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Students and Postdocs (5)
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Aapo Hyvarinen http://www.cs.helsinki.fi/u/ahyvarin/
Involved in developing independent component analysis (ICA). Page supplies papers and code for reproducing experiments. Addresses generative model based vision and statistics of natural scenes.
Ad Aertsen http://www.brainworks.uni-freiburg.de/
This lab studies theoretical neuroscience, spiking neural networks, temporal processing and dynamic coding.
Allison Doupe http://keck.ucsf.edu/neurograd/faculty/doupe.html
Lab analyzes how the nervous system mediates behavior, especially complex behaviors that must be learned, studying the neural basis of vocal learning in songbirds.
Andreas Bartels http://www.snl.salk.edu/~bartels/
Using imaging methods to understand information processing in the human brain.
Andreas Engel http://www.40hz.net/Home.html
Work at the 40Hz Lab is focused on the dynamics of neural processing, from single cells to perception and behavior.
Andreas Herz http://itb.biologie.hu-berlin.de/~herz/
Professor at the Institute for Theoretical Biology, Humboldt University, Berlin. Main research interest is the dynamics and information processing in neural systems.
Ann Graybiel http://web.mit.edu/bcs/graybiel-lab/people/ann_graybiel.html
Research at the Graybiel Lab at the McGovern Institute for Brain Research, is focused on trying to understand how activity states of the forebrain are controlled and modulated during motor activity, procedural learning and cognition.
Bjorn Brembs http://brembs.net/
Features a wealth of background knowledge about learning and memory (with an emphasis on associative learning) together with published and unpublished original research on the fruitfly Drosophila and the sea-slug Aplysia.
Brandi Ormerod http://stemcell.bme.ufl.edu/
Research at the Stem Cell Research Lab at the University of Florida is focused on how neuron addition impacts behavior and on how systems-level regulators influence neurogenesis and gliogenesis.
Breedlove Jordan Lab https://www.msu.edu/~breedsm/
This lab at Michigan State University is researching the hormonal modulation of the developing and adult nervous system that leads to changes in behavior.
Bruno Olshausen https://redwood.berkeley.edu/bruno/
Research at the lab concentrates on trying to understand how we organize sensory information in order to build meaningful representations of objects, sounds and surface textures in the environment.
Christoph Kayser http://frontiersin.org/neuroscience/profiles/christophkayser/
Work combines behavioral and electrophysiological studies with functional imaging in order to understand how the brain combines the input from the different sensory systems into a coherent whole.
Claudia Schmauss http://www.schmauss-lab.com/
The Laboratory at Columbia University performs neurobiology research on dopamine receptors.
Cynthia F. Moss http://www.bsos.umd.edu/psyc/batlab/
Advancing our understanding of how sensory information is processed, organized, and integrated with motor programs, with a focus on bat auditory processing.
Cynthia L. Jordan http://www.msu.edu/~breedsm/cj.htm
The Jordan lab works on cellular and molecular mechanims underlying steroid-regulated behaviors.
Cyril Pernet http://www.sbirc.ed.ac.uk/cyril/
Studies statistics, human neurophysiology and neuroimaging. Provides a user guide for fMRI analysis using SPM2.
Dale Purves http://www.purveslab.net
The Purves laboratory is studying visual perception and its neurobiological underpinnings. Shows a lot of interactive demos of psychophysical effects and optical illusions.
Dario Floreano http://lis.epfl.ch/member.php?SCIPER=111729
Goal is to develop methods for evolving embedded intelligent systems, such as Autonomous Robots, capable of adaptation to physical environments. Interested in artificial sensory-motor systems that display life-like properties and are based upon bio-inspired mechanisms (genetics, cellular biology, neural networks, bio-morphic engineering).
David Attwell http://www.ucl.ac.uk/npp/da.html
The Attwell lab at UCL studies neuron-glial interactions and the energy supply to the brain.
David Cox http://www.rowland.harvard.edu/rjf/cox/
The Visual Neuroscience Group at Harvard studies the neurophysiology of natural visual systems in an effort to build better artificial ones
David Fitzpatrick http://www.fitzpatricklab.net
The Laboratory at Duke University Medical Center is focused on understanding the functional organization of circuits in primary visual cortex, an important component in processing visual information.
David Mumford http://www.dam.brown.edu/people/mumford/
Research is on similarity metrics, statistics of natural scenes and pattern theory.
David Tam http://www.david.tam.name
A physiologist studying computational and experimental neuroscience problems.
David Tolhurst http://www.pdn.cam.ac.uk/staff/tolhurst/
My research interests are in the area of the neurophysiology and psychophysics of vision.
Dittmar, Michael http://www-nw.uni-regensburg.de/~.dim14809.anaest.klinik.uni-regensburg.de/
Research on stroke, anesthesiology, and out-of-hospital emergency medicine.
Dmitri Chklovskii http://www.cshl.org/public/SCIENCE/chklovskii.html
Interested in developmental pattern generation or ways of describing coupled networks of genes and neurons.
Donald Sakaguchi http://www.public.iastate.edu/~zoogen/saklab.html
Researches development and plasticity in vertebrate visual systems
Douglas A. Baxter http://www.uth.tmc.edu/baxterlab/
The Baxter lab is investigating how neural circuits are organized, what principles underlie their function, and the consequences of sensory inputs and of modulatory influences.
Dwight Bergles http://www.bergleslab.com/
The Laboratory at Johns Hopkins studies synaptic physiology, with an emphasis on glutamate transporters and glial involvement in neuronal signaling.
EBRI: European Brain Research Institute http://www.ebri.it/DOCUMENTO/672/en/go.aspx
Research at EBRI is focused on the functional organization of the brain, and translating basic brain science into ways to possibly cure the diseases affecting the nervous system.
Ed Adelson http://web.mit.edu/persci/people/adelson/
Ed Adelson focuses on topics in human and machine vision, including mid-level vision, lightness perception, motion analysis, perceptual organization, and image data compression.
Ed Boyden http://edboyden.org
Analysis and engineering of neural circuit function.
Eduardo Candelario-Jalil http://www.freewebs.com/candelariojalil/
The lab is using neurochemical approaches to study phenomena such as brain injury and regeneration.
Eero Simoncelli http://www.cns.nyu.edu/~eero/
The laboratory addresses a variety of basic issues in the analysis and representation of visual imagery. 1) construction of mathematical theories for the representation of visual information, 2) development of functional models for biological visual processing, and 3) creation of novel algorithms for image processing and computer vision applications.
Elba Serrano http://biology-web.nmsu.edu/serrano/neurolab/neurolab.html
Focuses on the development of the nervous system, with an emphasis on the sensory systems responsible for hearing and balance.
Elie Bienenstock http://www.dam.brown.edu/people/elie/page.html
Elie Bienenstock is interested in temporal coding by individual action potentials.
Eunice Yuen http://www.acsu.buffalo.edu/%7eyeyuen/
Research focuses on the regulation of neurotransmitter receptors, and the implications of abnormal receptor activity in neurological diseases.
Francesco Ventriglia http://biocib.cib.na.cnr.it/Ventriglia/ventriglia.html
Working at the Institute of Cybernetics of CNR. Working on projects related to parallel computer simulation of neurotransmitter difusion and neural network.
Frank LaFerla http://neurobiology.bio.uci.edu/faculty/laferla/
Researches the molecular biology of Alzheimer's disease and neurodegenerative disorders.
Fred Gage http://www-biology.ucsd.edu/faculty/gage.html
The Gage lab works on adult neural stem cells.
Gary Holt http://lnc.usc.edu/~holt/
Our goal is to devise learning rules that can develop a feature-detector hierarchy similar to that proposed by Fukushima et al. (1983) in order to recognize objects independent of location, scale, or orientation.
Gaute Einevoll http://arken.umb.no/~gautei/index_english.html
Research activity is in computational neuroscience, in particular various problems related to the function of nerve cells and networks of nerve cells.
Geoffrey Boynton http://web.psych.washington.edu/directory/person.php?PersonID=10122
Researching the neural correlates of human visual perception using the relatively new technique for measuring brain responses in humans called functional magnetic resonance imaging.
Georg Schulze http://www.interchg.ubc.ca/schulze/Georg_SchulzeHP.htm
Motivational psychology from an engineering perspective with biological constraints. Behavioral modeling. Resonance Raman spectroscopy of neurotransmitters. Artificial neural networks.
Giedrius Buracas http://www.cnl.salk.edu/~giedrius/
Research into the origins of the BOLD signal measured when applying fMRI. Also interested in temporal codes.
Heather Bradshaw http://www.kinseyinstitute.org/about/bradshaw.html
Research at the Kinsey Institute is centered on the relationship of endogenous cannabinoids and uterine and vaginal neurophysiology.
Hilary Beggs http://www.ucsf.edu/beggs/
The Beggs lab works on signal transduction, cell morphology, and extracellular influences on circuit development in the retina.
Huda Zoghbi http://www.bcm.edu/db/db_fac-zoghbi.html
The Zoghbi lab works on neural development and neurodegeneration.
Idan Segev http://lobster.ls.huji.ac.il/idan/
This lab at the Department of Neurobiology, Hebrew University, Israel is studying nerve cells and the specific networks they form.
Jürgen Schmidhuber http://www.idsia.ch/~juergen/
Has done important work on regularization of neural networks. Also addresses processing long short term memory and optimal learning.
Jack Gallant http://neuroscience.berkeley.edu/users/users_profile.php?rid=12
The Gallant lab studies the neural basis of vision and visual perception, with particular emphasis on object vision, and visual selective attention.
Jeff Henderson http://www.phm.utoronto.ca/~jeffh/henderson.htm
Researching the molecular mechanisms which regulate neuronal injury and survival following acute or chronic CNS insults.
Jennifer Raymond http://www.stanford.edu/group/raymondlab/
The Raymond lab does research on the mechanisms of motor learning in a simple cerebellar task.
Jerzy Achimowicz http://www.angelfire.com/wa3/jachimow/
Digital signal processing (DSP) is applied to the analysis of electro-physiological signals (such as EEG), with emphasis on human brain electrical activity. From the State Committee for Scientific Research; Warsaw, Poland.
Jianguo Gu http://plaza.ufl.edu/jggjgg/
Studies on spinal cord sensory transmission using patch-clamp, immunocytochmistry and molecular biology approaches.
Jim Trimmer http://www.sunysb.edu/biochem/BIOCHEM/facultypages/trimmer/index.html
Research laboratory studying molecular organization of neuronal signaling proteins.
John Taylor http://www.mth.kcl.ac.uk/~jgtaylor/index.htm
Mathematical modelling in neurobiology, Neural computation and neural bases of behaviour, High energy physics and superstrings, quantum field theory and quantum gravity.
John W. Moore http://www.umass.edu/neuro/faculty/files/moore.html
This lab studies a simple form of associative learning - classical eyeblink conditioning in rabbits - using a variety of approaches: behavioral, computational, and neurophysiological. Recent work has focused on neuronal activity of the cerebellum during complex training procedures.
Jonas Frisen http://www.cmb.ki.se/research/frisen/
The Frisen Lab at the Karolinska Institute in Sweden is studying the development of the nervous system and the continued neurogenesis from neural stem cells in the adult.
Jörg Conradt http://www.ini.uzh.ch/~conradt/
Does robotics research at institute of neuroinformatics. He is interested in novel types of robots, pattern generation, control and navigation.
Josh Tenenbaum http://web.mit.edu/cocosci/josh.html
Studies how people use statistical methods when solving cognitive problems.
Juanita Anders http://www.usuhs.mil/nes/anders.html
Research on low power laser irradiation, spinal cord injury research and diabetes. Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Department of Anatomy, Physiology and Genetics.
Julie Grezes http://www.juliegrezes.com
Dr. Grezes studies neural bases of social phenomena such as action perception, emotions, and theory of mind.
Karel Svoboda http://www.cshl.org/public/SCIENCE/svoboda3.html
Karel Svoboda is addressing the functioning of the nervous system using two photon microscopy. His page summarizes the research goal of understanding network function from an understanding of the nerve cells properties.
Karl Deisseroth http://www.stanford.edu/~deissero/
Studies hippocampal neurogenesis.
Kaushik Ghose http://maunsell.med.harvard.edu/kghose/
Behavioural experiments on flying bats. Beam patterns. Neural models.
Keith Sillar http://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/~xscr/
The group studies locomotion at the University of St Andrews, Scotland. Studies on the development and intrinsic mechanisms behind the neural control of vertebrate locomotion.
Ken Miller http://phy.ucsf.edu/~ken/
My lab's interests focus on understanding the cerebral cortex. We use theoretical and computational methods, and theoretically motivated experimental methods, to unravel the circuitry of the cerebral cortex, the rules by which this circuitry develops or "self-organizes", and the computational functions of this circuitry.
Klaus Obermayer http://ni.cs.tu-berlin.de/
The NI group focuses on computational models of neuronal systems, on the mathematical analysis of neural networks, and on the development of ANN algorithms, in particular for image processing applications.
Klaus-Armin Nave http://www.nave.de/
Prof. Dr. Nave uses transgenic mouse and molecular/cellular techniques to study neural development and the neurodegenerative pathogenesis.
Konrad Körding http://www.kording.eu
Neuroscientist doing both experiments and theory at the Institute of Neurology, London. Specializes in Bayesian Statistics and Statistics of Natural scenes. Applications to Visual, Somatosensory, Auditory and Motor problems.
Laurent Itti http://ilab.usc.edu/
Focus in visual neuroscience, approached using computational modeling, human psychophysics and functional neuroimaging. In particular, studies on visual attention in primates.
Lilian Yuan http://www.neuroscience.umn.edu/ProStu/facprof/yuan.html
Research at the Department of Neuroscience at the University of Minnesota is focused on understanding the dendritic mechanisms underlying synaptic and intrinsic plasticity, and how malfunction of these mechanisms contributes to human neurological diseases.
Lisa Topolnik http://www.neuronimaging.ca
The Neural Imaging Lab uses cellular imaging techniques in combination with electrophysiology and genetic approaches to study local biochemical signalling at excitatory synapses of different type of central neurons.
Loesch, Dr Andrzej http://www.homepages.ucl.ac.uk/~ucgaanl/
Relationship between the autonomic nervous system and the vascular system, mechanisms underlying disease in human arteries, cerebral and coronary arteries. Relevant to clinical medicine. Saphenous vein for CABG, and neurodegenerative diseases. University College London.
Luis R. Cruz Cruz http://www.physics.drexel.edu/~ccruz
Studies Alzheimers disease at the Center for Polymer Studies at Boston University.
Luke Remage-Healey http://healey.bol.ucla.edu/
At the Brain Research Institute at the University of California. List of publications.
Lydia Danglot http://lydia.danglot.free.fr
Researching the mechanisms of formation of neuronal synapses and vesicular trafficking. Also provides details of publications and courses taught.
Maneesh Sahani http://www.gatsby.ucl.ac.uk/~maneesh/
Focuses on the statistical analysis of neural data and the design of experiments in neuroscience.
Mark Dubin http://spot.colorado.edu/~dubin/index.html
Applies virtual reality to neural rehabilitation.
Mark Laubach http://spikelab.jbpierce.org/
The lab uses methods for large-scale neuronal ensemble recording to study neuronal processing in multiple parts of the nervous system simultaneously.
Mato, German http://cab.cnea.gov.ar/users/Mato/
Researcher at Bariloche Nuclear Center. Includes activity on neural networks, neural modelling and related subjects. List of publications.
Matt Phillips http://www.columbia.edu/%7emp2570/
Postdoct in Dr. Michael E. Goldberg's Primate Electrophysiology lab in Columbia University. Research interests include neurobiology, psychophysics, visual search and saccadic eye movement.
Matt Wilson http://mit.edu/org/w/wilsonlab/
What are the mechanisms of learning and memory? How are actions and experiences encoded in the activity patterns of neurons in the brain? In the Wilson Lab we are addressing these questions through multineuron recording from the hippocampus and other brain areas of rats and mice during active behavior.
Matthew Larkum http://www.physio.unibe.ch/~larkum/
My research interests focus on the roll of dendritic processing in networks of cortical neurons.
Maurizio Grimaldi http://www.mauriziogrimaldi.net/
Information includes curriculum vitae, publications, research interest description, address, and links.
Michael Hausser http://www.ucl.ac.uk/wibr/3/research/neuro/mh/mh.htm
Works on how neuronal dendrites perform computations.
Michael Nikoletseas http://www.greekads.com/nikoletseas/
Scientist working on nonassosiative and associative learning phenomena.
Michale Fee http://web.mit.edu/feelab/
Understanding how the brain learns and generates complex sequential behaviors, with a focus on the songbird as a model system.
Mikko Juusola http://www.shef.ac.uk/bms/research/juusola
Studies processing in visual neurons of Drosophila as well as effects of molecular components on neural computations and sensory adaptation. Influence of rearing and environment on signalling is studied and signalling during natural stimulation is analyzed and modeled.
Morgan Sheng http://web.mit.edu/picower/faculty/sheng.html
Studies synaptic structure, function, and plasticity.
Nathan Intrator http://www.math.tau.ac.il/~nin/
Neural computation, high dimensional statistics and pattern recognition, computer vision, visual cortex plasticity and time series prediction.
Nordeen, Ernest J. http://www.bcs.rochester.edu/people/ernie/ernie.html
Hormonal regulation of neural plasticity and learning, with a focus on the songbird system.
Nordeen, Kathy W. http://www.bcs.rochester.edu/people/knordeen/knordeen.html
Studies neural plasticity, learning, memory, with a focus on vocal learning in songbirds.
Pam Reinagel http://www.biology.ucsd.edu/labs/reinagel/
Pam Reinagel studies how patterns of activity in populations of visual neurons encode information about visual scenes, especially naturalistic ones.
Patrick Hoyer http://www.cis.hut.fi/~phoyer/
Patrick Hoyer works on ICA (independent component analysis) and nonlinear variants thereof.
Patrizia Casaccia-Bonnefil http://www2.umdnj.edu/cblabweb/
Addresses very basic questions on cellular and molecular mechanisms of proliferation and differentiation in the central nervous system.
Paul De Koninck http://www.greenspine.ca
The lab investigates the cellular and molecular mechanisms used by neurons to decode synaptic and electrical activities that propagate through neural circuits.
Paul Glimcher http://www.cns.nyu.edu/~glimcher/
The Glimcher lab studies the neural mechanisms underlying choice behavior using a combination of electrophysiological, behavioral, and neuroimaging techniques.
Paul Harrison http://www.psychiatry.ox.ac.uk/mng/
His group is studying gene expression in psychiatric disorders in the University of Oxford Department of Psychiatry.
Peter Dayan http://www.gatsby.ucl.ac.uk/~dayan/
Builds mathematical and computational models of neural processing, with a particular emphasis on representation and learning. The main focus is on reinforcement learning and unsupervised learning, covering the ways that animals come to choose appropriate actions in the face of rewards and punishments, and the ways and goals of the process by which they come to form neural representations of the world. The models are informed and constrained by neurobiological, psychological and ethological data.
Peter Kovacs http://www.pkovacs.com/
Research focuses mainly on the neuronal background of obesity.
Peter Lansbury http://lansbury.bwh.harvard.edu
From the Center for Neurologic Diseases and Laboratory for Drug Discovery in Neurodegeneration at Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School.
Peter Latham http://www.gatsby.ucl.ac.uk/~pel/
Computational neuroscience and neural coding.
Pouget, Alexandre http://www.bcs.rochester.edu/people/alex/
The Pouget lab works on the computational neuroscience of spatial representation, visual perception, and neural coding.
Quentin Huys http://www.gatsby.ucl.ac.uk/~qhuys/
He is interested in the mechanisms that have led to neural tissue being able to control complex organisms. Photography is another artistic way of slicing the timeline and recombining it for analysis.
Rajesh Rao http://www.cnl.salk.edu/~rao/
The primary goal of my research is to discover the computational principles underlying the brain's remarkable ability to learn, process and store information, and to apply this knowledge to the task of building adaptive robotic systems and artificially intelligent agents.
Randall O'Reilly http://psych.colorado.edu/~oreilly/
He develops computational and formal models of the biological bases of cognition , focusing on specialization of function in and interactions between hippocampus, prefrontal cortex, and posterior neocortex in learning, memory, attention, and controlled processing.
Reza Shadmehr http://www.bme.jhu.edu/~reza/
The Shadmehr lab works on motor control and learning, robotics, brain imaging, and neurophysiology.
Richard Hahnloser http://hebb.mit.edu/people/rh/
Richard Hahnloser is doing theory on recurrent systems and songbird physiology.
Robert Fern http://faculty.washington.edu/bobfern/index.html
Research on ischemic injuries in the neonatal brain.
Rodney Douglas http://www.ini.uzh.ch/~rjd/
Rodney Douglas addresses information processing in the neocortex. He is the head of the institute of neuroinformatics in Zurich.
Roland Baddeley http://psychology.psy.bris.ac.uk/people/rolandbaddeley.htm
He is interested in many things including neural network techniques, the statistics of naturally generated spike trains in V1 and IT and the implications for coding, eye movements, stereo interactions in V1, timing behaviour, reading in young children, and the statistics of natural images.
Ruedi Stoop http://stoop.net/group
The Stoop group works on statistical neural networks, biological complexity, self-organized clustering and perception, and hearing biophysics.
Ruth Herbst http://www.meduniwien.ac.at/typo3/?id=2464
Research is focused on the molecular mechanisms that regulate the formation and maintenance of the neuromuscular synapse.
Sam Roweis http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~roweis/
Machine learning, nonlinear manifolds, signal processing, DNA computing.
Sami Ikonen http://www.uku.fi/neuro/54the.htm
The role of the septohippocampal cholinergic system in cognitive functions - a doctoral thesis.
Sander Bohte http://www.cwi.nl/~sbohte/
Neuroscientist in Amsterdam related to coding by action potentials as well as pattern recognition.
Shawn Mikula http://brainmeta.com/index.php?q=mikula
Does experiments to study coincidence detection as well as connectivity. He uses simulation methods as well as fMRI.
Simon Laughlin http://www.zoo.cam.ac.uk/zoostaff/laugh.htm
Simon Laughlin addresses optimal coding, the cost of action potentials and more generally relates the properties of nervous systems to ethological optimisation and constraints
Stephen Grossberg http://cns-web.bu.edu/Profiles/Grossberg.html
Vision, audition, language, learning and memory, reward and motivation, cognition, development, sensory-motor control, mental disorders, applications.
Stephen Maren http://www-personal.umich.edu/~maren/marenlab.html
Fear, conditioned learning behavior, and the neurophysiology of the amygdala. Research summaries, related links. Rat behavior animation.
Sue Becker http://www.science.mcmaster.ca/Psychology/sb.html
Computational neuroscience, neural network models of perceptual and cognitive processes including cortical and hippocampal memory systems, spatial memory, semantic memory organization, frontal executive control of memory.
Theo Geisel http://www.chaos.gwdg.de/theo/
Nonlinear dynamics, chaotic systems, neural networks
Thomas J. Anastasio http://csn.beckman.uiuc.edu
Our goal is to gain deeper insight into multisensory integration and motor learning using computational neuroscience methodology.
Thorsten Naserke http://www.tnase.net
Curriculum vitae, lists of skills, publications, participations at conferences and a description of research into the development of the midbrain and hindbrain.
Tobi Delbruck http://www.ini.uzh.ch/~tobi/
Research at the Institute for Neuroinformatics in Zurich, Switzerland centers on using neuromorphic design principles to make practical vision sensors.
Tony Zador http://www.cshl.org/public/SCIENCE/zador.html
At a cocktail party we can selectively attend to a single voice, effortlessly filtering out all the others that make up the banter that surrounds us; yet this task remains far beyond the capabilities of our most sophisticated computers. How do the neurons in our brains conspire to form such powerful computational engines?
Veeramani Maharhajan http://biocib.cib.na.cnr.it/Maharhajan/maha.html
Working at the Institute of Cybernetic of CNR. Included current working projects mainly related to the himmunohystochemistry of hippocampal piramidal cells; the effect of maternal drug abuse on neonatal rodents.
Vialatte, Francois http://fbv.site.voila.fr/
PhD in cognitive neuroscience research. Includes publications.
Vito Di Maio http://biocib.cib.na.cnr.it/DiMaio/dimaio.html
The projects carried out at the Institute of Cybernetics are mainly related to neurocomputation and visual perception of geometrical figures.
Werner Rathmayer http://www.uni-konstanz.de/FuF/Bio/research/Arbeitsgruppen/Rathmayer/Homepage/index_eng.htm
Overview of the research in our lab at the University of Constance, Germany, covering research in invertebrate neuroscience.
William H. Calvin http://faculty.washington.edu/wcalvin/
A theoretical neurophysiologist and author of The Cerebral Code, How the Brain Thinks.
Winfried Denk http://www.mpg.de/cgi-bin/mpg.de/person.cgi?nav=kontakt&inst=medizinische_forschung&persId=166764&lang=en
Biomedical optics, two-photon microscopy, and imaging of neuronal activity.
Wiskott, Laurenz http://itb.biologie.hu-berlin.de/~wiskott/homepage.html
Face recognition, Invariances in learning and vision.
Women in Neuroscience Biographies http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/win.html
Women who are contributing to our knowledge of neuroscience today including Ellen Kuwana, Frances Mary Ashcroft, Leslie P. Tolbert, Rae Nishi, Christine H. Block and Rosamund Langston.
Yang Dan http://mcb.berkeley.edu/faculty/NEU/dany.html
Goal is to understand the structure, function and plasticity of the mammalian visual system. Uses a combination of electrophysiological, psychophysical, and computational techniques to analyze how visual information is coded in the spiking activity of neurons in the visual cortex.
Yasir el Sherif http://www.angelfire.com/yt/yas709neuroscience/
Information on ATP, melatonin, 8-OH-DPA, and magnetic fields in the nervous system.
Zhongmin Lu http://www.bio.miami.edu/zlu/index.html
Laboratory (P.I. - Dr. John Lu) that focuses on mechanisms of hearing in fish, including directional and ultrasonic hearing, and neurotoxin effects on hearing.

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