Organized by Misha Ahrens (Janelia), Asya Rolls (Technion) and Nelson Spruston (Janelia), this is the first in a series of planning workshops that will help identify where Janelia can make the most impact with a new 15-lab, 15-year research program.
In October, Janelia announced 4D Cellular Physiology as a new research area, complementing our first research area, Mechanistic Cognitive Neuroscience and two core areas, Molecular Tools and Imaging and Computation and Theory. 4D Cellular Physiology aims to understand the function, structure and communication mechanisms of cells within and across organ systems. We aim to develop and deploy creative new approaches that will improve our ability to study cellular function in intact tissues, in living animals.
This workshop will focus on the critical interaction of the nervous system with myriad cell types in physiological systems across the body. Coordination of homeostatic processes in animals requires communication between the body and the brain, and our goal in this meeting is to identify the most pressing questions and exciting directions pertaining to the mechanisms of bidirectional communication between neurons and other cell types and physiological systems throughout the body.
The virtual format will include 4-5 hours of short talks and discussion each day. All talks will be open to the broad scientific community. Presentations by invited speakers will focus on current challenges in the field and exciting new directions that could lead to transformative advances. If you wish to attend any of the sessions, click the "sign up" button on this page to receive the meeting agenda and zoom link to join when they become available.
This workshop will serve an important role in shaping Janelia’s ongoing research program, providing critical background for a new approach to collaboratively tackle some of the most important problems in modern biomedical research.
Early career researchers, including graduate students and postdocs, are invited to submit an abstract for consideration for a 10-minute talk focused on how the development of new tools and approaches in the area of brain-body communication could drive your research forward.
Applications are closed for this workshop.
View Full DetailsOrganized by Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz (Janelia), Michael Caplan (Yale) and Patrick Chitwood (Janelia), this is one in a series of planning workshops that will help identify where Janelia can make the most impact with a new 15-lab, 15-year research program.
In October, Janelia announced 4D Cellular Physiology as a new research area, complementing our first research area, Mechanistic Cognitive Neuroscience and two core areas, Molecular Tools and Imaging and Computation and Theory. 4D Cellular Physiology aims to understand the function, structure and communication mechanisms of cells within and across organ systems. We aim to develop and deploy creative new approaches that will improve our ability to study cellular function in intact tissues, in living animals.
This workshop will focus on the critical physiological roles that epithelia play in forming mechanical and chemical barriers in many tissues. Differentiated cell types of each epithelial tissue and organ acquire unique structures and subcellular specializations that endow them with the capacity to perform their physiological functions. For the vast majority of epithelial cell types, the essential cellular and physiological cues that produce their exquisite architectural and biochemical tissue-specific adaptations are not fully understood. Our goal in this meeting is to identify the most pressing questions and exciting directions pertaining to the interface between epithelial cell biology and physiology throughout the body.
The virtual format will include 4-5 hours of short talks and discussion each day. All talks will be open to the broad scientific community. Presentations by invited speakers will focus on current challenges in the field and exciting new directions that could lead to transformative advances. If you wish to attend any of the sessions, click the "sign up" button on this page to receive the meeting agenda and zoom link to join when they become available.
This workshop will serve an important role in shaping Janelia’s ongoing research program, providing critical background for a new approach to collaboratively tackle some of the most important problems in modern biomedical research.
Early career researchers, including graduate students and postdocs, are invited to submit an abstract for consideration for a 10-minute talk focused on how the development of new tools and approaches in the area of epithelial physiology could drive your research forward.
Applications are closed for this workshop.
View Full DetailsOrganized by Mikala Egeblad (CSHL), Ron Vale (HHMI-Janelia) and Harold Varmus (Weill Cornell), this is the third in a series of planning workshops that will serve an important role in shaping a 15-lab, 15-year research program at Janelia Research Campus called “4D Cellular Physiology”.
4D Cellular Physiology aims to understand the function, structure and communication mechanisms of cells within and across organ systems. We hope to stimulate this emerging field by taking mechanistic cell biological approaches to important physiological questions about development, normal homeostatic function, and disease in the context of organs and tissues. Janelia is particularly strong in high-resolution light and electron microscopy approaches that probe the structure, biochemistry, and dynamic behavior of single cells in 3D tissue environments; efforts that are aided by computer scientists and theorists who help to analyze and interpret such data.
The tumor microenvironment (TME) is an excellent topic for a 4D Cellular Physiology workshop, as tumors consist of a complex, heterogeneous ecosystem of cells, the collective behavior of which influences tumor progression, spread, and response to therapeutic intervention. This meeting will focus on the most pressing questions, outstanding problems and innovative approaches to understanding the mechanisms of communication, adaptations in biochemistry, and biophysical properties of the many cell types and extracellular components that comprise the TME. We welcome everyone to help us explore the big unknown questions related to the cell biology of tumors and to identify barriers, both conceptual and technical, that must be overcome to answer those questions.
This workshop will serve an important role in shaping Janelia’s ongoing research program, providing critical background for a new approach to collaboratively tackle some of the most important problems in modern biomedical research. The virtual format will include roughly 5 hours of short talks and discussions each day.
Early career researchers, including graduate students and postdocs, are invited to submit an abstract for consideration for a 10-minute talk focused on your work related to the tumor microenvironment, any challenges you face, and how the development of new tools and approaches could drive your research forward.
Applications are closed for this workshop.
View Full Details
Organized by Luke Lavis (Janelia), Alison Tebo (Janelia) and Jordan Meier (NCI/NIH), this is the fourth in a series of planning workshops that will serve an important role in shaping a 15-lab, 15-year research program at Janelia Research Campus called “4D Cellular Physiology”.
The goal of 4DCP is to understand the function, structure and communication mechanisms of cells within and across organ systems. Exploring how the collective actions of molecules give rise to cell and tissue functions requires tracking of cells and visualization of biological processes in vivo in real-time and at high resolution. One way in which we aim to stimulate this emerging field is through the development of novel cell biological tools and technologies that enable mechanistic approaches to physiological questions of development, homeostasis and disease in the context of organs and tissues. This workshop will center on some of the latest advances in imaging methods, technology development and molecular approaches at the interface of cell biology and physiology.
The virtual format will include 4-5 hours of short talks and discussion each day. All talks will be open to the broad scientific community. Presentations by invited speakers will focus on current challenges in the field and exciting new directions that could lead to transformative advances. If you wish to attend any of the sessions, sign up to receive the meeting agenda and zoom link to join when they become available.
This workshop will serve an important role in shaping Janelia’s ongoing research program, providing critical background for a new approach to collaboratively tackle some of the most important problems in modern biomedical research.
Graduate students, postdocs and other trainees are invited to submit an abstract for consideration for a short talk.
Short talk applications are closed
Immediately preceding this workshop, on May 26, Janelia is hosting an Early Career Researcher Symposium on Protein Engineering, intended for students and postdocs. Visit the website for more details and to apply for a short talk.
View Full Details
Organized by Gwyneth Card (Janelia), Wyatt Korff (Janelia), Margaret Gardel (U. Chicago) and Dan Goldman (GA Tech), this is the fifth in a series of planning workshops that will serve an important role in shaping a 15-lab, 15-year research program at Janelia Research Campus called “4D Cellular Physiology”.
This workshop will bring together scientists with both top-down and bottom-up perspectives to explore what predictions we could make about physiological processes by studying mechanics across scales and how 4D Cellular Physiology can catalyze this effort to transcend our current state of knowledge and accelerate progress. Adaptive macromolecular machines support myriad physiological processes at scales from single molecules to whole organisms. These machines need to be dynamically regulated in space and time to function and must be organized into tissues to support organismal movement. Through a series of forward-looking talks and discussions, we will explore the common mechanical and physical properties that span these scales, as well as the new tools and conceptual frameworks that are necessary to elucidate them.
The virtual format will include ~5 hours of short talks and discussion each day, open to the broad scientific community. Presentations by invited speakers will focus on current challenges in the field and exciting new directions that could lead to transformative advances.
This workshop will serve an important role in shaping Janelia’s ongoing research program, providing critical background for a new approach to collaboratively tackle some of the most important problems in modern biomedical research.
Graduate students, postdocs and other trainees are invited to submit an abstract for consideration for a short talk.
Short talk applications are closed
Organized by Kara McKinley (Harvard), Shruti Naik (NYU) and Mike Longaker (Stanford), this is the sixth in a series of planning workshops that will serve an important role in shaping a 15-lab, 15-year research program at Janelia Research Campus called “4D Cellular Physiology”.
View Full DetailsOrganized by Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz (HHMI/Janelia), Vamsi Mootha (HHMI/Harvard) and Rong Tian (U. Washington), this is the seventh in a series of planning workshops that will serve an important role in shaping Janelia's new 15-lab, 15-year research program in 4D Cellular Physiology.
View Full DetailsOrganized by Kristin Branson (Janelia), James Fitzgerald (Janelia), Ann Hermundstad (Janelia), Michael Reiser (Janelia), and Allyson Sgro (Boston University), this is the eighth in a series of planning workshops that will serve an important role in shaping a 15-lab, 15-year research program at Janelia Research Campus called “4D Cellular Physiology”.
View Full DetailsOrganized by Zev Gartner (UCSF), Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz (Janelia), Wallace Marshall (UCSF) and Manu Prakash (Stanford), this is the ninth in a series of planning workshops that will serve an important role in shaping Janelia's new 15-lab, 15-year research program in 4D Cellular Physiology.
View Full Details
Organized by Gabriela Michel, Gowan Tervo, Michael Reiser, Emily Dennis, Josh Dudman, Vanessa Ruta, and Vivek Jayaraman, this Junior Scientist Workshop provides an exciting opportunity for graduate students and recent PhDs interested in the mechanistic basis of cognition to present their research to a diverse audience and discuss ideas for the future, while also discovering potential independent early-career options at Janelia. Due to the ongoing concerns surrounding COVID-19, the 2021 workshop will be online but still highly interactive. Having hosted using this format in 2020, we believe that the workshop will be very successful, making use of the unique advantages of various online communication tools.
View Full DetailsStay Updated
Sign up to receive periodic updates and announcements about Janelia’s programs and events, including conferences and workshops, public lectures, educational and career opportunities, and more.