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neuroscience

Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences

Traumatic Brain Disease in the Military: Past, Present and Future

A review of the fascinating 100 year history of traumatic brain injury in the military and, in particular, its long-term consequences.
Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences

Homeostatic regulation of sleep and its regional aspects

Vladyslav Vyazovskiy from the Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics gives this Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences seminar
Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences

Early inflammation and NGF deregulation in Alzheimer's and Down's syndrome

Claudio Cuello from the Department of Pharmacology, McGill University, Montreal gives this Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences seminar.
Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences

Imaging and Stimulating Brain Plasticity

Professor Heidi Johansen-Berg gives her inaugural lecture as head of the Plasticity Group at the Oxford Centre for Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Brain (FMRIB).
Women in Medical Science

Heidi Johansen-Berg: Women in Science

Professor Heidi Johansen-Berg heads the Plasticity Group at the Oxford Centre for Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Brain (FMRIB). Her research focuses on how the brain changes in response to damage, learning and experience.
Alumni Weekend

A Successful Strategy for Building Normal Brains - Nature or Nurture?

Dr Simon Butt (Keble), Fellow and Tutor in Neuroscience, gives a talk for the Oxford Alumni Weekend.
Uehiro Oxford Institute

Uehiro Seminar: Rescuing Responsibility from the Retributivists - Neuroscience, Free Will and Criminal Punishment

Legal punishment as the routine infliction of suffering poses a serious challenge of justification. The challenge becomes more urgent as a number of thinkers argue that the dominant, retributivist answer fails in the light of the findings of neuroscience.
Undergraduate Admissions (PodOxford)

Biology, Chemistry and Biochemistry at Oxford: a guide for prospective undergraduate students

This light-hearted talk gives you the chance to hear three admissions tutors discuss what you can expect from their courses, and what the tutors are looking for when they select students.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Developing and disseminating effective psychological therapies for anxiety disorders: science, policy and economics.

David M Clark (Oxford University) delivers a lecture at the third Calleva Research Symposium on Evolution and Human Science on 27 October 2012.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

A social neuroscience perspective on adolescent risk-taking

Laurence Steinberg (Temple University) delivers a lecture at the third Calleva Research Symposium on Evolution and Human Science on 27 October 2012.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Social networks and evolution

Nicholas Christakis (Harvard University) delivers a lecture at the third Calleva Research Symposium on Evolution and Human Science on 27 October 2012.
Alumni Weekend

The Thomas Willis Oxford Brain Collection

Professor Margaret Esiri, Professor of Neuropathology and Fellow of St Hugh's, will talk about the pivotal role Oxford has played in neuroscience - where the words neuron and cell were coined - and the relevance of this history today.
Alumni Weekend

Wobbles, warbles and fish the brain basis of reading difficulties

John Stein gives a talk for the 2012 Oxford Alumni Weekend.
Entrepreneurship

Oxford at Said Seminar: Neuroscience

This Oxford at Said seminar showcases some of Oxfords most exciting new research in the area of Neuroscience.
Keble College

Creativity Lecture 8: Creativity as a neuroscientific mystery

Prof. Margaret Boden (Philosophy, Sussex) delivers a lecture as part of the Keble College Creativity series.
Keble College

Creativity Lecture 5: The Neuroscience of Creativity

Professor Susan Greenfield explains how neuroscience can make innovative contributions to creativity by offering a perspective at the level of the physical brain.
Bio-Ethics Bites

Neuroscience Can Tell Us About Morality

What can science tell us about morality? Many philosophers would say, 'nothing at all'. Facts don't imply values, they say. you need further argument to move from facts about us and about the world to conclusions about what we ought to do.
Bio-Ethics Bites

Brain Chemistry and Moral Decision-Making

Answers to moral questions, it seems, depend on how much serotonin there is flowing through your brain. In the future might we be able to alter people's moral behaviour with concoctions of chemicals?
Alumni Weekend

New Cells for Old Members: The Science of Stem Cells

Dr Francis Szele gives a talk for the Oxford Alumni Weekend on Stem Cell science and looks at how they could be used in repairing brain disease and injuries.
Oxford Humanities - Research Showcase: Global Exploration, Innovation and Influence

Mindreading: From Neuroimaging to the Philosophy of Mind

Dr Timothy Baines, Oxford, gives a talk for the Oxford Humanities Research Showcase conference on 11th July 2011.

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