[FUN_Mail] Research Seminars online?

Bruce Raymond Johnson brj1 at cornell.edu
Tue Mar 17 16:47:15 EDT 2020


Hi all,

Following up on what Barbara suggested-

Here's a link to an iBiology description in JUNE:

https://www.funjournal.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/JUNE-17-67.pdf?x89760


best,
Bruce

Bruce R. Johnson, Ph.D.
Dept of  Neurobiology and Behavior
Mudd Hall
Cornell University
Ithaca, NY 14853

Office: 1134 Comstock Hall; Ph: 607-592-9184
________________________________
From: FUN_Mail <fun_mail-bounces at lists.funfaculty.org> on behalf of Lom, Barbara <balom at davidson.edu>
Sent: Tuesday, March 17, 2020 4:09 PM
To: Faculty for Undergraduate Neuroscience Mailing List <fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org>
Subject: Re: [FUN_Mail] Research Seminars online?


Leah—



Try iBiology.org – lots of seminars there by a wide range scientists for a scientific audience - some will be neuro topics, some will be new investigators, and some will be recognized names – it’s a pretty deep catalog.



FWIW – iBiology also has very good microscopy course resources and a nice series called Let’s Experiment introducing students doing research projects – I will be using both of those sections more than ever in the coming weeks.

Best—



--Barbara



From: FUN_Mail <fun_mail-bounces at lists.funfaculty.org> on behalf of "Roesch, Leah Anderson" <leah.roesch at emory.edu>
Reply-To: Faculty for Undergraduate Neuroscience Mailing List <fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org>
Date: Tuesday, March 17, 2020 at 3:38 PM
To: Faculty for Undergraduate Neuroscience Mailing List <fun_mail at lists.funfaculty.org>
Subject: [FUN_Mail] Research Seminars online?



Dear FUN colleagues,



I’m looking for online neuroscience research seminars…just like you might have at a research university weekly department lunch seminar…but available online.



Students in one of my classes were required to attend neuroscience research seminars and write a reflection about the research questions, techniques, and people. Typically, this can be done in person at Emory since we have several seminars a week that can fit this requirement. I’d like to mostly keep this assignment, but move it online, so I’m NOT looking for simplified K12 type videos or press releases, but real-deal, about an hour-long, research seminars.



Did we once have a list of TED-style talks featuring neuroscience? That may work for me, but I don't know if I made that up or if I just misplaced it? Maybe your departmental seminars are posted online? SfN has panels and professional development stuff online through neuronline, but I don’t really see the big talks?



I currently have:

Podcasts from our Center for Mind Brain and Culture (Emory’s CMBC) http://cmbc.emory.edu/connect/podcasts/index.html<https://nam10.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fcmbc.emory.edu%2Fconnect%2Fpodcasts%2Findex.html&data=02%7C01%7Cbalom%40davidson.edu%7C1caaeb8e6ff14712830e08d7caaacd79%7C35d8763cd2b14213b629f5df0af9e3c3%7C1%7C0%7C637200707264424060&sdata=N%2FzLAOILLU8PKW%2FsUnvMbKy4brF8RMRwypH53EwQtd4%3D&reserved=0>

Symposia recordings from the Center for Academic Research & Training in Athropogeny (UCSD and Salk CARTA) https://carta.anthropogeny.org/symposia/past_list<https://nam10.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcarta.anthropogeny.org%2Fsymposia%2Fpast_list&data=02%7C01%7Cbalom%40davidson.edu%7C1caaeb8e6ff14712830e08d7caaacd79%7C35d8763cd2b14213b629f5df0af9e3c3%7C1%7C0%7C637200707264434053&sdata=xOo2BgzXfB0Ae1QTldQOD9qEqGuQaQM%2BrHza2ItdARo%3D&reserved=0>

Nobel Prize Lectures https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/lists/video-lectures-from-nobel-laureates-in-physiology-or-medicine<https://nam10.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.nobelprize.org%2Fprizes%2Flists%2Fvideo-lectures-from-nobel-laureates-in-physiology-or-medicine&data=02%7C01%7Cbalom%40davidson.edu%7C1caaeb8e6ff14712830e08d7caaacd79%7C35d8763cd2b14213b629f5df0af9e3c3%7C1%7C0%7C637200707264434053&sdata=wZ3pgo6moN1ulfQ13Myjmn8ShpF8vDLl5Kro55ACxOA%3D&reserved=0>



Thanks for any suggestions you have, and I appreciate you even reading this when you’re likely as discombobulated as I am.



Stay safe,

Leah



-----------------------------------------------------------------
Leah Anderson Roesch, PhD

Pronouns: she, her, hers
Senior Lecturer, Neuroscience and Behavioral Biology Program (NBB)

Director, Undergraduate Research for NBB

At-Large Faculty Advisor, Neuroscience Graduate Program

Emory University
1462 Clifton Rd Room 304H

Atlanta GA 30322
leah.roesch at emory.edu
404-727-4589

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