TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
50Total items
30ePosters
20Seminars

Latest

SeminarNeuroscience

Decoding stress vulnerability

Stamatina Tzanoulinou
University of Lausanne, Faculty of Biology and Medicine, Department of Biomedical Sciences
Feb 20, 2026

Although stress can be considered as an ongoing process that helps an organism to cope with present and future challenges, when it is too intense or uncontrollable, it can lead to adverse consequences for physical and mental health. Social stress specifically, is a highly prevalent traumatic experience, present in multiple contexts, such as war, bullying and interpersonal violence, and it has been linked with increased risk for major depression and anxiety disorders. Nevertheless, not all individuals exposed to strong stressful events develop psychopathology, with the mechanisms of resilience and vulnerability being still under investigation. During this talk, I will identify key gaps in our knowledge about stress vulnerability and I will present our recent data from our contextual fear learning protocol based on social defeat stress in mice.

SeminarNeuroscience

Rejuvenating the Alzheimer’s brain: Challenges & Opportunities

Salta Evgenia
Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience, Royal Dutch Academy of Science
May 9, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

Unlocking the Secrets of Microglia in Neurodegenerative diseases: Mechanisms of resilience to AD pathologies

Ghazaleh Eskandari-Sedighi
UC Irvince
May 1, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

How Intermittent Bioenergetic Challenges Enhance Brain and Body Health

Mark Mattson
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Sep 26, 2023

Humans and other animals evolved in habitats fraught with a range of environmental challenges to their bodies and brains. Accordingly, cells and organ systems possess adaptive stress-responsive signaling pathways that enable them to not only withstand environmental challenges, but also to prepare for future challenges and function more efficiently. These phylogenetically conserved processes are the foundation of the hormesis principle in which repeated exposures to low to moderate amounts of an environmental challenge improve cellular and organismal fitness. Here I describe cellular and molecular mechanisms by which cells in the brain and body respond to intermittent fasting and exercise in ways that enhance performance and counteract aging and disease processes. Switching back and forth between adaptive stress response (during fasting and exercise) and growth and plasticity (eating, resting, sleeping) modes enhances the performance and resilience of various organ systems. While pharmacological interventions that engage a particular hormetic mechanism are being developed, it seems unlikely that any will prove superior to fasting and exercise.

SeminarNeuroscience

From the guts to the brain through adaptive immunity in the prevention of Alzheimer’ disease

Pasinetti Giulio Maria
Mount Sinai Health System, Department of Neurology, New York, NY, USA / Basic and Biomedical Research and Training Program, Geriatric Research and Clinical Center (GRECC)
Sep 26, 2023

Dr. Pasinetti is the Saunders Family Chair and Professor of Neurology at Icahn School of medicine at Mount Sinai, New York. His studies allowed him to develop novel therapeutic approaches through investigation of preventable risk factors including mood disorders in the promotion of resilience against neurodegenerative disorder. In his presentation Dr. Pasinetti will discuss novel concepts about the gut-brain axis in mechanisms associated to peripheral adaptive immunity as therapeutic targets to mitigate the onset and the progression of Alzheimer’s disease and other form of dementia.

SeminarNeuroscience

The Picower Institute Spring 2023 Symposium "Environmental and Social Determinants of Child Mental Health

Cecile Richards (Keynote - fmr President of Planned Parenthood), Gregory Bratman, PhD, Annie Belcourt, PhD, Paul Dworkin, MD, Byungkook Lim, PhD, Sarah Milligan-Toffler, Catherine Jensen Peña, PhD, Ravi Raju, MD. PhD, Robert Sege, MD, PhD, Marc Weisskopf, PhD, ScD, Nsedu Obot Witherspoon, MPH
May 11, 2023

Studies show that abuse, neglect or trauma during childhood can lead to lifelong struggles including with mental health. Fortunately research also indicates that solutions and interventions at various stages of life can be developed to help. But even among people who remain resilient or do not experience acute stresses, a lack of opportunity early in life due to poverty or systemic racism can still constrain their ability to realize their full potential. In what ways are health and other outcomes affected by early life difficulty? What can individuals and institutions do to enhance opportunity?" "This daylong event will feature talks by neuroscientists, policy experts, physicians, educators and activists as they discuss how our experiences and biology work together to affect how our minds develop and what can be accomplished in helping people overcome early disadvantages.

SeminarNeuroscience

Early life adversity, inflammation, and depression-onset: Results from the Teen Resilience Project

Kate Ryan Kuhlman
University of California
Nov 15, 2022

My research focuses broadly on the lifelong health disparities associated with experiences of adversity early in life. In this talk I will present the results of our recently completed Teen Resilience Project, a prospective and longitudinal study of first onset depression during adolescence. First, I will present the results on whether and how inflammatory processes may be shaped by early life adversity. Second, I will present data on the role of stress-induced inflammation in reward-related psychological processes. Finally, I will discuss the biobehavioral predictors of first-onset depression in this sample.

SeminarNeuroscience

Biopsychosocial pathways in dementia inequalities

Laura Zahodne
Psychology, University of Michigan
Mar 21, 2022

In the United States, racial/ethnic inequalities in Alzheimer's disease and related dementias persist even after controlling for socioeconomic factors and physical health. These persistent and unexplained disparities suggest: (1) there are unrecognized dementia risk factors that are socially patterned and/or (2) known dementia risk factors exhibit differential impact across social groups. Pursuing these research directions with data from multiple longitudinal studies of brain and cognitive aging has revealed several challenges to the study of late-life health inequalities, highlighted evidence for both risk and resilience within marginalized communities, and inspired new data collection efforts to advance the field.

SeminarNeuroscience

Growing Up in Academia with Onur Güntürkün

Onur Güntürkün
Professor in Biopsychology, Psychology Department, Ruhr-Universität Bochum
Feb 28, 2022

There are stories of resilience, passion, braveness and determination and the one of Onur Güntürkün. He has managed to beat the odds in so many ways, from moving countries, surviving the polio, establishing a new field against the advice of a senior professor and much more, all the while keeping a positive spirit, an endless curiosity and the braveness to keep going despite adversities. Join me on Monday, February 28, 2022, 6 p.m. (CET) for a Growing Up in Academia with Onur Güntürkün.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

NMC4 Short Talk: Resilience through diversity: Loss of neuronal heterogeneity in epileptogenic human tissue impairs network resilience to sudden changes in synchrony

Scott Rich
Kremibl Brain Institute
Dec 1, 2021

A myriad of pathological changes associated with epilepsy, including the loss of specific cell types, improper expression of individual ion channels, and synaptic sprouting, can be recast as decreases in cell and circuit heterogeneity. In recent experimental work, we demonstrated that biophysical diversity is a key characteristic of human cortical pyramidal cells, and past theoretical work has shown that neuronal heterogeneity improves a neural circuit’s ability to encode information. Viewed alongside the fact that seizure is an information-poor brain state, these findings motivate the hypothesis that epileptogenesis can be recontextualized as a process where reduction in cellular heterogeneity renders neural circuits less resilient to seizure onset. By comparing whole-cell patch clamp recordings from layer 5 (L5) human cortical pyramidal neurons from epileptogenic and non-epileptogenic tissue, we present the first direct experimental evidence that a significant reduction in neural heterogeneity accompanies epilepsy. We directly implement experimentally-obtained heterogeneity levels in cortical excitatory-inhibitory (E-I) stochastic spiking network models. Low heterogeneity networks display unique dynamics typified by a sudden transition into a hyper-active and synchronous state paralleling ictogenesis. Mean-field analysis reveals a distinct mathematical structure in these networks distinguished by multi-stability. Furthermore, the mathematically characterized linearizing effect of heterogeneity on input-output response functions explains the counter-intuitive experimentally observed reduction in single-cell excitability in epileptogenic neurons. This joint experimental, computational, and mathematical study showcases that decreased neuronal heterogeneity exists in epileptogenic human cortical tissue, that this difference yields dynamical changes in neural networks paralleling ictogenesis, and that there is a fundamental explanation for these dynamics based in mathematically characterized effects of heterogeneity. These interdisciplinary results provide convincing evidence that biophysical diversity imbues neural circuits with resilience to seizure and a new lens through which to view epilepsy, the most common serious neurological disorder in the world, that could reveal new targets for clinical treatment.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Mature retina is resilient to partial photoreceptor loss

Felice Dunn
UCSF
Nov 8, 2021

I will discuss recent findings from our lab about the effects of partial photoreceptor loss on the retinal circuit’s structure and function. I will relate this work to the question of whether the visual system can distinguish between changes in light level and photoreceptor number.

SeminarNeuroscience

The Picower Institute Spring 2021 Symposium: Early Life Stress & Mental Health

Mariana Arcaya, Nadine Burke Harris, Geoffrey Canada, Gloria Choi, Bryan Stevenson, Jose Antonio Vargas
May 10, 2021

Though studies show that abuse, neglect or trauma during childhood can lead to lifelong lifelong struggles including in mental health, research also indicates that solutions and interventions at various stages of life can be developed to help. And while many people manage to remain resilient, a lack of opportunity early in life, including because of poverty and systemic racism, can constrain their ability to realize their full potential. In what ways are health and other outcomes affected? How can systems instead restore opportunity? "The Picower Institute for Learning and Memory's biennial spring symposium, 'Early Life Stress & Mental Health,' will examine these issues. The daylong event will feature talks by neuroscientists, policy experts, physicians, educators and activists as they discuss how our experiences and biology work together to affect how our minds develop and what can be accomplished in helping people overcome early disadvantages.

SeminarNeuroscience

The Impact of Racism-related Stress on Neurobiological Systems in Black Americans”

Negar Fani
Emory University
Apr 9, 2021

Black Americans experience diverse racism-related stressors throughout the lifespan. Disproportionately high trauma exposure, economic disadvantage, explicit racism and inequitable treatment are stressors faced by many Black Americans. These experiences have a cumulative negative impact on psychological and physical health. However, little is understood about how experiences of racism, such as discrimination, can mediate health outcomes via their effects on neurobiology. I will present clinical, behavioral, physiological and neurobiological data from Black American participants in the Grady Trauma Project, a longstanding study of trauma conducted in inner-city Atlanta. These data will be discussed in the context of both risk and resilience/adaptation perspectives. Finally, recommendations for future clinical neuroscience research and targets for intervention in marginalized populations will be discussed.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Advancing Communication Science to Address Tobacco-Related Health Disparities

Andy Tan
University of Pennsylvania
Feb 19, 2021

Tobacco use is the leading cause of preventable deaths and illnesses in the United States and globally. Sexual, racial, ethnic minorities, young adults, and populations from rural areas and lower socioeconomic positions are disproportionately impacted by the health harms of tobacco use and exposure to secondhand smoke. In this talk, Andy Tan, Associate Professor at the Annenberg School for Communication, will provide an overview of integrating communication science to address inequalities in health information exposure, message processing, and behavioral effects associated with pro- and anti-tobacco communications among vulnerable populations. He will present findings from recent work including examining inequities in tobacco advertising exposure among young adult sexual minorities, experiences of smoking risk and protective factors among transgender and gender expansive adults, and development of a culturally responsive communication intervention to increase resilience against tobacco marketing influences and reduce smoking among young adult LGB women.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Social deprivation, coping and drugs: a bad cocktail in the COVID-19 era: evidence from preclinical studies

David Belin
Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge
Dec 8, 2020

The factors that underlie an individual’s vulnerability to switch from controlled, recreational drug use to addiction are not well understood. I will discuss the evidence in rats that in individuals housed in enriched conditions, the experience of drugs in the relative social and sensory impoverishment of the drug taking context, and the associated change in behavioural traits of resilience to addiction, exacerbate the vulnerability to develop compulsive drug intake. I will further discuss the importance of the acquisition of alcohol drinking as a mechanism to cope with distress as a factor of exacerbated vulnerability to develop compulsive alcohol intake. Together these results demonstrate that experiential factors in the drug taking context, which can be substantially driven by social isolation, shape the vulnerability to addiction.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Logical Neural Networks

Ndivhuwo Makondo
IBM Research-Africa & the University of Witwatersrand
Oct 21, 2020

The work to be presented in this talk proposes a novel framework seamlessly providing key properties of both neural nets (learning) and symbolic logic (knowledge and reasoning). Every neuron has a meaning as a component of a formula in a weighted real-valued logic, yielding a highly interpretable disentangled representation. Inference is omnidirectional rather than focused on predefined target variables, and corresponds to logical reasoning, including classical first-order logic theorem proving as a special case. The model is end-to-end differentiable, and learning minimizes a novel loss function capturing logical contradiction, yielding resilience to inconsistent knowledge. It also enables the open-world assumption by maintaining bounds on truth values which can have probabilistic semantics, yielding resilience to incomplete knowledge.

SeminarNeuroscience

Differential Resilience of Neurons and Networks with Similar Behavior to Perturbation

Eve Marder
Brandeis University
Oct 14, 2020

Both computational and experimental results in single neurons and small networks demonstrate that very similar network function can result from quite disparate sets of neuronal and network parameters. Using the crustacean stomatogastric nervous system, we study the influence of these differences in underlying structure on differential resilience of individuals to a variety of environmental perturbations, including changes in temperature, pH, potassium concentration and neuromodulation. We show that neurons with many different kinds of ion channels can smoothly move through different mechanisms in generating their activity patterns, thus extending their dynamic range.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Differential Resilience of Neurons and Networks with Similar Behavior to Perturbation. (Simultaneous translation to Spanish)

Eve Marder, Ph.D.
Victor and Gwendolyn Beinfield Professor of Neuroscience, Biology Dept and Volen Center, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA, USA
Sep 28, 2020

Both computational and experimental results in single neurons and small networks demonstrate that very similar network function can result from quite disparate sets of neuronal and network parameters. Using the crustacean stomatogastric nervous system, we study the influence of these differences in underlying structure on differential resilience of individuals to a variety of environmental perturbations, including changes in temperature, pH, potassium concentration and neuromodulation. We show that neurons with many different kinds of ion channels can smoothly move through different mechanisms in generating their activity patterns, thus extending their dynamic range. The talk will be simultaneously translated to spanish by the interpreter Liliana Viera, MSc. Los resultados tanto computacionales como experimentales en neuronas individuales y redes pequeñas demuestran que funcionamientos de redes muy similares pueden pueden resultar de conjuntos bastante dispares de parámetros neuronales y de las redes. Utilizando el sistema nervioso estomatogástrico de los crustáceos, estudiamos la influencia de estas diferencias en la estructura subyacente en la resistencia diferencial de los individuos a una variedad de perturbaciones ambientales, incluidos los cambios de temperatura, pH, concentración de potasio y neuromodulación. Mostramos que neuronas con muchos tipos diferentes de canales iónicos pueden moverse suavemente a través de diferentes mecanismos para generar sus patrones de actividad, extendiendo así su rango dinámico. La conferencia será traducida simultáneamente al español por la intérprete Liliana Viera MSc.

SeminarNeuroscience

Stress and the developing brain - molecular mechanisms of risk and resilience

Elisabeth Binder
Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry
Sep 22, 2020
SeminarNeuroscience

Adult Neurogenesis, Enriched Environments, and the Neurobiology of Early Life-style Dependent Resilience

Gerd Kempermann
Center for Regenerative Therapies Dresden
Jul 9, 2020
ePosterNeuroscience

Vascular and blood-brain barrier-related changes underlie stress responses and resilience in female mice and depression in human tissue

Laurence Dion-Albert, Alice Cadoret, Ellen Doney, Fernanda N. Kaufmann, Katarzyna A. Dudek, Béatrice Daigle, Lyonna F. Parise, Flurin Cathomas, Nalia Samba, Nathalie Hudson, Manon Lebel, Signature Consortium, Matthew Campbell, Gustavo Turecki, Naguib Mechawar, Caroline Ménard
ePosterNeuroscience

Oxidative balance alterations in the rat ventral hippocampus are associated to the vulnerability and resilience to stress-induced anhedonia

Vittoria Spero, Sabrina D'Amelio, Eleonora Buscemi, Mariusz Papp, Raffaella Molteni
ePosterNeuroscience

A maternal diet enriched with African walnuts confers neurodevelopmental resilience to MnCl2-induced neurotoxic cascades in rats

Tolulope Arogundade, Ismail Gbadamosi, Olayemi Olajide, Bernard Enaibe

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Modeling pain sensitivity in healthy individuals: The influence of emotional traits and resilience

Ombretta Caspani, Niko Möller-Grell, Genser Bernd, Jan Vollert, Finnerup Nanna, Zahra Nochi, Hatice Tankisi, Andrea Truini, Caterina Leone, Andre Mouraux, Lieve Filbrich, Louisien Lebrun, Vishvarani Wanigasekera, Sophie Clarke, Irene Tracey, Luis Garcia-Larrea, Rolf-Detlef Treede

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Resilience to sensory uncertainty in the primary visual cortex

Hugo Ladret, Nelson Cortes, Lamyae Ikan, Frederic Chavane, Christian Casanova, Laurent Perrinet

COSYNE 2023

ePosterNeuroscience

Anxiety levels after vicarious social defeat stress are associated with vulnerability and resilience to cocaine-induced conditioned place preference in female mice

Maria A. Aguilar, Maria A. Martínez-Caballero, Claudia Calpe-López, Maria P. García-Pardo
ePosterNeuroscience

Behavioural and neuropathological characterization of a rat model of resilience in the field of Alzheimer’s Disease

Marianne Léger, Lucas Gephine, Stacy Largillière, Gérald Née, Sophie Corvaisier, Thomas Freret
ePosterNeuroscience

Behavioural Markers of Resilience and Susceptibility in a Neurodevelopmental Two-Hit Model of Schizophrenia

Jarred M. Lorusso, Rebecca Woods, Mike Harte, Reinmar Hager, Jocelyn D. Glazier
ePosterNeuroscience

Does physical exercise offer resilience in a social defeat stress mouse model?

Julie H. Reis, Edna Soares, Carlos Fontes-Ribeiro, Frederico C. Pereira
ePosterNeuroscience

Fear circuit-based neurobehavioral signatures and transcriptional networks promoting resilience to chronic social stress

Sarah Ayash, Thomas Lingner, Soojin Ryu, Raffael Kalisch, Ulrich Schmitt, Marianne Müller
ePosterNeuroscience

Functional protection in J20/VLW mice: a model of cognitive resilience to Alzheimer’s disease

Eva Dávila-Bouziguet, Arnau Casòliba-Melich, Georgina Targa-Fabra, Lorena Galera-López, Andrés Ozaita, Rafael Maldonado, Jesús Ávila, Jose M. Delgado-García, Agnès Gruart, Eduardo Soriano, Marta Pascual
ePosterNeuroscience

GABAergic modulation of cortical excitability and resilience to seizures

Gregory Lepeu, Kristina Slabeva, Antoine R. Adamantidis, Maxime O. Baud
ePosterNeuroscience

High Resilience of Cerebellum Across the Life-Span: Imaging Genomics Leads for identifying and validating Neuroprotective Drug Discovery

Brijesh Baghel, Anindita Bhattacharjee, Pratik Purohit, Bindu Kumari, Prasun K. Roy
ePosterNeuroscience

Hypothalamic pacemaking mechanism that drives acclimation-induced heat resilience

Wojciech Ambroziak, Sara Nencini, Joerg Pohle, Kristina Zuza, Jan Siemens
ePosterNeuroscience

Region-specific CREB function regulates distinct forms of regret associated with resilience versus susceptibility to chronic stress

Romain Durand-de Cuttoli, Freddyson M. Martinez-Rivera, Long Li, Angelica M. Minier-Toribio, Flurin Cathomas, Leanne Holt, Farzana Yasmin, Salma O. Elhassa, Sanjana Ahmed, Jasmine F. Shaikh, Scott J. Russo, Eric Nestler, Brian M. Sweis
ePosterNeuroscience

The role of locus coeruleus-noradrenergic system in resilience following child abuse

Déa Slavova, Stéphanie De Gois, Bruno Giros, Elsa Isingrini
ePosterNeuroscience

The role of Rev-ERBα circadian clock gene in stress resilience and development of depression-like behaviour

David Sarrazin, Carole Marchese, Tsvetan Serchov
ePosterNeuroscience

Stress resilience in SCA3: study of depression and cognitive comorbidities in a mouse model

Joana Sofia Correia, Daniela Monteiro-Fernandes, Sara Guerreiro, Bruna Ferreira-Lomba, Daniela Cunha-Garcia, Patrícia Gomes, Sara Duarte-Silva, Patrícia Maciel
ePosterNeuroscience

The VPAC2 Receptor Mediates Resilience to Stress in Female, but Not Male Mice

Briana K. Chen, Abhishek Shah, Grace Shin, Holly C. Hunsberger, Christine A. Denny
ePosterNeuroscience

Beta-caryophyllene (BCP) and stress resilience: Behavioral and molecular insights in depression-related disorders

Basak Gündüz, Constance Vennin, Alex Brown, Bilal Akhtar, Beat Lutz

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Central role of the habenulo-interpeduncular system in the neurodevelopmental basis of susceptibility and resilience to anxiety

Fabien D'Autréaux, Malalaniaina Rakotobe, Niels Fjerdingstad, Nuria Ruiz Reig, Thomas Lamonerie

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Effects of early handling and sex on cognitive resilience in APP/PS1 mice

Maria Carrigan, Jeniffer Sanguino-Gómez, Wiesje M. van der Flier, Paul J. Lucassen, Rik Ossenkoppele, Harm J. Krugers

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

The epicenter of trauma resilience?

Carolina Temporão, Angelos Didachos, Sophie Brouwer, Lisa Louws, Rens Hoekstra, Kubra Gulmez-Karaca, Judith Homberg, Johnannes Graff, Marloes Henckens

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Home tobacco smoke exposure and family resilience scores among U.S. children

Ashley Merianos, Laura Nabors, Kayleigh Gregory, Madelyn Hill, E. Melinda Mahabee-Gittens

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Increased intestinal permeability and unexpected resilience to DSS colitis-induced sickness behaviour in the Neuroligin-3R451C mouse model of autism

Samantha Matta, Chalystha Lee, Vic Lin, Yuansong Li, Joshua Williams, Suzanne Hosie, Mohammed Alamoudi, Anya Shindler, Jennifer Wood, Peter Crack, Ashley Franks, Elisa Hill

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

LOU/c/Jall rat as a resilience model in the context of sporadic Alzheimer’s disease induced by streptozotocin

Lucas Gephine, Emna Marouane, Stacy Largillière, Sophie Corvaisier, Thomas Freret, Marianne Leger

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Metabolic neural constraints provide resilience to noise in feed-forward networks

Ivan Bulygin, Chaitanya Chintaluri, Tim P. Vogels

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Resilience to changes in hippocampal excitatory synapses contribute to cognitively healthy Tg2576 mice

María de los Llanos Martínez Poyato, Carolina Aguado, Sara Badesso, José Martínez-Hernández, Alejandro Martín-Belmonte, Rocío Alfaro-Ruiz, Miriam Fernández, Ana Esther Moreno-Martínez, Mar Cuadrado-Tejedor, Ana García-Osta, Rafael Luján

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Unraveling the interplay between psychological resilience, intrinsic functional connectivity and processing speed in healthy ageing

Menglu Chen, Tatia M.C Lee

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Unveiling molecular signatures in resilience following child abuse: Noradrenergic cells transcriptomics in human post-mortem tissues

Déa Slavova, Maria Antonietta Davoli, Céline Keime, Erika Vigneault, Corina Nagy, Naguib Mechawar, Bruno Giros, Elsa Isingrini

FENS Forum 2024

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