Digital representation of neuronal morphologies and tissue

  • Dates : Mon. Apr. 11 - Tue. Apr.12, 2016
  • Location : OIST Main Campus (C210 Seminar Room, Center Building)

*The lectures are open to all OIST researchers. The afternoon discussions are by invitation only

 

Organizer

Confirmed Speakers

 

Program

Day 1 

Monday, April 11

9:00-9:30

Ben Torben-Nielsen  "Future proof representation of neuronal morphologies”

9:30-10:00

Erhan Bas "Cracking the Morphology: In the Pursuit of Reproducible Research"

10:00-10:45

Henchuan Peng  "Allen Cell Type Projects and BigNeuron"

10:45-11:15 Coffee Break
11:15-11:45

Jinny Kim  "mGRASP and neuTube: mapping synaptic connectivity”

11:45-12:15

Gaia Tavosanis  “Life in the periphery: building dendrites one step at a time”

12:15-12:45

Chi-Tin Shih “Digital representation of Single Neurons in the Drosophila Brain -- From Fluorescent Raw Images to Structural Indices and Sequence Representation"

12:45-13:30 Lunch
13:30-14:15 Giorgio Ascoli  ”Deconstructing and reconstructing neuronal morphology: a digital ecosystem for the analysis and synthesis of axonal and dendritic trees"
14:15-15:30

Round table discussion 1:

requirements of digital representation of neurons (which data should be included, types of data)

15:30-16:00 Coffee Break
16:00-18:00

Round table discussion 2:

guideline for implementation of digital representations (proposed file format(s) and their structure)

18:15- Working Dinner (at Campus)

 

Day 2

Tuesday, April 12

9:00-9:30

Weiliang Chen  “SWC and Meshes: The use of neuronal morphologies in spatial reaction diffusion simulation”

9:30-10:15

Hermann Cuntz  "The TREES toolbox - code for neuronal branching."

10:15-10:45

Coffee Break

10:45-11:15

Adrian W. Moore “The uses of neuron morphometric analyses in our studies of dendrite patterning" 

11:15-11:45

Yoshiyuki Kubota "Structurally authentic model pyramidal and non-pyramidal cells"

11:45-12:30

Round Table Discussion

12:30-13:30

Lunch

13:30-15:30

Formulation of conclusions

15:30-16:00

Coffee Break

16:00-18:00

Wrap-up: publish the conclusions?

18:30-

Banquet (at Restaurant Orange)

 

 

OIST Mini Symposia”
A Mini Symposium is the standard conference format, with invited talks, possibly some contributed talks, however with less speakers and no non-speaking participants.  The Mini Symposium addresses a specific scientific theme or topic, focusing on current trends and recent findings in the field of interest.  Unlike OIST Funded Workshops, talks at the Mini Symposia can be highly technical and specific for the field of research of the organizing unit. However, all invited and/or contributed talks have to be open to all OIST research members.