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Monday, January 31, 2011
Noon - 1:00 PM
Biolomolecular Seminar Series
Description: "Neural circuit analysis enabled by a new generation of genetic & optical technologies, optogenetics"

Dr. Xue Han, Assistant Professor, Dept of Biomedical Engineering, Boston University
24 Cummington Street B01
Boston, MA 02215

http://people.bu.edu/celenza/Biomolecular.html
Contact: Dr. Chip Celenza
Tuesday, February 1, 2011
Noon - 1:00 PM
Image Guided Tumor Ablation: Shifting Paradigms in Cancer Care
Description: Location: The Forsyth Insitute, Seminar Room A
245 First Street, 17th Floor
Cambridge

Speaker: Damian E. Dupuy, MD, FACR
Professor of Diagnostic Imaging
The Warren Alpert School of Medicine of Brown University
Director of Tumor Ablation
Rhode Island Hospital

Summary: For decades conventional treatment of solid malignancies in the head and neck, lung, liver and kidney has relied upon surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Such therapies can be toxic, invasive and costly. As the median age of the population increases many patients who develop these tumors may be too frail or elderly to undergo the standard treatment. In addition health care costs continue to rise and many expensive therapies don’t provide significant improvements in quality or quantity of life. Image-guided tumor ablation is a less invasive alternative that can be used alone or in conjunction with standard therapies to locally control tumors. Cat scan, ultrasound or magnetic resonance imaging provides image-guidance to place needle-like applicators into the target tumors whereby thermal or chemical treatment can be applied to directly destroy cancers. Image-guided tumor ablation is by and large an outpatient “bandaid” procedure that can be performed in the young or old at a fraction of the cost of conventional treatments. Clinical applications and data for this new treatment will be shown and reviewed.
Contact: Pam Quattrocchi
12:30 PM - 1:30 PM
Manipulation of Innate Immunity by Commensal Bacteria
Description: Speaker: Jeffrey N. Weiser, University of Pennsylvania
Location: Harvard Med School, Warren Alpert Bldg, Room 341
Host: Dr. Dennis Kasper
Coffee and snacks served at 12:15pm outside the room
Contact: Shannon Humphreys
4:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Seminars in Oncology: "BRAF Inhibitors - Their Promise and Their Limits"
Description: Guest Speaker: Keith Flaherty, MD
Lecturer
Harvard Medical School
Massachusetts General Hospital
Cambridge, MA

Host: Lynda Chin
617-582-7646
Contact: Claudia Steele
Wednesday, February 2, 2011
9:30 AM - 10:30 AM
The Legionella lifestyle: an amoeba-adapted human pathogen. R. Isberg, Tufts U. Med. School.
Description: Dr. Ralph Isberg, from Tufts University Medical School, will be giving a seminar at the Massachusetts General Hospital's Simches Research Building.
Room: Simches Auditorium, Simches Building 3rd Floor, 185 Cambridge St, Boston, MA 02114.
Contact: Diana Minasian
2:00 PM - 3:20 PM
Non-Invasive Molecular Imaging in Early Diagnosis of Diabetic Complication
Description: Ali Hafezi-Moghadam, M.D., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Radiology, Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women's Hospital. Boston University School of Medicine, 72 East Concord St, Room L-112. Free and open to the public. Part of the Current Topics in Pharmacological Sciences Seminar Series sponsored by the Department of Pharmacology & Experimental Therapeutics, Boston University School of Medicine. Refreshments at 1:45 pm, BUSM, R-Building 6th Floor.

http://www.bumc.bu.edu/busm-pm/
Contact: Kristina Bigdeli
6:00 PM - 7:30 PM
CANCELLED Hirschsprung aganglionoisis: Defects of the 'second brain'
Description: Aravinda Chakravarti, Ph.D. Director, Center for Complex Disease Genomics, Professor of Medicine, Pediatrics, Molecular Biology & Genetics McKusick - Nathans Institute of Genetic Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Visit web.mit.edu/autism for further details, including talk abstract. Please RSVP to lmavros@mit.edu if you'd like to attend.
Contact: Lee Mavros Rushton
Thursday, February 3, 2011
4:00 PM - 5:30 PM
Memory: Enduring traces of external and internal attention
Description: 2011 MIT Colloquium on Brain and Cognition
Speaker Marvin M. Chun, Ph.D.,Yale University
Place MIT, Singleton Auditorium, 46-3002
Cognition can be broadly distinguished into perceptual processes that are focused on external information from the environment, and reflective processes focused on internal information arising from active mental representations (e.g., memories, thoughts, images). Attention can be directed either to such external (perceptual) or internal (reflective) information (Chun, Golomb, & Turk-Browne, 2011), and the traces of such processing yield different types of memories. FMRI experiments will show how selective processes separately influence the encoding and the retrieval of competing visual memories. This perceptual/reflective framework integrates a broad range of findings.

http://bcs.mit.edu/newsevents/colloquia.html
Contact: Kathleen Dickey
4:30 PM - 5:30 PM
Vascular Biology Seminar: Chenghua Gu, DVM, PhD
Description: Chenghua Gu, DVM, PhD
Assistant Professor, Department of Neurobiology
Harvard Medical School
“Developmental Cross-Talk Between Nervous and Vascular Systems”
Folkman Auditorium, Enders Bldg,
Children's Hospital Boston, 320 Longwood Ave.
Contact: David Lynn, 617-525-4351
Friday, February 4, 2011
8:30 AM - 9:30 AM
Repurposing lipoamide alters electron flow in two important metabolic pathways of E. coli
Description: Speaker: Morgan Feeney, Harvard Medical School
Location: Harvard University Center for the Environment (HUCE), 24 Oxford St, 3rd Floor, Room 310
Notes: MSI Weekly Chalktalk! Please join us for coffee/tea/pastries at 8:30 AM, followed by the chalktalk at 8:45.
http://www.msi.harvard.edu/fridays.html
Contact: Andrea Lenco
Previous Period  Week of Sunday, January 30, 2011    Next Period 



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