@gregschwartznu.bsky.social
lol… yeah m, sorry about that. I told the AV guy that I wanted “some” sound, not ear-shattering!
May 6, 2025 at 11:58 PM
lol… yeah m, sorry about that. I told the AV guy that I wanted “some” sound, not ear-shattering!
5. Hifsah Ahmed. Technician. Poster A0528. Wednesday. 2:00 - 3:45 PM.
Single unit recordings of retinal ganglion cells with intact neurovascular function.
Our science-fiction project. We got spikes from RGCs in the optic nerve of an intact eye following perfusion of the carotid artery!
Single unit recordings of retinal ganglion cells with intact neurovascular function.
Our science-fiction project. We got spikes from RGCs in the optic nerve of an intact eye following perfusion of the carotid artery!
May 5, 2025 at 3:53 AM
5. Hifsah Ahmed. Technician. Poster A0528. Wednesday. 2:00 - 3:45 PM.
Single unit recordings of retinal ganglion cells with intact neurovascular function.
Our science-fiction project. We got spikes from RGCs in the optic nerve of an intact eye following perfusion of the carotid artery!
Single unit recordings of retinal ganglion cells with intact neurovascular function.
Our science-fiction project. We got spikes from RGCs in the optic nerve of an intact eye following perfusion of the carotid artery!
4. Santiago Guardo Maya. Student. Poster A0524. Wednesday. 2:00 - 3:45 PM.
Dissecting intrinsic and circuit-level contributions to temporal adaptation in retinal ganglion cell subtypes.
A deep dive into temporal processing in RGCs comparing white noise to natural statistics.
Dissecting intrinsic and circuit-level contributions to temporal adaptation in retinal ganglion cell subtypes.
A deep dive into temporal processing in RGCs comparing white noise to natural statistics.
May 5, 2025 at 3:53 AM
4. Santiago Guardo Maya. Student. Poster A0524. Wednesday. 2:00 - 3:45 PM.
Dissecting intrinsic and circuit-level contributions to temporal adaptation in retinal ganglion cell subtypes.
A deep dive into temporal processing in RGCs comparing white noise to natural statistics.
Dissecting intrinsic and circuit-level contributions to temporal adaptation in retinal ganglion cell subtypes.
A deep dive into temporal processing in RGCs comparing white noise to natural statistics.
3. Me. Talk in session 340 (Ballroom J). Tuesday. 2:30 PM
Tusc5 and the role of glucose transport regulation in retinal ganglion cell metabolism and function.
Do you believe that I'm giving a talk on metabolism - with the name of a gene in the title?! Check it out. I think we found something cool.
Tusc5 and the role of glucose transport regulation in retinal ganglion cell metabolism and function.
Do you believe that I'm giving a talk on metabolism - with the name of a gene in the title?! Check it out. I think we found something cool.
May 5, 2025 at 3:53 AM
3. Me. Talk in session 340 (Ballroom J). Tuesday. 2:30 PM
Tusc5 and the role of glucose transport regulation in retinal ganglion cell metabolism and function.
Do you believe that I'm giving a talk on metabolism - with the name of a gene in the title?! Check it out. I think we found something cool.
Tusc5 and the role of glucose transport regulation in retinal ganglion cell metabolism and function.
Do you believe that I'm giving a talk on metabolism - with the name of a gene in the title?! Check it out. I think we found something cool.
2. Julia Fadjukov. Postdoc. Talk in Session 313 (Ballroom J). Tuesday. 9:15 AM
Characterization of displaced amacrine cells of the mouse retina using function, morphology and gene expression.
21 types. come find your favorite!
Characterization of displaced amacrine cells of the mouse retina using function, morphology and gene expression.
21 types. come find your favorite!
May 5, 2025 at 3:53 AM
2. Julia Fadjukov. Postdoc. Talk in Session 313 (Ballroom J). Tuesday. 9:15 AM
Characterization of displaced amacrine cells of the mouse retina using function, morphology and gene expression.
21 types. come find your favorite!
Characterization of displaced amacrine cells of the mouse retina using function, morphology and gene expression.
21 types. come find your favorite!
1. Zach Jessen. Postdoc. Poster B0011. Monday. 3:00 - 4:45 PM
Functional imaging of rod-mediated signaling in the ex vivo mouse retina.
Zach is developing a system to image huge areas of the mouse retina with very little light exposure by using light sheet microscopy and far red indicators.
Functional imaging of rod-mediated signaling in the ex vivo mouse retina.
Zach is developing a system to image huge areas of the mouse retina with very little light exposure by using light sheet microscopy and far red indicators.
May 5, 2025 at 3:53 AM
1. Zach Jessen. Postdoc. Poster B0011. Monday. 3:00 - 4:45 PM
Functional imaging of rod-mediated signaling in the ex vivo mouse retina.
Zach is developing a system to image huge areas of the mouse retina with very little light exposure by using light sheet microscopy and far red indicators.
Functional imaging of rod-mediated signaling in the ex vivo mouse retina.
Zach is developing a system to image huge areas of the mouse retina with very little light exposure by using light sheet microscopy and far red indicators.
Yes it is! A popular science writer sent it to me a couple of days early. She will probably put one sentence in her article after I talked her ear off about it!
April 21, 2025 at 1:09 AM
Yes it is! A popular science writer sent it to me a couple of days early. She will probably put one sentence in her article after I talked her ear off about it!
Congrats! I’m really looking forward to the results of this exciting project.
March 27, 2025 at 2:42 PM
Congrats! I’m really looking forward to the results of this exciting project.
And the 1.5 page paper from 1975 in which he coined it has more elegant prose than most novels!
March 21, 2025 at 1:02 AM
And the 1.5 page paper from 1975 in which he coined it has more elegant prose than most novels!
For those of you who are curious… look up “hyperacuity” and enjoy the rabbit hole of literature that almost all leads back to Westheimer. A chapter of my book is devoted to this field that he almost single-handedly created, and it does not do justice to all the great papers.
March 21, 2025 at 12:58 AM
For those of you who are curious… look up “hyperacuity” and enjoy the rabbit hole of literature that almost all leads back to Westheimer. A chapter of my book is devoted to this field that he almost single-handedly created, and it does not do justice to all the great papers.
Gerald Westheimer is indeed a legend (and Austin Roorda has done a few pretty important things himself over the years 😉). I had the honor of meeting Dr. Westheimer at a virtual forum a couple of years ago and asking him a couple of science questions.
March 21, 2025 at 12:58 AM
Gerald Westheimer is indeed a legend (and Austin Roorda has done a few pretty important things himself over the years 😉). I had the honor of meeting Dr. Westheimer at a virtual forum a couple of years ago and asking him a couple of science questions.
Some more signs...
March 7, 2025 at 8:59 PM
Some more signs...
So sad. What a waste of all your time and that of all the other reviewers. This is hard work! Any idea what they plan to do? Reschedule? Review a double batch of applications next time?
February 27, 2025 at 4:11 AM
So sad. What a waste of all your time and that of all the other reviewers. This is hard work! Any idea what they plan to do? Reschedule? Review a double batch of applications next time?
Yeah, but to lessen the load on the investigator to pay the rest off grants, not the department contribution, which can then be reallocated to anything else the department wants to spend it on.
February 11, 2025 at 1:26 AM
Yeah, but to lessen the load on the investigator to pay the rest off grants, not the department contribution, which can then be reallocated to anything else the department wants to spend it on.
has always been from my own grants). I wonder if the donors know how their money is being spent. I guess this is in the fine print somewhere when they donate? The wording was ambiguous at best in the letter I received when I was awarded the chair.
Is this normal?
Is this normal?
February 11, 2025 at 12:50 AM
has always been from my own grants). I wonder if the donors know how their money is being spent. I guess this is in the fine print somewhere when they donate? The wording was ambiguous at best in the letter I received when I was awarded the chair.
Is this normal?
Is this normal?
And as far as the output of the retina, I would argue that while the primate fovea is a notable exception, in most species, the majority of retinal ganglion cell spikes are driving these reflex pathways that never make it to perception.
December 18, 2024 at 5:58 AM
And as far as the output of the retina, I would argue that while the primate fovea is a notable exception, in most species, the majority of retinal ganglion cell spikes are driving these reflex pathways that never make it to perception.