Veranstaltungstipp
Donnerstag, 22. September 2016, 08:00 - 21:00 iCal
Resting State and Brain Connectivity
Following the successful previous conferences in Boston/Cambridge (Mass., USA), Magdeburg (Germany, EU), and Milwaukee (Wisc., USA), the Fifth Biennial Conference on Resting State and Brain Connectivity will take place in Vienna (Austria, EU) from September 21 to 23, 2016.
Hauptgebäude der Universität Wien
Universitätsring 1, 1010 Wien
Tagung, Konferenz, Kongress, Symposium
Weitere Termine
Mittwoch, 21. September 2016, 08:00 - 17:00
Freitag, 23. September 2016, 08:00 - 21:00
Program
Wednesday, 21.9.2016
Emerging Technologies
08:10 Elizabeth Hillman (Columbia University, USA)
Visualizing the neural drivers of resting state fMRI
08:30 Pierre Levan (University of Freiburg, Germany)
Accelerated fMRI: is faster better?
08:50 Gary Glover (Stanford University, USA)
Mapping electromagnetic neuromodulation
09:10 Gustavo Deco (Pompeu Fabra University, Spain)
The Dynamical Complexity Underlying Different Brain States
09:30 Coffee break
Analysis
09:50 Tor Wager (University of Colorado, USA)
Large-scale predictive modeling: Principles and examples from affective neuroscience
10:10 Catie Chang (NIH, USA)
Arousal fluctuations and spontaneous brain dynamics
10:30 John Gore (Vanderbilt, USA)
Resting state anisotropy in white matter
10:50 Robert Cox (NIH, USA)
Resting State Processing in AFNI – from Time Series to Group Analyses
11:10 Gold Sponsor Presentation SIEMENS
11:55 Lunch break
Acquisition
12:55 Tom Liu (Univ of California San Diego, USA)
The global signal: Nuisance or Information
13:15 Lilianne R. Mujica-Parodi (Stony Brook University, USA)
Signal Fluctuation Sensitivity: dynamic phantom and human data suggest an improved metric for optimizing detection of resting-state fMRI networks
13:35 Helmut Laufs (Schleswig-Holstein University, Germany)
The brain functional architecture across different states of consciousness
13:55 Coffee break and poster session
Connectomics
15:10 Ed Bullmore (Cambridge, UK)
Brain graphs and gene expression
15:30 Angelo Bifone (Instituto Intaliano di Technologia, Italy)
Modular organization of resting state functional connectivity networks beyond the resolution limit
15:50 Susan Gabrieli (MIT, USA)
Connectomic Insights into Schizophrenia
16:10 James S. Hyde Lecture: Denis Le Bihan (Neurospin, France)
Water diffusion, neuronal activity and brain connectivity
16:50 End of Day1
Thursday, 22.9.2016
Multi-Modal
08:00 Valentin Riedl (Technical University Munich, Germany)
Neuroenergetics offers a window into the directional signaling architecture of the human brain
08:20 Pedro Valdes-Sosa (Cuban Neurosciences Center, Cuba)
Matrix-Tensor network methods for Brain Connectivity
08:40 Michael Chee (Duke-NUS, Singapore)
Altered resting state connectivity in the sleep deprived brain
09:00 Thomas König (University of Bern, Switzerland)
Potentials and pitfalls of connectivity analyses in EEG data
09:20 Coffee break
Modulations
09:40 Yong He (Beijing Normal University, China)
Antidepressant Selectively Modulates Brain Network Connectivity in Major Depressive Disorder
10:00 Yihong Yang (NIDA, USA)
Modulation of large-scale brain networks by cognitive task loads and in brain disorders
10:20 Michelle Voss (University of Iowa, USA)
Sparking brain plasticity in the aging brain: Physical exercise to improve hippocampal connectivity and learning in older adults
10:40 Rupert Lanzenberger (Medical University Vienna, Austria)
Pharmacological modulation of brain networks in psychiatry
11:00 Arno Villringer (Max Planck Institute Leipzig, Germany)
What can resting-state fMRI tell us in patients with ischemic stroke?
11:20 Silver Sponsor Presentation GE
11:45 Lunch break
Translational
12:45 Christopher Pawela (Medical College Wisconsin, USA)
The Effects of Peripheral and Central Nervous System Modulation on the BOLD Signal in Preclinical Animal Models
13:05 Nanyin Zhang (Penn State University, USA)
Understanding the awake rat brain organization using resting-state fMRI
13:25 James Hyde (Medical College Wisconsin, USA)
Meta-metallic Surface Coil for Enhanced Resting-state Sensitivity in the Rat Cerebellum
13:45 Christian Windischberger (Medical University Vienna, Austria)
Multimodal assessment of brain connectivity in health and disease
14:05 Coffee break and poster session
Consciousness
15:50 Athena Demertzi (University of Liege, Belgium)
Intrinsic functional architecture reflects the level of consciousness and differentiates non-communicating patients
16:10 Anthony Hudetz (University of Michigan, USA)
Dynamic Brain States in Wakefulness and Anesthesia
16:30 Keynote Paul Thompson (Univ of Southern California, USA)
ENIGMA, Big Data, and the Brain: Imaging and Genetics in 50,000 Individuals from 35 Countries
19:30 Social Event at the Orangerie of Schoenbrunn Palace
Friday, 23.9.2016
Psychiatry
08:00 Vince Calhoun (MIND, USA)
Data fusion of dynamic connectivity with brain structure and genetics
08:20 Vinod Menon (Standford University, USA)
Atypical brain circuits in autism: relating clinical symptoms, cognitive inflexibility and physiology
08:40 Frank Scharnowski (University of Zurich, Switzerland)
Learning control over emotion networks with real-time fMRI connectivity feedback
09:00 Martin Walter (University of Tübingen, Germany)
Robustness of the Depression Connectome and its pharmacological correction
09:20 Oral presentations I
Abboud Sami: Modularity in the visual cortex of the congenitally blind
Abbas Anzar: Quasiperiodic patterns vary in frequency between anesthetized and awake monkeys
Hart Michael: Distinct gender and age related changes of the functional connectome during development from adolescence to adulthood
Ávila César: Measuring phonemic fluency ability by means of functional connectivity in resting state
Floris Dorothea: A Functional Connectivity-Based Evaluation of Competing Models of Sex Differentiation and Autism
10:00 Coffee break
Development
10:20 John Gilmore (Univ of North Carolina, USA)
Resting-State Development in Early Childhood
10:40 Xi-Nian Zuo (Chinese Academy of Sciences, China)
Surface-based Functional Homogeneity in Human Connectomics: Computation, Reliability, Parcellation and Neurodevelopment
11:00 David Salat (Harvard University, USA)
Factors influencing connectivity of the aging brain
11:20 Michael Milham (Child Mind Institute, USA)
Brain-Based Biomarkers for Psychiatry: New Directions and Next Steps
11:40 Silver Sponsor Presentation PHILIPS
12:05 Lunch break
13:10 Oral presentations II
Chen Jingyuan: Nuisance Regression of High Frequency FMRI Data: Denoising Can Be Noisy
Tomasi Dardo: Temporal evolution of functional connectivity metrics: Could seven minutes of rest be enough?
Liu Quanying: High-density electroencephalography permits the detection of resting state networks
Thielcke Andre: Simultaneous PET/MR highlights the complementary nature between metabolic and functional connectivity and their importance in the investigation of resting state networks
Razi Adeel: Parametric Empirical Bayes for Spectral DCM
Disease Connectome – I
13:50 Maria Rocca (San Raffaele University, Italy)
Assessing system involvement in multiple sclerosis
14:10 Andrei Holodny (Memorial Sloan Kettering, USA)
Resting State fMRI in Brain Tumors
14:30 Apkar Vania Apkarian (Northwestern University, USA)
Brain Mechanisms of Chronic Pain
14:50 Pratik Mukherjee (Univ of California San Francisco, USA)
New Approaches to the Disease Connectome: Network Eigenmodes and White Matter Edge Density
15:10 Coffee break and poster session
Disease Connectome – II
16:25 M. Elizabeth Meyerand (University of Wisconsin, USA)
The Epilepsy Connectome Project
16:45 Victoria Morgan (Vanderbilt University, USA)
Journey to develop clinically useful connectivity biomarkers for temporal lobe epilepsy
17:05 Martijn Van Den Heuvel (Utrecht University, Netherlands)
Disease Connectomics : truth or dare?
17:25 Mark Lowe (Cleveland Clinics, USA)
Functional and Structural Connectivity Measures as Biomarkers of Neurologic Disease Progression
17:45 Closing Ceremony
Saturday, 24.9.2016
09:00 Satellite Symposia
Zur Webseite der Veranstaltung
Veranstalter
Center for Medical Physics and Biomedical Engineering at the Medical University of Vienna
Um Anmeldung wird gebeten
Kosten
Registration includes lunchtime buffets, coffee breaks and social event at the Orangerie of Schoenbrunn Palace.
650€ late/onsite rate after August 15, 2016
A limited number of discounted student registrations are available on a first-come first-serve basis. Students are those who have not yet earned a PhD and/or an MD diploma and who are enrolled in an educational program. Those registering as student must show a valid student ID at registration check-in or standard registration fees apply.
Registration fee for the satellite symposia is 50€.
Registration fee for the educational workshop is 450€.
For questions regarding registration, hotel reservations or invitation letters please contact: congress@univie.ac.at
Kontakt
Univ.-Prof. Dr. Claus Lamm
University of Vienna; Social, Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience Unit
+43-1-4277-471 30
claus.lamm@univie.ac.at
Erstellt am Dienstag, 13. September 2016, 11:50
Letzte Änderung am Dienstag, 13. September 2016, 12:04