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USRP 2016 - Dissecting motion processing pathways in fruit flies

Dissecting motion processing pathways in fruit flies

2016 USRP Talks - Wednesday, July 6, 2016

Events

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  • USRP 2016 - Dissecting motion processing pathways in fruit flies
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Courses and Workshops

Headshot portrait of Thomas Clandinin - Shooter Family Professor

Thomas Clandinin - Shooter Family Professor

Scientific Leadership Council Member, Bio-X Affiliated Faculty
Stanford Profile
Dr. Clandinin's Lab Homepage
Dr. Clandinin's laboratory is focused on two questions: how do complex neuronal circuits assemble during development and disassemble in disease, and how do such circuits mediate the complex computations essential to behavior?

Related videos

USRP 2016 - Dissecting motion processing pathways in fruit flies

USRP 2019 - Your Heart Counts

USRP 2011 - Imaging Informatics: From Pixels to Biomedical Meaning

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Stanford Bio-X Seed Grants

Collage of headshot photos of Kwabena Boahen, Thomas Clandinin, and Michael Lin.

Interdisciplinary Initiatives Program Seed Grant: Decoding dendritic computation for natural and artificial intelligence

Interdisciplinary Initiatives Program Round 12 - 2024

Interdisciplinary Initiatives Program Seed Grant: Revealing internal models of the environment by theory and brain-wide imaging

Interdisciplinary Initiatives Program Round 9 - 2018

A molecular snapshot of genome organization

Interdisciplinary Initiatives Program Round 8 - 2016

Other Stanford Bio-X Supported Research

2 LI-COR’s Odyssey CLx Quantitative Imaging System for Sensitive Quantification of Protein Expression

Equipment Grant - 2013

Research News

An optical illusion called 'reverse-phi motion' helps explain how we view moving objects, Stanford scientists find

September 12, 2011
Research conducted by Bio-X affiliated faculty member Thomas Clandinin.

Stanford Bio-X

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