Veranstaltungsarchiv

Raum: Wilhelm Wundt Raum (A400)
Abstract: Multi-echo gradient-echo (GRE) sequences are commonly used for anatomical imaging of the spinal cord because they provide excellent contrast between grey matter (GM), white matter (WM), and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). One of their main limitations is the sensitivity to voluntary and involuntary motion, leading to ghosting artifacts and lower image quality even in compliant subjects. Time-varying B0 fields related to the breathing cycle contribute substantially to the artifact load in the spinal cord. Navigator readouts can be used to measure the intensity of the B0 fluctuations, allowing to demodulate the acquired signal before the image reconstruction. However, the standard navigator processing approach, developed for brain imaging, often fails in the spine, which can even exacerbate the artifacts. Therefore, there is a need for navigator processing specifically tailored to spinal cord imaging. In this study, we explore the effect of optimized processing pipelines for navigator-based correction on the image quality of a multi-echo GRE sequence acquired in the spinal cord at 3T. [mehr]

Prof. Dr. Magdalena Sauvage | Towards a Functional Architecture of Memory

Gastvortrag

Professor Jörn Diedrichsen | What is the function of the human cerebellum across cognitive domains?

Gastvortrag

Dr. Julia Moser | Precision Functional Brain Imaging in Infants

Gastvortrag

Prof. Matthew Larkum | Dendritic Integration Theory - Why anesthesia blocks consciousness

Kognitive-Neurologie-Vortrag

Dr Boris Bernhardt | New tools and resources for multiscale human neuroscience

Gastvortrag
My talk will overview new tools and resources to study the human brain across multiple space scales, and how these approaches can help to (i) understand the spatial layout of brain networks, (ii) associations between brain structure and function, (iii) as well as shifts in spatial patterns in both typical and atypical brain development. [mehr]

Dr Tobias Sommer | The assimilation of novel information into schemata and its efficient consolidation

Gastvortrag

Dr Nicole Seiberlich | Magnetic Resonance Fingerprinting: Challenges and Opportunities

Gastvortrag
Magnetic Resonance Fingerprinting (MRF) was introduced in 2013 as an approach for mapping multiple tissue properties simultaneously using MRI. This presentation will provide an overview of the MRF technique, with an emphasis on practical aspects of implementation, and describe how tissue property maps derived from MRF may be leveraged to provide additional information about structure and function in the brain and beyond. [mehr]

Dr. Bevil Conway | Principles of Neuroscience in color

Gastvortrag
Principles of neuroscience, notably as they relate to vision, invoke concepts of building blocks, opponency, representation, and agency (active vision). He will argue that these ideas have been productively developed using color as a model system, with roots in the earliest western theories of psychology dating to the ancient Greeks. In his talk, he will describe data from neurophysiology, functional brain imaging (fMRI and MEG), and psychophysics that aim to test the principles of neuroscience and to place them in a holistic framework of our broad goal to understand brain and behavior [mehr]
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