• Institutions
    • NEURO
    • FAPSE
    • HUG
  • Research
    • Research groups
    • Publications
  • Education
    • Master
    • PhD
  • Outreach
  • Events
    • Agenda
    • Photo Gallery
  • About us

Geneva University Neurocenter

  • fr
  • en

Or you can search on UNIGE website (advanced-search)  
  • Institutions
    • NEURO
    • FAPSE
    • HUG
  • Research
    • Research groups
    • Publications
  • Education
    • Master
    • PhD
  • Outreach
  • Events
    • Agenda
    • Photo Gallery
  • About us

Agenda

Loading Events

« All Events

  • This event has passed.

Séminaire de Genevieve Stein-O’Brien: “Transforming Context One Cortical Layer At a Time”

25 November 2024 @ 15 h 00 min - 16 h 00 min

  • « Basic Neuroscience Intra-department Seminars: Charles Findling: “Brain-wide representations of prior information in mouse decision-making”
  • Séminaire d’Alexander Heimel: “The circuitry behind innate visual behavior” »

Host: Denis Jabaudon

+ Google Calendar+ iCal Export

Details

Date:
25 November 2024
Time:
15 h 00 min - 16 h 00 min
Event Categories:
Seminars brain&cognition, Seminars neurobiology
Website:
http://agenda.unige.ch/events/view/41240

Venue

Room H4-02-A

Related Events

  • NEURO-CONNECT Tuesday Seminar “Functional Plasticity in the Language Network – evidence from Neuroimaging and Neurostimulation”

    NEURO-CONNECT Tuesday Seminar “Functional Plasticity in the Language Network – evidence from Neuroimaging and Neurostimulation”

    20 May @ 12 h 15 min - 13 h 15 min
  • Basic Neuroscience Intra-department Seminars: “TBA”

    Basic Neuroscience Intra-department Seminars: “TBA”

    26 May @ 11 h 00 min - 12 h 00 min
  • Séminaire de Luca Mazzucato : “TBA”

    Séminaire de Luca Mazzucato : “TBA”

    2 June @ 11 h 00 min - 12 h 00 min
  • « Basic Neuroscience Intra-department Seminars: Charles Findling: “Brain-wide representations of prior information in mouse decision-making”
  • Séminaire d’Alexander Heimel: “The circuitry behind innate visual behavior” »
Geneva University Neurocenter