About the School Robert Wood Johnson Medical School - Department of Neuroscience and Cell Biology -
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Neuroscience Seminars

New Horizon Seminar Series
Department of Neuroscience and Cell Biology 2004-2006

Richard Vallee, PhD
Professor of Pathology
Columbia University
How Microtubule Motors Direct Neural Progenitor Cell Migration and Axonogenesis
September 20, 2006

Hongjun Song, PhD
Assistant Professor of Neurology and Neuroscience
Institute for Cell Engineering
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Mechanisms Regulating Adult Mammalian Stem Cells and Neurogenesis
June 7, 2006

Moses V. Chao, PhD
Professor of Cell Biology, Physiology and Neuroscience
New York University School of Medicine
Upstream and Downstream of Neurotrophin Receptors
May 17, 2006

Li-Huei Tsai, PhD
Professor of Pathology, Harvard Medical School
Investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Mechanisms Governing Neurogenesis and Neuronal Migration in the Developing Telencephalon
April 26, 2006

Stephen Strittmatter, MD, PhD
Vincent Coates Professor
Yale University School of Medicine
Role of Nogo Receptor in Adult CNS Plasticity and Regulation
March 1, 2006

Alex L. Kolodkin, PhD
Department of Neuroscience
The Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
Molecular Mechanisms of Neuronal Growth Cone Guidance
June 15, 2005

Alexandra L. Joyner, PhD
HHMI and Skirball Institute of Biomolecular Medicine
Developmental Genetics Program
NYU School of Medicine
Constructing a Nervous System: Genetic Blueprint of the Cerebellum
May 18, 2005

Jane E. Johnson, PhD
Associate Professor
Center for Basic Neuroscience
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Transcriptional Control of Neuronal Diversity in the Spinal Cord
April 20, 2005

Stewart A. Anderson, MD
Assistant Professor, Dept. of Psychiatry
Dept. of Neurology and Neuroscience
Weill Medical College of Cornell University
Origins and Specification of Cortical Interneurons
December 15, 2004

Karl Herrup, PhD
Professor of Neuroscience
Director, Alzheimer Research Lab
University Memory and Aging Center
Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine
Balancing Your Brain: The Engrailed Mouse as a Model of Human Autism Spectrum Disorder
November 17, 2004

Last updated October 6, 2006

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