Colloquium Series 2021-2022

Colloquium Series 2021-2022

Colloquia are generally on Tuesdays at 2:30 p.m., once per month. For the Fall 2021 they will be online (link to be provided shortly). We anticipate a return to live events in Winter 2022 (formerly held in E5-6111). Abstracts are posted as available. If you'd like to be on the mailing list announcing these events, please sign up here.


Here is a list of our speakers so far for the 2021 and 2022 academic year:

Winter 2022 Term

Feb 22 Richard Naud (U Ottawa)

March 8 Mayank Mehta (UCLA)

Title: From virtual reality to reality: How neurons make maps

A part of the brain called the hippocampus is thought to be crucial for learning and memory and implicated in many incurable disorders ranging from Autism to Alzheimer's. Hence, it is crucial to understand how the hippocampus works. Decades of research shows that hippocampal damage in humans causes loss of episodic or autobiographical memory. But, such memory traces in hippocampal single neurons are hard to find. Instead research in the rodent hippocampus shows that the neurons encode spatial maps, or place cells. Place cells are common in rodents but rare in humans or nonhuman primates. These major discrepancies have hampered not only scientific progress, but also diagnosis and treatment of major disorders including ADRD. I will share our findings using virtual reality that address these questions and provide surprising answers that can significantly advance translation of basic science to treatments.

Karim Jerbi (UdeM)

April (TBD) We are rescheduling in hope of doing this live and in-person.

(titles, abstracts, and times to follow)


Fall 2021 Term

Kohitij Kar MIT

Lyle Muller Western

Andreas Burkhalter Washington University St. Louis