Synopsis
Neuroscientists Talk Shop is the University of Texas at San Antonio's (UTSA) Neurobiology Podcast, showcasing the current research of internationally renowned guest Neuroscientists. Each episode features a moderated discussion with a cross section of UTSA Neurobiology faculty, highlighting the featured guest's research, and the state of the art in the field at hand.
Episodes
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Episode 207 -- Ajay Dhaka PhD
07/11/2019 Duration: 36minThursday, November 7, 2019 Ajay Dhaka (UW) talks about distinctions in itch (pruritis) and pain (nociception) somatosensation, and his discovery of overlapping mechanisms for these sensations via direct activation of different populations of TRP channel-expressing somatosensory neurons in zebrafish. He also talks to us about developing zebrafish larvae as a behavioral screening tool for analgesic drug discovery. Duration: 35 minutes Discussants:(in alphabetical order) Salma Quraishi (Res Asst Prof, UTSA) Lindsey Macpherson (Asst Prof, UTSA) acknowledgement: JM Tepper for original music. Thursday, November 7, 2019
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Episode 206 -- Sophie Caron PhD
31/10/2019 Duration: 37minThursday, October 31, 2019 Sophie Caron (U of Utah) discusses how sensory representations shift from ordered to random in the sensory system of drosophila. Duration: 35minutes Discussants:(in alphabetical order) Salma Quraishi (Res Asst Prof, UTSA) Lindsey Macpherson (Asst Prof, UTSA) Charles Wilson (Ewing Halsell Chair, UTSA) acknowledgement: JM Tepper for original music.
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Episode 205 -- Michelle T. Diaz PhD
24/10/2019 Duration: 35minThursday, October 24, 2019 Michelle Diaz (Penn State) discusses how language features might be organized in the neural architecture and talks about her structural and behavioral studies of how language production changes over the lifespan. Duration: 35minutes Discussants:(in alphabetical order) Salma Quraishi (Res Asst Prof, UTSA) Todd Troyer (Assoc Prof, UTSA) Nicole Wicha (Professor, UTSA) Charles Wilson (Ewing Halsell Chair, UTSA) acknowledgement: JM Tepper for original music.
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Episode 204 -- Ottavio Arancio MD PhD
10/10/2019 Duration: 41minThursday, October 10, 2019 Ottavio Arancio discusses the problematic aspects of therapeutic strategies built upon the amyloid hypothesis of Alzheimer's disease, and his work defining the synaptic effects of soluble beta amyloid and tau oligomers in the etiopathogenesis of Alzheimer’s disease. Duration: 39 minutes Discussants:(in alphabetical order) Hyoung-gon Lee (Assoc Prof, UTSA) Salma Quraishi (Res Asst Prof, UTSA) George Perry (Semmes Chair, UTSA) Charles Wilson (Ewing Halsell Chair, UTSA) acknowledgement: JM Tepper for original music.
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Episode 203 -- Michael Smotherman PhD II
03/10/2019 Duration: 39minThursday, October 3, 2019 Mike Smotherman joins us again to talk echolocation in bats, specifically how physiological studies in his lab investigate the circuitry that shapes sonar pulse acoustics. He discusses how bats in groups implement circuit plasticity to coordinate their sonar systems to minimize interference. Duration: 39 minutes Discussants:(in alphabetical order) Salma Quraishi (Res Asst Prof, UTSA) Todd Troyer (Assoc Prof, UTSA) Charles Wilson (Ewing Halsell Chair, UTSA) acknowledgement: JM Tepper for original music.
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Episode 202 -- Symposium 2019: Brain Oscillations in Parkinson’s Disease
12/09/2019 Duration: 42minThursday, September 12, 2019 Recorded as a panel discussion following the UTSA Neurosciences Institute’s 2019 research symposium on September 12, 2019. Hosted by Charles Wilson Duration: 44 minutes Discussants:(in alphabetical order) Mark Bevan, Professor in Physiology, Northwestern University Robert Turner Professor, Pitt Jerrold Vitek, Mcknight Professor, University of Minnesota Judith Walters, Senior Investigator, NINDS Charles Wilson, Ewing Halsell Chair, UTSA acknowledgement: JM Tepper for original music.
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Episode 201 -- Maya Henry PhD
18/04/2019 Duration: 39minThursday, April 18, 2019 Maya Henry (UT Austin) talks to us about her imaging studies of patients suffering from primary progressive aphasias, what they tell us about speech and language networks, and how her rehabilitation studies are demonstrating speech gains for patients with an otherwise poor degenerative prognosis. Duration: 39 minutes Discussants:(in alphabetical order) Salma Quraishi (Res Asst Prof, UTSA) Todd Troyer (Assoc Prof, UTSA) Nicole Wicha (Assoc Prof, UTSA) Charles Wilson (Ewing Halsell Chair, UTSA) acknowledgement: JM Tepper for original music.
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Episode 200 -- Brian Kaspar PhD
10/04/2019 Duration: 45minWednesday, April 10, 2019 Brian Kaspar (AveXis Inc) talks about the realities and promise of building a single-dose gene transfer therapy for treating the prime gene defect in spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) type I. He discusses his company’s modified adeno-associated virus 9 approach to human gene therapy that is currently in highly promising clinical trials, for SMA, and in development for Rett syndrome and one variant of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis. Duration: 45 minutes Discussants:(in alphabetical order) Jenny Hsieh (Semmes Foundation Chair, UTSA) Salma Quraishi (Res Asst Prof, UTSA) Charles Wilson (Ewing Halsell Chair, UTSA) acknowledgement: JM Tepper for original music.
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Episode 199 -- Craig Blackstone MD PhD
04/04/2019 Duration: 31minThursday, April 4, 2019 Craig Blackstone (UT Health San Antonio) tells us about new vantage points on endoplasmic reticulum structure, dynamics and function through advanced imaging technologies in the context of his work on hereditary spastic paraplegias. Duration: 46 minutes Discussants:(in alphabetical order) Michael Hanna (Asst Professor of Practice, UTSA) Salma Quraishi (Res Asst Prof, UTSA) Fidel Santamaria (Assoc Prof, UTSA) Charles Wilson (Ewing Halsell Chair, UTSA) acknowledgement: JM Tepper for original music.
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Episode 198 -- Sarah Hopp PhD
21/03/2019 Duration: 36minTuesday, March 21, 2019 Sarah Hopp (UT Health San Antonio) discusses tau seeding in the developing pathology of Alzheimer's disease, and the role that microglia may play in supporting it. Duration: 46 minutes Discussants:(in alphabetical order) Salma Quraishi (Res Asst Prof, UTSA) Charles Wilson (Ewing Halsell Chair, UTSA) acknowledgement: JM Tepper for original music.
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Episode 197 -- Catharine Winstanley PhD
21/02/2019 Duration: 46minThursday, February 21, 2019 Catharine Winstanley (UBC Vancouver) discusses mechanisms of impulsive and poor decision-making in gambling and its intersection with mechanisms of disparate drugs of abuse, addiction and relapse. The group considers whether addiction is a single disease, and whether catecholamine systems are the final common pathway for various addiction trajectories. (apologies for some uneven sound, it’s worth roughing it out!) Duration: 46 minutes Discussants:(in alphabetical order) Salma Quraishi (Res Asst Prof, UTSA) Carlos Paladini (Professor, UTSA) Matt Wanat (Asst Prof, UTSA) Charles Wilson (Ewing Halsell Chair, UTSA) acknowledgement: JM Tepper for original music.
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Episode 196 -- Jon Sakata PhD
14/02/2019 Duration: 37minThursday, February 14, 2019 Jon Sakata (McGill) talks about songbird plasticity in the zebra finch, and how brain circuits transduce social information to modulate the learning and control of birdsong. Duration: 37 minutes Discussants:(in alphabetical order) Salma Quraishi (Res Asst Prof, UTSA) Todd Troyer (Assoc Prof, UTSA) Charles Wilson (Ewing Halsell Chair, UTSA) acknowledgement: JM Tepper for original music.
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Episode 195 -- Future Frameworks in Theoretical Neuroscience Workshop, Part 2
07/02/2019 Duration: 34minThursday, February 7, 2019 This episode is a panel discussion recorded as the conclusion of a two part series showcasing Present & Future Frameworks in Theoretical Neuroscience, an international workshop hosted by Horacio Rotstein (NJIT) & Fidel Santamaria (UTSA) through support of NSF’s Brain Initiative (see episode 194 for Part I). Part II is a round table with a new group that recaps the themes of the workshop and reports on the main themes of the discussions that occurred in each of the five workgroups. Many trainees were involved in the workshop, and two of them join the panel to highlight the value and necessity of fresh voices to any discussion about the future of theoretical neuroscience. Workshop co-organizer Fidel Santamaria leads the panel. Duration: 34 minutes Panel:(in alphabetical order, pictured left to right) Habiba Azab, PhD student, Ben Hayden lab, UMN - Student perspective on Organizing Theories Workgroup Carmen Canavier, Professor & Vice Chair, LSU Health Kreš
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Episode 194 -- Future Frameworks in Theoretical Neuroscience Workshop, Part I
04/02/2019 Duration: 34minMonday, February 4, 2019 This episode is a panel discussion recorded as Part I of a two part series on the recent Present & Future Frameworks in Theoretical Neuroscience, an international workshop hosted by Horacio Rotstein (NJIT) & Fidel Santamaria (UTSA) with support from the NSF’s Brain Initiative. Part I is a preamble recorded on day one of the meeting, in which some friends of the podcast (see below) define the need for the workshop and identify their objectives as they undertake their workgroups. Hosted by Salma Quraishi. Stay tuned for Part II, which was recorded at the close of the workshop. Part II will be posted separately as a follow up to summarize some of the critical discussions that transpired in the workgroups. Duration: 33 minutes Panel:(in alphabetical order, pictured left to right) Veronica Alvarez, Senior Investigator, IRP NIAAA Alain Destexhe, Research Director, CNRS Paris Tatiana Engel, Assistant Professor, CSHL Horacio Rotstein, Professor, NJIT David Redish, Di
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Episode 193 -- Liberty Hamilton PhD
31/01/2019 Duration: 40minThursday, January 31, 2019 Liberty Hamilton (UT Austin) talks about using electrocorticography to study the representation and processing of speech sounds in the auditory cortex. Duration: 40 minutes Discussants:(in alphabetical order) Salma Quraishi (Res Asst Prof, UTSA) Todd Troyer (Assoc Prof, UTSA Nicole Wicha (Assoc Prof, UTSA) Charles Wilson (Ewing Halsell Chair, UTSA) acknowledgement: JM Tepper for original music.
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Episode 192 -- Jeff Golden MD
24/01/2019 Duration: 37minThursday, January 24, 2019 Jeff Golden (Harvard Medical School) talks about dichotomies in mitochondrial dynamics observed in the migration of cortical neurons and interneurons in early development and neuronal patterning. Duration: 42 minutes Discussants:(in alphabetical order) Jenny Hsieh (Semmes Foundation Chair, UTSA) Asif Maroof (Asst Prof, UTSA) Salma Quraishi (Res Asst Prof, UTSA) Todd Troyer (Assoc Prof, UTSA Charles Wilson (Ewing Halsell Chair, UTSA) acknowledgement: JM Tepper for original music.
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Episode 191 -- Sarah C. Woolley PhD
17/01/2019 Duration: 35minThursday, January 17, 2019 Sarah C. Woolley (McGill) discusses her work on the neural basis of song preference in female songbirds. She describes experiments that manipulate in vivo dopaminergic pathways in the auditory system to change song preference. Duration: 35 minutes Discussants:(in alphabetical order) Salma Quraishi (Res Asst Prof, UTSA) Todd Troyer (Assoc. Prof, UTSA) Charles Wilson (Ewing Halsell Chair, UTSA) acknowledgement: JM Tepper for original music.
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Episode 190 -- Maurice Chacron PhD
01/11/2018 Duration: 41minThursday, November 1, 2018 Maurice Chacron (McGill) talks about optimal coding mechanisms invoked in sensory perception of the electric fish. He discusses his “awake behaving” model, through which he has deciphered that feedback from descending inputs tunes sensory responses through a “temporal whitening” function which may be conserved across species. Duration: 42 minutes Discussants:(in alphabetical order) Salma Quraishi (Research Asst Prof, UTSA) Fidel Santamaria (Assoc Prof, UTSA) Charles Wilson (Ewing Halsell Chair, UTSA) acknowledgement: JM Tepper for original music.
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Episode 189 -- Josh Dudman PhD
25/10/2018 Duration: 42minThursday, October 25, 2018 Josh Dudman (HHMI Janelia) discusses his model of how the basal ganglia shape performance based on prior experience by controlling the gain of movement kinematics. The group considers this history-dependent gain computation model alongside the traditional action selection model. Duration: 43 minutes Discussants:(in alphabetical order) Juan Morales (PhD student, UTSA) Salma Quraishi (Research Asst Prof, UTSA) Denard Simmons (Postdoc, UTSA) Todd Troyer (Assoc Prof, UTSA) Matt Wanat (Asst Prof, UTSA) Charles Wilson (Ewing Halsell Chair, UTSA) acknowledgement: JM Tepper for original music.
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Episode 188 -- Marisela Morales PhD
04/10/2018 Duration: 43minThursday, October 4, 2018 Marisela Morales (NIDA) discusses the anatomical and functional complexity of VTA projections, including the distinctive synaptic architecture of dual GABAergic glutamatergic synapses in the habenula, and the indispensability of electron microscopy for understanding the diversity of brain circuits. Duration: 43 minutes Discussants:(in alphabetical order) Carlos Paladini (Professor, UTSA) Salma Quraishi (Research Asst Prof, UTSA) Todd Troyer (Assoc Prof, UTSA) Matt Wanat (Asst Prof, UTSA) Charles Wilson (Ewing Halsell Chair, UTSA) acknowledgement: JM Tepper for original music.