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Doctoral Programme Brain & Mind
Finland
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 23 ต.ค. 2020
Lecture and panel discussion recordings from the Brain & Mind Symposiums.
Brain & Mind Symposium is the annual, student-organized scientific symposium of the Doctoral Programme Brain & Mind of the University of Helsinki and Aalto University.
#neuroscience #brain #mind #bmsymp2020 #bmsymp2021
Brain & Mind Symposium is the annual, student-organized scientific symposium of the Doctoral Programme Brain & Mind of the University of Helsinki and Aalto University.
#neuroscience #brain #mind #bmsymp2020 #bmsymp2021
Climate crisis for neuroscientists - workshop with Kate Jeffery and Tom Böhling
The non-neuroscientific workshop session on the climate crisis with Kate Jeffery and Tom Böhling at the Brain & Mind Symposium 2021.
Chaired by Brain & Mind Student Council members Annika Schäfer and Lauri Elsilä. Hosted from Aalto Studios, Espoo, Finland.
Brain & Mind Symposium is the annual, student-organized scientific symposium of the Doctoral Programme Brain & Mind at the University of Helsinki and Aalto University.
Chaired by Brain & Mind Student Council members Annika Schäfer and Lauri Elsilä. Hosted from Aalto Studios, Espoo, Finland.
Brain & Mind Symposium is the annual, student-organized scientific symposium of the Doctoral Programme Brain & Mind at the University of Helsinki and Aalto University.
มุมมอง: 42
วีดีโอ
David Attwell - The role of glia and pericytes in regulating brain blood flow in health and disease
มุมมอง 3043 ปีที่แล้ว
Lecture by David Attwell at the Brain & Mind Symposium 2021. Chaired by Brain & Mind Student Council members David Micinski and Vikcy Gkini. Hosted from Aalto Studios, Espoo, Finland. Brain & Mind Symposium is the annual, student-organized scientific symposium of the Doctoral Programme Brain & Mind at the University of Helsinki and Aalto University.
Ewelina Knapska - Second-hand emotions.
มุมมอง 1413 ปีที่แล้ว
Lecture titled "Second-hand emotions. What can rodents learn about the world from other’s bliss and fear?" by Ewelina Knapska at the Brain & Mind Symposium 2021. Chaired by Brain & Mind Student Council members Annika Schäfer and Vikcy Gkini. Hosted from Aalto Studios, Espoo, Finland. Brain & Mind Symposium is the annual, student-organized scientific symposium of the Doctoral Programme Brain & M...
Roshan Cools - Chemistry of the adaptive mind: lessons from dopamine
มุมมอง 1413 ปีที่แล้ว
Lecture by Roshan Cools at the Brain & Mind Symposium 2021. Chaired by Brain & Mind Student Council members Annika Schäfer and Vikcy Gkini. Hosted from Aalto Studios, Espoo, Finland. Brain & Mind Symposium is the annual, student-organized scientific symposium of the Doctoral Programme Brain & Mind at the University of Helsinki and Aalto University.
Benedikt Berninger - Engineering new interneurons in the cerebral cortex in vivo
มุมมอง 1433 ปีที่แล้ว
Lecture by Benedikt Berninger at the Brain & Mind Symposium 2021. Chaired by Brain & Mind Student Council members David Micinski and Vikcy Gkini. Hosted from Aalto Studios, Espoo, Finland. Brain & Mind Symposium is the annual, student-organized scientific symposium of the Doctoral Programme Brain & Mind at the University of Helsinki and Aalto University.
Ewan St. John Smith - Naked Nociception: Tales From The Naked Mole-Rat
มุมมอง 1873 ปีที่แล้ว
Lecture by Ewan St. John Smith at Brain & Mind Symposium 2021. Chaired by Brain & Mind Student Council members Vikcy Gkini and Lauri Elsilä. Hosted from Aalto Studios, Espoo, Finland. Brain & Mind Symposium is the annual, student-organized scientific symposium of the Doctoral Programme Brain & Mind at the University of Helsinki and Aalto University.
Katrin Schrenk-Siemens - Human stem cell derived neurons: a step towards translational pain research
มุมมอง 2303 ปีที่แล้ว
Lecture by Katrin Schrenk-Siemens at Brain & Mind Symposium 2021. Chaired by Brain & Mind Student Council members Vikcy Gkini and Lauri Elsilä. Hosted from Aalto Studios, Espoo, Finland. Brain & Mind Symposium is the annual, student-organized scientific symposium of the Doctoral Programme Brain & Mind at the University of Helsinki and Aalto University.
Reproducibility in neuroscience - panel discussion
มุมมอง 1604 ปีที่แล้ว
Reproducibility in neuroscience - panel discussion with Dorothy Bishop, Peter Stern and Plinio Casarotto at Brain & Mind Symposium 2020. Chaired by Mikaela Laine, neuroscience doctoral researcher at the University of Helsinki. Brain & Mind Symposium is the annual, student-organized scientific symposium of the Doctoral Programme Brain & Mind of the University of Helsinki and Aalto University.
Neuropharmacology of psychedelic drugs - panel discussion with David E. Nichols & David E. Olson
มุมมอง 4654 ปีที่แล้ว
Panel discussion with David E.Nichols & David E. Olson at Brain & Mind Symposium 2020 chaired by Brain & Mind Student Council 2020 members Rafael Moliner and Cecilia Cannarozzo. Brain & Mind Symposium is the annual, student-organized scientific symposium of the Doctoral Programme Brain & Mind of the University of Helsinki and Aalto University.
David Nichols - From ergot to LSD and beyond
มุมมอง 5K4 ปีที่แล้ว
Lecture by David E. Nichols at Brain & Mind Symposium 2020. Chaired by Brain & Mind Student Council 2020 members Rafael Moliner and Cecilia Cannarozzo. Brain & Mind Symposium is the annual, student-organized scientific symposium of the Doctoral Programme Brain & Mind of the University of Helsinki and Aalto University.
Future of Neuroscience - panel discussion at Brain & Mind Symposium 2020
มุมมอง 3064 ปีที่แล้ว
Future of Neuroscience - panel discussion with Gaute Einevoll, Iiris Hovatta, Iiro Jääskeläinen, Eero Castrén, Lauri Parkkonen, Mikko Airavaara, Riitta Salmelin and Takashi Namba at Brain & Mind Symposium 2020. Chaired by Brain & Mind Student Council 2020 members Marko Havu and Anaïs Virenque. Brain & Mind Symposium is the annual, student-organized scientific symposium of the Doctoral Programme...
Gaute Einevoll - Towards multipurpose biophysics-based mathematical models of cortical circuits
มุมมอง 734 ปีที่แล้ว
Lecture by Gaute Einevoll at Brain & Mind Symposium 2020. Chaired by Brain & Mind Student Council 2020 members Marko Havu and Anaïs Virenque. Brain & Mind Symposium is the annual, student-organized scientific symposium of the Doctoral Programme Brain & Mind of the University of Helsinki and Aalto University.
Ignite talks by neuroscientist from University of Helsinki and Aalto University
มุมมอง 974 ปีที่แล้ว
Short ingite talks by Helsinki-region neuroscience group leaders at Brain & Mind Symposium 2021: 1. Iiris Hovatta - University of Helsinki, Department of Psychology and Logopedics 2. Iiro Jääskeläinen - Aalto University, Department of Neuroscience and Biomedical Engineering 3. Eero Castrén - University of Helsinki, Neuroscience Center 4. Lauri Parkkonen - Aalto University, Department of Neurosc...
Consciousness and the mind-brain problem - panel discussion with Paavo Pylkkänen & Christof Koch
มุมมอง 1114 ปีที่แล้ว
Panel discussion with Paavo Pylkkänen and Christof Koch at Brain & Mind Symposium 2020 chaired by Brain & Mind Student Council 2020 members Rafael Moliner and Angelina Lesnikova. Brain & Mind Symposium is the annual, student-organized scientific symposium of the Doctoral Programme Brain & Mind of the University of Helsinki and Aalto University.
Christof Koch - Neural correlates of consciousness - Progress and problems
มุมมอง 1.3K4 ปีที่แล้ว
Lecture by Christof Koch at Brain & Mind Symposium 2020. Chaired by Brain & Mind Student Council 2020 members Rafael Moliner and Angelina Lesnikova. Brain & Mind Symposium is the annual, student-organized scientific symposium of the Doctoral Programme Brain & Mind of the University of Helsinki and Aalto University.
Paavo Pylkkänen - Consciousness and its place in the physical world
มุมมอง 4574 ปีที่แล้ว
Paavo Pylkkänen - Consciousness and its place in the physical world
Pieter Roelfsema - Interactions between areas of the visual cortex that are essential for perception
มุมมอง 1054 ปีที่แล้ว
Pieter Roelfsema - Interactions between areas of the visual cortex that are essential for perception
Mechanisms of brain disorders - panel discussion with Carmen Sandi and Cédric Raoul
มุมมอง 864 ปีที่แล้ว
Mechanisms of brain disorders - panel discussion with Carmen Sandi and Cédric Raoul
Cédric Raoul - Motoneuron vulnerability in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
มุมมอง 694 ปีที่แล้ว
Cédric Raoul - Motoneuron vulnerability in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
Carmen Sandi - Brain mitochondria and metabolism on the links between stress, anxiety and motivation
มุมมอง 6554 ปีที่แล้ว
Carmen Sandi - Brain mitochondria and metabolism on the links between stress, anxiety and motivation
90% of serotonin neurorecpetors are in the intestines and phenetillamines touch dopamine receptors too
Great talk! Thanks for sharing 👍🏼
mikaela loves creampies
she loves a good creampie, Mikaela does.
Crisp explanation doc ! Learned a lot .. its very hard to find human beings like you in this era ...much love and peace
This type of work deserves nobel prize
Never ceases to amaze me how brilliant some people are. This gentleman was obviously given gifts that I wasn't.
Is it menthol that dose the word stuff I can run this stuff in my head pretty well been. Able to since I got intrested in chemistry it looks like you have attached a menthol or perhaps Pepperdine with an additional molicule in the mix to me ans that looks like menthol if not perhaps try it as you would look at 6 - 8 he affinity partial antognsist I believe to ht25 perhaps addition n of ht25 or a precirser natural occuring acid other than ....lysergic my intrest is in migraine as LSD causes total nullifying if my hard aches for 3 to 9 months but I dont want to trip off if it ...but to achieve affect it seems like that has to happen to have a longer affect so some residue that is left stays I was rhink a propel like propline but I don't really know how all that would work it just seems it's related to what ever that is that stays behind ...this works so ...for now I'll stick to it but to find something that would be the same affect but 🚫 tbilligal would be perfect bur the other stuff Dosent work or is very temporary wgere this works for a while and is precentiitve it just dosent happen after words
So yea this is ledford and Brooks cyber stalking me
Really a great discussion here. Thanks for sharing!
Great work. Very interesting information.. I wouldn't mind 2-3 hour LSD trip as opposed to the 12 hr.. with the L229A
Mushroom (psilocybe) trip lasts 3 to 6 hours. Is supposedly very similar to lsd. Some people prefer it for being a somewhat deeper experience.
Such objective language- deeper?
@@Arctic-fox717 Yup
33:00 so anxiety disorder (and a lot of issues) comes back to mitochondria at the core , But what are effective ways to increase mitochondrial respiratory function? And neuronal ATP 36:10 mitofusin 2 relationship with mitochondria & anxiety (Stearic acid could help with this , shown to impact mitochondria fusion in humans, and reverse inhibition of mitofusin 2) 46:00
Thank You Dr.David!!! For all youve Done!! 1 Love
😂😂😂this rat experiment😂😂😂
So taking lsd ARRESTS you?😂
I have a hole in my skull so I put it directly in my brain makes it taste like cheese.
Always a reductionist view
Of course the institutions have to control the spread of natural entheogens
Fbi tried ruining lsd
Dude is like I could use a hit right now
Amazing talk!🙏🤗
what is the nero activity shape of the scene at 2:14 in dr strange th-cam.com/video/FkXlKQS5Elo/w-d-xo.html
Can't you see it ? It's bonds and g gold over it traps light in there I be live o think it the actual reaction that transmits light 🕯️ not the receptor as it goes lds over at that sight of you look st tht middle like paxil Dosent ever cross tht blood brain barrier wow of it did that like string together a list of dirty words like amd English professor on chemistry but...the binding sight st I believe it's the m1 r2 sight seeing mply folds over and traps it and thrn allows it tovpss dovet I think thst is what actually happens and thst tht snappisis in tht briancsmd ehy it work on migraines as it just by passes thst area and rewired so the neurologist problem just rewires around the srea but it somply open up allows the antognoist to enter smd thrn folds over trapping ng tht.milicule the receptor sight as long ad it takes for tht.body to rove it....that ehy light Ms amd maois work they extend her e long it takes to break down in tht body to break it down ...but yes there a 3d middle of tht h5 receptor on eonkipedia I'd say watch that and you'll under stand it...
It's becoming clearer that with all the brain and consciousness theories out there, the proof will be in the pudding. By this I mean, can any particular theory be used to create a human adult level conscious machine. My bet is on the late Gerald Edelman's Extended Theory of Neuronal Group Selection. The lead group in robotics based on this theory is the Neurorobotics Lab at UC at Irvine. Dr. Edelman distinguished between primary consciousness, which came first in evolution, and that humans share with other conscious animals, and higher order consciousness, which came to only humans with the acquisition of language. A machine with primary consciousness will probably have to come first.
It's becoming clearer that with all the brain and consciousness theories out there, the proof will be in the pudding. By this I mean, can any particular theory be used to create a human adult level conscious machine. My bet is on the late Gerald Edelman's Extended Theory of Neuronal Group Selection. The lead group in robotics based on this theory is the Neurorobotics Lab at UC at Irvine. Dr. Edelman distinguished between primary consciousness, which came first in evolution, and that humans share with other conscious animals, and higher order consciousness, which came to only humans with the acquisition of language. A machine with primary consciousness will probably have to come first.
It's becoming clearer that with all the brain and consciousness theories out there, the proof will be in the pudding. By this I mean, can any particular theory be used to create a human adult level conscious machine. My bet is on the late Gerald Edelman's Extended Theory of Neuronal Group Selection. The lead group in robotics based on this theory is the Neurorobotics Lab at UC at Irvine. Dr. Edelman distinguished between primary consciousness, which came first in evolution, and that humans share with other conscious animals, and higher order consciousness, which came to only humans with the acquisition of language. A machine with primary consciousness will probably have to come first.
30:55 the picture where at a place it binds in the receptor to s242 5.46 position what damage is done to that part of the strand of the receptor and is it long lasting? Though it's said that LSD-25 is among the least toxic of substances it seems to me there have been people whom have been harmed by LSD-25 and I'd like to know if you can ask the distinguished Doctor for his best insights on this very import question and concept. I know the doctor seem to be about getting people some help with these substances, and people claim they are helped, however, in the receptor where it is binding, when the top closes over the molecule and traps it, this to me is a function of the vasoconstriction properties of a lysergicide. This seems to be the danger of constriction it still produces on what ever it touches. So, it would seem to me since a direct poisoning can harm a person permanently right at the receptor, I am wondering if you know what damage is taking place, and if you have not assertained this direction, I would like to gently ask you with your abilities insights knowledge and extreme care for your profession and genuine care and love for humans and a genuine desire to help people feel better if they can from an LSD-25 or other trippy compounds that we should be allowed to do so, since you have helped us learn so much about what is happening along with your staff and colleagues, what damage is this LSD-25 doing to the receptor.? Thank You Johnathan Foster can you please ask the doctor for me, this question, it's very important. Because even if you claim help, if it's constricting the receptor and it's permanent I don't think this could be a good thing. If the psylocibin not being a vaso-constrictor( or is it ?? ) and the mushroom doesn't do this then isn't that a better way and a better substance since there is nothing permenant about what happens in the receptor no damage is done with psylocibin.?? Or a phenethylamine in mescaline also not a vasoconstrictor ( or am I wrong ) is better because it doesn't constrict what ever it touches and this is why LSD-25 is actually bad for the receptor.?? And bad for the user because it produces long lasting damage to the bind sight in the receptor that doesn't happen with psylocibin.?? So, if you could offer some clarity to this concept that would help everyone on earth understand the reasons still why LSD-25 is not as safe as even you think it may be, that would be important words everyone would be interested in hearing. Johnathan Foster
I don't understand a word of what you said, it is absolutely not clear at all. The molecules are not "bad for the receptor" that does not work that way. LSD has very little toxicity and people who had taken few MILLIGRAMS (the usual dose is around 80-100 micrograms) didn't died. The only damage LSD can do is psychologically. Try to rephrase your comment because we can't understand
I think you don't what you are talking about if you can not answer the question, and did you really read it.? I asked could you ask the distinguished Doctor Nichols to be slightly more clear what damage is it doing at the bind sight s242 5.46 where it binds in the receptor that is for serotonin, and it's not a receptor for a lysergicide, what damage is being done where it binds.? If you are not aware, could you forward this to the distinguished Dr. Nichols, that he may have knowledge to give an answer. He even spoke of doing this research in another video post, and I was hoping to stay in top of his research because it is outstanding. You may not be aware of this, and many people are not aware, however, the Doctor is. This is a very relevant question, and quite easy. However, maybe you do not understand, and didn't know what the Doctor knows to properly answer the question, so, I asked if you could possibly be the go between for getting a more informed statement about this.? This would show how a constant trip disorder would take place, other people call it Permenant Trip Disorder, that was what he was speaking about. So, I asked a relevant question. Even just from the video. I watched, you seem to not know what I am speaking to. I wonder, did you watch the same video I watched, which is this one? This is a video which talks and speaks directly to the bind sight. Could you, if you could, ask the Dr, and see if he will respond to the question.? The answer has direct correlation to people who have been harmed by LSD-25, and there certainly have been people who have been harmed, even with its toxicity rating, it's still a lysergicide. It's dangerous material. The video was very good, it's not a video issue, the video was so good I could formulate such a good question.
@@jdf237 do yo really think that person knows to how to get ahold of David Nichols? Lol
@@jdf237 and dude, for the record, LSD doesn't do anything permanent to the 5h2a receptor. do you understand what the word vasoconstriction means?
@@jdf237 *lysergamide
Carmen, he seguido tus investigaciones en el tema de la ansiedad y subordinación social, y tus experimentos con niacina (o nicotinamide riboside y NMN) y con diacepam. CUando hablas de 'bajas dosis de diacepam'....de que cantidad diaria estamos hablando? Muchas gracias. azorin@ua.es