans learn language

MPSCog Cognition Colloquium

Professor Simon B. Eickhoff | Technical, conceptual and practical considerations on neuroimaging-based prediction of cognitive phenotypes

MPSCog Cognition Colloquium

Prof. Jane A. Foster | Microbiota-immune-brain interactions in behaviour and brain function

Gastvortrag
Researchers in psychiatry and neuroscience are increasingly recognizing the importance of gut-brain communication in mental health. Based on a foundation of animal studies demonstrating the vital role for microbiota-brain communication in brain development, behavior, and brain function over the life span, clinical studies have started to consider the microbiome in psychiatric disorders. Work to date by our group and others suggest that microbiota-immune-brain signaling is an important pathway that infuences brain structure, gene expression of stress-related and plasticity-related genes, stress-reactivity, and behaviour. Ongoing work in our lab is interested in determining the importance of peripheral T cells in the maturation of the microbiome, microbe and host metabolism, and neurodevelopment. The composition, diversity and function of commensal microbes is influenced by genetic, lifestyle, and environmental factors. Our increasing knowledge on pathways and involved mediators along the gut-brain axis has revolutionized our understanding of brain-body interaction. Intestinal bacteria act along the gut-brain axis in part by modifying the immune response. On the other side, bacteria produce neuroactive mediators and can modulate neuronal function, plasticity and behavior. Our recent research has focused on the bidirectional communication between microbiota and T cells in mouse models and in clinical popupations. This presentation will highlight this work in the context of recent developments linking microbiota to behaviour and brain function. Understanding the influence of microbiota-brain axis on brain function and behaviour is essential to understanding how host-microbe interactions are essential regulators of both physical and mental health. Understanding the basis of these differences, their functional impact, and mapping them to clinical symptoms, severity, and host biology is the next step in this fast-moving area of research. Moveover, the opportunity to harness our knowledge of the microbiome to develop novel therapies and to improve outcomes in psychiatry will be discussed. [mehr]
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