Events
Open full Events browserLoading...
Live and recorded talks from the researchers shaping this domain.
Restoring Sight to the Blind: Effects of Structural and Functional Plasticity
Visual restoration after decades of blindness is now becoming possible by means of retinal and cortical prostheses, as well as emerging stem cell and gene therapeutic approaches. After restoring visual perception, however, a key question remains. Are there optimal means and methods for retraining the visual cortex to process visual inputs, and for learning or relearning to “see”? Up to this point, it has been largely assumed that if the sensory loss is visual, then the rehabilitation focus should also be primarily visual. However, the other senses play a key role in visual rehabilitation due to the plastic repurposing of visual cortex during blindness by audition and somatosensation, and also to the reintegration of restored vision with the other senses. I will present multisensory neuroimaging results, cortical thickness changes, as well as behavioral outcomes for patients with Retinitis Pigmentosa (RP), which causes blindness by destroying photoreceptors in the retina. These patients have had their vision partially restored by the implantation of a retinal prosthesis, which electrically stimulates still viable retinal ganglion cells in the eye. Our multisensory and structural neuroimaging and behavioral results suggest a new, holistic concept of visual rehabilitation that leverages rather than neglects audition, somatosensation, and other sensory modalities.
Speaker
Noelle Stiles • Rutgers University
Scheduled for
May 21, 2025, 4:00 PM
Timezone
GMT+1
Resonancia Magnética y Detección Remota: No se Necesita Estar tan Cerca”
La resonancia magnética nuclear está basada en el fenómeno del magnetismo nuclear que más aplicaciones ha encontrado para el estudio de enfermedades humanas. Usualmente la señal de RM es recibida y transmitida a distancias cercanas al objeto del que se quiere obtener una imagen. Otra alternativa es emitir y recibir la misma señal de manera remota haciendo uso de guías de onda. Este enfoque tiene la ventaja que se puede aplicar a altos campos magnéticos, la absorción de energía es menor, además es posible cubrir mayores regiones de interés y comodidad para el paciente. Por otro lado, sufre de baja calidad de imagen en algunos casos. En esta ocasión hablaremos de nuestra experiencia haciendo uso de este enfoque empleando una guía de ondas abierta y metamateriales tanto para sistemas clínicos como preclínicos de IRM.
Speaker
Alfredo Rodriguez • Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana Itzapalapa
Scheduled for
Mar 26, 2025, 10:00 AM
Timezone
GMT-3
Analyzing Network-Level Brain Processing and Plasticity Using Molecular Neuroimaging
Behavior and cognition depend on the integrated action of neural structures and populations distributed throughout the brain. We recently developed a set of molecular imaging tools that enable multiregional processing and plasticity in neural networks to be studied at a brain-wide scale in rodents and nonhuman primates. Here we will describe how a novel genetically encoded activity reporter enables information flow in virally labeled neural circuitry to be monitored by fMRI. Using the reporter to perform functional imaging of synaptically defined neural populations in the rat somatosensory system, we show how activity is transformed within brain regions to yield characteristics specific to distinct output projections. We also show how this approach enables regional activity to be modeled in terms of inputs, in a paradigm that we are extending to address circuit-level origins of functional specialization in marmoset brains. In the second part of the talk, we will discuss how another genetic tool for MRI enables systematic studies of the relationship between anatomical and functional connectivity in the mouse brain. We show that variations in physical and functional connectivity can be dissociated both across individual subjects and over experience. We also use the tool to examine brain-wide relationships between plasticity and activity during an opioid treatment. This work demonstrates the possibility of studying diverse brain-wide processing phenomena using molecular neuroimaging.
Speaker
Alan Jasanoff • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Scheduled for
Jan 27, 2025, 10:00 AM
Timezone
PDT
Sometimes more is not better: The case of medical imaging
En el diagnóstico médico por imágenes muchas veces los desarrollos técnicos se han concentrado en mejorar la calidad de las imágenes en términos de resolución espacial y/o temporal, lo cual muchas veces ha incrementado considerablemente los costos de estas prestaciones. Sin embargo, mejor resolución espacial y/o temporal de las imágenes médicas, no se traducen necesariamente en mejores diagnósticos o en diagnósticos más tempranos, y en algunos casos, nuevas capacidades diagnósticas no han demostrado un impacto en reducir la mortalidad asociada a las patologías. En esta presentación discutiremos como el impacto de las nuevas tecnologías en salud debe ser medido en términos del resultado clínico del paciente o la población afectada más que en parámetros asociados a la "calidad" de las imágenes.
Speaker
Marcelo Andia • Profesor Asosiado
Scheduled for
Nov 19, 2024, 1:00 PM
Timezone
GMT-3
Localisation of Seizure Onset Zone in Epilepsy Using Time Series Analysis of Intracranial Data
There are over 30 million people with drug-resistant epilepsy worldwide. When neuroimaging and non-invasive neural recordings fail to localise seizure onset zones (SOZ), intracranial recordings become the best chance for localisation and seizure-freedom in those patients. However, intracranial neural activities remain hard to visually discriminate across recording channels, which limits the success of intracranial visual investigations. In this presentation, I present methods which quantify intracranial neural time series and combine them with explainable machine learning algorithms to localise the SOZ in the epileptic brain. I present the potentials and limitations of our methods in the localisation of SOZ in epilepsy providing insights for future research in this area.
Speaker
Hamid Karimi-Rouzbahani • The University of Queensland
Scheduled for
Oct 10, 2024, 12:15 PM
Timezone
GMT+11
Why age-related macular degeneration is a mathematically tractable disease
Among all prevalent diseases with a central neurodegeneration, AMD can be considered the most promising in terms of prevention and early intervention, due to several factors surrounding the neural geometry of the foveal singularity. • Steep gradients of cell density, deployed in a radially symmetric fashion, can be modeled with a difference of Gaussian curves. • These steep gradients give rise to huge, spatially aligned biologic effects, summarized as the Center of Cone Resilience, Surround of Rod Vulnerability. • Widely used clinical imaging technology provides cellular and subcellular level information. • Data are now available at all timelines: clinical, lifespan, evolutionary • Snapshots are available from tissues (histology, analytic chemistry, gene expression) • A viable biogenesis model exists for drusen, the largest population-level intraocular risk factor for progression. • The biogenesis model shares molecular commonality with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, for which there has been decades of public health success. • Animal and cell model systems are emerging to test these ideas.
Speaker
Christine Curcio • The University of Alabama at Birmingham Heersink School of Medicine
Scheduled for
Aug 18, 2024, 3:00 PM
Timezone
GMT
Toward globally accessible neuroimaging: Building the OSI2ONE MRI Scanner in Paraguay
The Open Source Imaging Initiative has recently released a fully open source low field MRI scanner called the OSI2ONE. We are currently building this system at the Universidad Paraguayo Alemana in Asuncion, Paraguay for a neuroimaging project at a clinic in Bolivia. I will discuss the process of construction, important considerations before you build, and future work planned with this device.
Speaker
Joshua Harper • Professor of Engineering
Scheduled for
Jun 17, 2024, 1:30 PM
Timezone
GMT-3
Epileptic micronetworks and their clinical relevance
A core aspect of clinical epileptology revolves around relating epileptic field potentials to underlying neural sources (e.g. an “epileptogenic focus”). Yet still, how neural population activity relates to epileptic field potentials and ultimately clinical phenomenology, remains far from being understood. After a brief overview on this topic, this seminar will focus on unpublished work, with an emphasis on seizure-related focal spreading depression. The presented results will include hippocampal and neocortical chronic in vivo two-photon population imaging and local field potential recordings of epileptic micronetworks in mice, in the context of viral encephalitis or optogenetic stimulation. The findings are corroborated by invasive depth electrode recordings (macroelectrodes and BF microwires) in epilepsy patients during pre-surgical evaluation. The presented work carries general implications for clinical epileptology, and basic epilepsy research.
Speaker
Michael Wenzel • Bonn University
Scheduled for
Mar 12, 2024, 6:00 PM
Timezone
GMT+1
Blood-brain barrier dysfunction in epilepsy: Time for translation
The neurovascular unit (NVU) consists of cerebral blood vessels, neurons, astrocytes, microglia, and pericytes. It plays a vital role in regulating blood flow and ensuring the proper functioning of neural circuits. Among other, this is made possible by the blood-brain barrier (BBB), which acts as both a physical and functional barrier. Previous studies have shown that dysfunction of the BBB is common in most neurological disorders and is associated with neural dysfunction. Our studies have demonstrated that BBB dysfunction results in the transformation of astrocytes through transforming growth factor beta (TGFβ) signaling. This leads to activation of the innate neuroinflammatory system, changes in the extracellular matrix, and pathological plasticity. These changes ultimately result in dysfunction of the cortical circuit, lower seizure threshold, and spontaneous seizures. Blocking TGFβ signaling and its associated pro-inflammatory pathway can prevent this cascade of events, reduces neuroinflammation, repairs BBB dysfunction, and prevents post-injury epilepsy, as shown in experimental rodents. To further understand and assess BBB integrity in human epilepsy, we developed a novel imaging technique that quantitatively measures BBB permeability. Our findings have confirmed that BBB dysfunction is common in patients with drug-resistant epilepsy and can assist in identifying the ictal-onset zone prior to surgery. Current clinical studies are ongoing to explore the potential of targeting BBB dysfunction as a novel treatment approach and investigate its role in drug resistance, the spread of seizures, and comorbidities associated with epilepsy.
Speaker
Alon Friedman • Dalhousie University
Scheduled for
Feb 27, 2024, 6:00 PM
Timezone
GMT+1
Trends in NeuroAI - Meta's MEG-to-image reconstruction
Trends in NeuroAI is a reading group hosted by the MedARC Neuroimaging & AI lab (https://medarc.ai/fmri). Title: Brain-optimized inference improves reconstructions of fMRI brain activity Abstract: The release of large datasets and developments in AI have led to dramatic improvements in decoding methods that reconstruct seen images from human brain activity. We evaluate the prospect of further improving recent decoding methods by optimizing for consistency between reconstructions and brain activity during inference. We sample seed reconstructions from a base decoding method, then iteratively refine these reconstructions using a brain-optimized encoding model that maps images to brain activity. At each iteration, we sample a small library of images from an image distribution (a diffusion model) conditioned on a seed reconstruction from the previous iteration. We select those that best approximate the measured brain activity when passed through our encoding model, and use these images for structural guidance during the generation of the small library in the next iteration. We reduce the stochasticity of the image distribution at each iteration, and stop when a criterion on the "width" of the image distribution is met. We show that when this process is applied to recent decoding methods, it outperforms the base decoding method as measured by human raters, a variety of image feature metrics, and alignment to brain activity. These results demonstrate that reconstruction quality can be significantly improved by explicitly aligning decoding distributions to brain activity distributions, even when the seed reconstruction is output from a state-of-the-art decoding algorithm. Interestingly, the rate of refinement varies systematically across visual cortex, with earlier visual areas generally converging more slowly and preferring narrower image distributions, relative to higher-level brain areas. Brain-optimized inference thus offers a succinct and novel method for improving reconstructions and exploring the diversity of representations across visual brain areas. Speaker: Reese Kneeland is a Ph.D. student at the University of Minnesota working in the Naselaris lab. Paper link: https://arxiv.org/abs/2312.07705
Speaker
Reese Kneeland
Scheduled for
Jan 4, 2024, 11:00 AM
Timezone
EDT
Imaging the subcortex; Microstructural and connectivity correlates of outcome variability in functional neurosurgery for movement disorders
We are very much looking forward to host Francisca Ferreira and Birte Forstmann on December 14th, 2023, at noon ET / 6PM CET. Francisca Ferreira is a PhD student and Neurosurgery trainee at the University College of London Queen Square Institute of Neurology and a Royal College of Surgeons “Emerging Leaders” program laureate. Her presentation title will be: “Microstructural and connectivity correlates of outcome variability in functional neurosurgery for movement disorders”. Birte Forstmann, PhD, is the Director of the Amsterdam Brain and Cognition Center, a Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience at the University of Amsterdam, and a Professor by Special Appointment of Neuroscientific Testing of Psychological Models at the University of Leiden. Besides her scientific presentation (“Imaging the human subcortex”), she will give us a glimpse at the “Person behind the science”. You can register via talks.stimulatingbrains.org to receive the (free) Zoom link!
Speaker
Birte Forstmann, PhD & Francisca Ferreira, PhD • University of Amsterdam, Netherlands / University College London, UK
Scheduled for
Dec 13, 2023, 6:00 PM
Timezone
GMT+1
Trends in NeuroAI - SwiFT: Swin 4D fMRI Transformer
Trends in NeuroAI is a reading group hosted by the MedARC Neuroimaging & AI lab (https://medarc.ai/fmri). Title: SwiFT: Swin 4D fMRI Transformer Abstract: Modeling spatiotemporal brain dynamics from high-dimensional data, such as functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI), is a formidable task in neuroscience. Existing approaches for fMRI analysis utilize hand-crafted features, but the process of feature extraction risks losing essential information in fMRI scans. To address this challenge, we present SwiFT (Swin 4D fMRI Transformer), a Swin Transformer architecture that can learn brain dynamics directly from fMRI volumes in a memory and computation-efficient manner. SwiFT achieves this by implementing a 4D window multi-head self-attention mechanism and absolute positional embeddings. We evaluate SwiFT using multiple large-scale resting-state fMRI datasets, including the Human Connectome Project (HCP), Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD), and UK Biobank (UKB) datasets, to predict sex, age, and cognitive intelligence. Our experimental outcomes reveal that SwiFT consistently outperforms recent state-of-the-art models. Furthermore, by leveraging its end-to-end learning capability, we show that contrastive loss-based self-supervised pre-training of SwiFT can enhance performance on downstream tasks. Additionally, we employ an explainable AI method to identify the brain regions associated with sex classification. To our knowledge, SwiFT is the first Swin Transformer architecture to process dimensional spatiotemporal brain functional data in an end-to-end fashion. Our work holds substantial potential in facilitating scalable learning of functional brain imaging in neuroscience research by reducing the hurdles associated with applying Transformer models to high-dimensional fMRI. Speaker: Junbeom Kwon is a research associate working in Prof. Jiook Cha’s lab at Seoul National University. Paper link: https://arxiv.org/abs/2307.05916
Speaker
Junbeom Kwon
Scheduled for
Nov 20, 2023, 8:30 AM
Timezone
EDT
Virtual Brain Twins for Brain Medicine and Epilepsy
Over the past decade we have demonstrated that the fusion of subject-specific structural information of the human brain with mathematical dynamic models allows building biologically realistic brain network models, which have a predictive value, beyond the explanatory power of each approach independently. The network nodes hold neural population models, which are derived using mean field techniques from statistical physics expressing ensemble activity via collective variables. Our hybrid approach fuses data-driven with forward-modeling-based techniques and has been successfully applied to explain healthy brain function and clinical translation including aging, stroke and epilepsy. Here we illustrate the workflow along the example of epilepsy: we reconstruct personalized connectivity matrices of human epileptic patients using Diffusion Tensor weighted Imaging (DTI). Subsets of brain regions generating seizures in patients with refractory partial epilepsy are referred to as the epileptogenic zone (EZ). During a seizure, paroxysmal activity is not restricted to the EZ, but may recruit other healthy brain regions and propagate activity through large brain networks. The identification of the EZ is crucial for the success of neurosurgery and presents one of the historically difficult questions in clinical neuroscience. The application of latest techniques in Bayesian inference and model inversion, in particular Hamiltonian Monte Carlo, allows the estimation of the EZ, including estimates of confidence and diagnostics of performance of the inference. The example of epilepsy nicely underwrites the predictive value of personalized large-scale brain network models. The workflow of end-to-end modeling is an integral part of the European neuroinformatics platform EBRAINS and enables neuroscientists worldwide to build and estimate personalized virtual brains.
Speaker
Viktor Jirsa • Aix Marseille Université - Inserm
Scheduled for
Nov 7, 2023, 6:00 PM
Timezone
GMT+1
From primate anatomy to human neuroimaging: insights into the circuits underlying psychiatric disease and neuromodulation; Large-scale imaging of neural circuits: towards a microscopic human connectome
On Thursday, October 26th, we will host Anastasia Yendiki and Suzanne Haber. Anastasia Yendiki, PhD, is an Associate Professor in Radiology at the Harvard Medical School and an Associate Investigator at the Massachusetts General Hospital and Athinoula A. Martinos Center. Suzanne Haber, PhD, is a Professor at the University of Rochester and runs a lab at McLean hospital at Harvard Medical School in Boston. She has received numerous awards for her work on neuroanatomy. Beside her scientific presentation, she will give us a glimpse at the “Person behind the science”. The talks will be followed by a shared discussion. You can register via talks.stimulatingbrains.org to receive the (free) Zoom link!
Speaker
Suzanne Haber, PhD & Prof. Anastasia Yendiki, PhD • University of Rochester, USA / Harvard Medical School, USA
Scheduled for
Oct 25, 2023, 6:00 PM
Timezone
GMT+1
Use of brain imaging data to improve prescriptions of psychotropic drugs - Examples of ketamine in depression and antipsychotics in schizophrenia
The use of molecular imaging, particularly PET and SPECT, has significantly transformed the treatment of schizophrenia with antipsychotic drugs since the late 1980s. It has offered insights into the links between drug target engagement, clinical effects, and side effects. A therapeutic window for receptor occupancy is established for antipsychotics, yet there is a divergence of opinions regarding the importance of blood levels, with many downplaying their significance. As a result, the role of therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) as a personalized therapy tool is often underrated. Since molecular imaging of antipsychotics has focused almost entirely on D2-like dopamine receptors and their potential to control positive symptoms, negative symptoms and cognitive deficits are hardly or not at all investigated. Alternative methods have been introduced, i.e. to investigate the correlation between approximated receptor occupancies from blood levels and cognitive measures. Within the domain of antidepressants, and specifically regarding ketamine's efficacy in depression treatment, there is limited comprehension of the association between plasma concentrations and target engagement. The measurement of AMPA receptors in the human brain has added a new level of comprehension regarding ketamine's antidepressant effects. To ensure precise prescription of psychotropic drugs, it is vital to have a nuanced understanding of how molecular and clinical effects interact. Clinician scientists are assigned with the task of integrating these indispensable pharmacological insights into practice, thereby ensuring a rational and effective approach to the treatment of mental health disorders, signaling a new era of personalized drug therapy mechanisms that promote neuronal plasticity not only under pathological conditions, but also in the healthy aging brain.
Speaker
Xenia Marlene HART. • Central Institute of Mental Health, Department of Molecular Neuroimaging, Medical Faculty Mannheim, University of Heidelberg, Mannheim, Germany & Department of Neuropsychiatry, Keio University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan
Scheduled for
Oct 12, 2023, 11:00 AM
Timezone
GMT+1
Algonauts 2023 winning paper journal club (fMRI encoding models)
Algonauts 2023 was a challenge to create the best model that predicts fMRI brain activity given a seen image. Huze team dominated the competition and released a preprint detailing their process. This journal club meeting will involve open discussion of the paper with Q/A with Huze. Paper: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2308.01175.pdf Related paper also from Huze that we can discuss: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2307.14021.pdf
Speaker
Huzheng Yang, Paul Scotti
Scheduled for
Aug 17, 2023, 9:00 AM
Timezone
EDT
Interacting spiral wave patterns underlie complex brain dynamics and are related to cognitive processing
The large-scale activity of the human brain exhibits rich and complex patterns, but the spatiotemporal dynamics of these patterns and their functional roles in cognition remain unclear. Here by characterizing moment-by-moment fluctuations of human cortical functional magnetic resonance imaging signals, we show that spiral-like, rotational wave patterns (brain spirals) are widespread during both resting and cognitive task states. These brain spirals propagate across the cortex while rotating around their phase singularity centres, giving rise to spatiotemporal activity dynamics with non-stationary features. The properties of these brain spirals, such as their rotational directions and locations, are task relevant and can be used to classify different cognitive tasks. We also demonstrate that multiple, interacting brain spirals are involved in coordinating the correlated activations and de-activations of distributed functional regions; this mechanism enables flexible reconfiguration of task-driven activity flow between bottom-up and top-down directions during cognitive processing. Our findings suggest that brain spirals organize complex spatiotemporal dynamics of the human brain and have functional correlates to cognitive processing.
Speaker
Pulin Gong • The University of Sydney
Scheduled for
Aug 10, 2023, 10:00 AM
Timezone
GMT+11
OpenSFDI: an open hardware project for label-free measurements of tissue optical properties with spatial frequency domain imaging
Spatial frequency domain imaging (SFDI) is a diffuse optical measurement technique that can quantify tissue optical absorption and reduced scattering on a pixel by-pixel basis. Measurements of absorption at different wavelengths enable the extraction of molar concentrations of tissue chromophores over a wide field, providing a noncontact and label-free means to assess tissue viability, oxygenation, microarchitecture, and molecular content. In this talk, I will describe openSFDI, an open-source guide for building a low-cost, small-footprint, multi-wavelength SFDI system capable of quantifying absorption and reduced scattering as well as oxyhemoglobin and deoxyhemoglobin concentrations in biological tissue. The openSFDI project has a companion website which provides a complete parts list along with detailed instructions for assembling the openSFDI system. I will also review several technological advances our lab has recently made, including the extension of SFDI to the shortwave infrared wavelength band (900-1300 nm), where water and lipids provide strong contrast. Finally, I will discuss several preclinical and clinical applications for SFDI, including applications related to cancer, dermatology, rheumatology, cardiovascular disease, and others.
Speaker
Darren Roblyer • Boston University
Scheduled for
Jun 27, 2023, 10:00 AM
Timezone
GMT-3
In vivo direct imaging of neuronal activity at high temporospatial resolution
Advanced noninvasive neuroimaging methods provide valuable information on the brain function, but they have obvious pros and cons in terms of temporal and spatial resolution. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) using blood-oxygenation-level-dependent (BOLD) effect provides good spatial resolution in the order of millimeters, but has a poor temporal resolution in the order of seconds due to slow hemodynamic responses to neuronal activation, providing indirect information on neuronal activity. In contrast, electroencephalography (EEG) and magnetoencephalography (MEG) provide excellent temporal resolution in the millisecond range, but spatial information is limited to centimeter scales. Therefore, there has been a longstanding demand for noninvasive brain imaging methods capable of detecting neuronal activity at both high temporal and spatial resolution. In this talk, I will introduce a novel approach that enables Direct Imaging of Neuronal Activity (DIANA) using MRI that can dynamically image neuronal spiking activity in milliseconds precision, achieved by data acquisition scheme of rapid 2D line scan synchronized with periodically applied functional stimuli. DIANA was demonstrated through in vivo mouse brain imaging on a 9.4T animal scanner during electrical whisker-pad stimulation. DIANA with milliseconds temporal resolution had high correlations with neuronal spike activities, which could also be applied in capturing the sequential propagation of neuronal activity along the thalamocortical pathway of brain networks. In terms of the contrast mechanism, DIANA was almost unaffected by hemodynamic responses, but was subject to changes in membrane potential-associated tissue relaxation times such as T2 relaxation time. DIANA is expected to break new ground in brain science by providing an in-depth understanding of the hierarchical functional organization of the brain, including the spatiotemporal dynamics of neural networks.
Speaker
Jang-Yeon Park • Sungkyunkwan University, Suwon, Korea
Scheduled for
Jun 27, 2023, 4:00 PM
Timezone
GMT+1
Attending to the ups and downs of Lewy body dementia: An exploration of cognitive fluctuations
Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) and Parkinson's disease dementia (PDD) share similarities in pathology and clinical presentation and come under the umbrella term of Lewy body dementias (LBD). Fluctuating cognition is a key symptom in LBD and manifests as altered levels of alertness and attention, with a marked difference between best and worst performance. Cognition and alertness can change over seconds or minutes to hours and days of obtundation. Cognitive fluctuations can have significant impacts on the quality of life of people with LBD as well as potentially contribute to the exacerbation of other transient symptoms including, for example, hallucinations and psychosis as well as making it difficult to measure cognitive effect size benefits in clinical trials of LBD. However, this significant symptom in LBD is poorly understood. In my presentation I will discuss the phenomenology of cognitive fluctuations, how we can measure it clinically and limitations of these approaches. I will then outline the work of our group and others which has been focussed on unpicking the aetiological basis of cognitive fluctuations in LBD using a variety of imaging approaches (e.g. SPECT, sMRI, fMRI and EEG). I will then briefly explore future research directions.
Speaker
CANCELLED: John-Paul Taylor • Newcastle University, UK
Scheduled for
Jun 26, 2023, 12:15 PM
Timezone
GMT+1