Upcoming
Peter Sarnak, Ph.D.Eugene Higgins Professor of Mathematics, Princeton University
Stephen Liberles, Ph.D.Professor of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School
Vicky Kalogera, Ph.D.Daniel I. Linzer Distinguished University Professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy, Northwestern University
Stephen R. Quake, Ph.D.Lee Otterson Professor of Bioengineering, Stanford University Past
Jun YeJILA New abilities with laser light have enabled us to create and probe atomic gases at ultralow temperatures, forming the basis of atomic clocks accurate to 18 decimal places. This talk will discuss the history of such advanced clocks and how they are used to test fundamental laws of nature, search for new physics and create a range of technologies.
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Mark Zylka, Ph.D.California Institute of Technology In this lecture, Mark Zylka will describe how candidate environmental risk factors for autism can be identified rationally, by pinpointing chemicals that interfere with the same molecular pathways that are affected in individuals with autism. His research focuses on identifying environmental-use chemicals that target autism-linked molecular pathways, using environmental sampling data to assess the exposure threat to people, and validating risk potential in animal models.
- Lecture
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Subir Sachdev, Ph.D.Herchel Smith Professor of Physics, Harvard University In this lecture, Subir Sachdev will present a simple model of many-particle entanglement, which has led to new insights into two very different classes of systems.
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Arnold Kriegstein, Ph.D.Founding Director of the Broad Stem Cell Center, University of California, San Francisco In this lecture, Dr. Arnold Kriegstein will describe recent advances in our understanding of the unique features of human cortical development.
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Jeremy Veenstra-VanderWeele, M.D.Columbia University Irving Medical CenterNew York State Psychiatric Institute
In this lecture, Dr. Jeremy Veenstra-VanderWeele will outline critical challenges, both conceptual and practical, to translating genomic, cellular, and animal model research into new treatments in autism spectrum disorder.
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John Morgan, Ph.D.Stony Brook University This talk will introduce an overview of some of the most important concepts and ideas from geometry and topology and then describe the recent interplay between these mathematical subjects and high energy theoretical physics, interactions that have been of a fundamentally different nature from earlier ones.
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