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HHMI Bulletin May 2010 Jeffrey M. Perkel |
A Brighter View of the Brain in Action A protein sensor is beefed up to illuminate the language of neural networks. |
HHMI Bulletin Aug 2011 |
Let's Get Small Tim Harris develops tools neuroscientists can use to measure the brain's activity, to give them a quantitative view inside the elaborate structure of the brain. |
HHMI Bulletin Nov 2011 Jim Keeley |
Getting Back to the Bench All Janelia Farm group leaders, fellows, and junior fellows actively engage in research. They work to discover the basic rules and mechanisms of the brain's information-processing systems and developing biological and computational techniques for creating and interpreting biological images. |
HHMI Bulletin Feb 2012 Paul Muhlrad |
Changing Channels Appetite and other deep-seated desires could be modified by altering brain ion channels, according to research at Janelia Farm. |
HHMI Bulletin Winter 2013 John Carey |
Sydney Brenner: Model of Success At the famously innovative Medical Research Council's Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, England, Sydney Brenner made his mark. Today, Brenner spends part of his year at Janelia, as a senior resident fellow. |
HHMI Bulletin Nov 2011 Mitch Leslie |
Creating Internal Maps Combining complementary skills, a team of neuroscientists studies how flies navigate their surroundings. |
HHMI Bulletin May 2010 Randy Barrett |
The Silicon Marvel Computational biologists have a need for speed. The computing cluster on the Janelia Farm Research Campus delivers the performance they require at a mind boggling 36 trillion operations per second. |
HHMI Bulletin February 2011 Kathryn Brown |
Curved Wings A scientist-sculptor says "My philosophy is that there are only two things you can do to keep creative, like a child: art and science." |
HHMI Bulletin Winter 2013 Sarah Goforth |
Something's Brewing Making beer is half art and half science, says Jasper Akerboom, so it's the perfect diversion for a restless researcher. In the lab of biochemist Loren Looger, Akerboom's day job entails creating and testing molecular probes that help visualize how neurons work in the brain. |