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?Description
Join us this October and explore new ways to light up your research with our live digital events and latest on-demand webinars.
Participate in dynamic talks and discussions with key leaders in the field of adult neurogenesis, brain development and repair, and neuroepigenetics. Hear about the new approaches being discovered in neurodegeneration and Alzheimer’s disease from experts in our on-demand webinars. Don’t miss out!
Individual registrations are required for each live session.
October 6, 2020
?7:00am PST | 10:00am EST | 3:00pm BST | 4:00pm CEST
Confirmed speakers
Organizer
Registration
Register for the Adult Neurogenesis session
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??Liv?e session: Building and Repairing the Brain
?7:00am PST | 10:00am EST | 3:00pm BST | 4:00pm CEST
Confirmed speakers
Organizers
Registration
Register for the Building and Repairing the Brain session
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???Live session: Epigenetics in the Nervous System
October 14, 2020
7:00am PST | 10:00am EST | 3:00pm BST | 4:00pm CEST
Confirmed speakers
Organizers
Registration
Register for the Epigenetics in the Nervous System session
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Video release date: October 12, 2020
Speaker
Webinar summary
Join Dr. Malú Tansey, Professor of neuroscience and Director of the Center for Translational Research in Neurodegenerative Disease at the University of Florida, Gainesville, USA, as she talks us through a new, alternative pathologic model for Alzheimer's disease, details how genetic and environmental risk factors combine to increase disease risk and her research demonstrating how this new approach could lead to therapeutic developments in this field.
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Video release date: October 26, 2020
?Speaker
Webinar summary
Join Dr. David Rubinsztein, Professor of Molecular Neurogenetics and Deputy Director of the Cambridge Institute for Medical Research at the University of Cambridge, UK, as he talks us through the association between autophagy and neurodegeneration. Dr Rubinsztein, who is also a UK Dementia Research Institute Professor, will discuss the role of autophagy in the clearance of misfolded proteins common to neurodegenerative disorders and how genetic evidence implicates this pathway in disease pathogenesis. He will further highlight how his research is helping advance our understanding of this molecular process and identify potential therapeutic intervention points.?
* More webinars to be announced shortly.
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