shanghai colloquium in neuroeconomics...2016/12/08  · shanghai colloquium in neuroeconomics...

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Shanghai Colloquium in Neuroeconomics Balancing Brain Plasticity/Stability across the Lifespan Early life experiences potently shape brain function, when neural circuits exhibit windows of pro- found plasticity then later stabilize. A cellular/molecular basis for these "critical periods" has begun to emerge: the balance between excitation and inhibition drives onset timing, while molec- ular ‘brakes’ actively limit rewiring thereafter. Manipulations targeting these processes are so powerful that animals of identical chronological age may be at the peak, prior to, or past their plastic window. Thus, critical period timing per se is plastic. Strikingly, most of these regulators converge in and around pivotal inhibitory circuits which are particularly vulnerable in mental illness. Understanding their maturation and maintenance provides novel therapeutic insight into cognitive disorders and the potential to reopen windows of brain plasticity throughout life – for better or worse. Biography Takao K. Hensch, Ph.D., is joint professor of Neurology, Harvard Medical School at Boston Chil- dren’s Hospital, and professor of Molecular and Cellular Biology at Harvard’s Center for Brain Sci- ence. After undergraduate studies with Dr. J Allan Hobson at Harvard, he was a student of Dr. Masao Ito at the University Tokyo (MPH) and a Fulbright fellow with Dr. Wolf Singer at the Max-Planck Institute for Brain Research, before receiving a PhD in neuroscience working with Dr. Michael Stryker at the University of California, San Francisco in 1996. He then helped to launch the RIKEN Brain Science Institute as lab head for neuronal circuit development and served as group director (and now special advisor) before returning to the United States in 2006.Professor Hensch has received several honors, including the Society for Neuroscience Young Investigator Award in both Japan (2001 Tsukahara Prize) and the United States (2005), as well as an NIH Director’s Pioneer Award (2007). He currently directs the NIMH Silvio O. Conte Center for Basic Mental Health Research at Harvard. Dec. 8 th , 2016 Part of the Shanghai Neuroeconomics Collective www.shanghai-neuroeconomics.org TIME: 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM VENUE: Room 1504, NYU Shanghai Pudong Campus 1555 Century Avenue, Pudong, Shanghai Takao Hensch Professor, Molecular & Cellular Biology Professor, Neurology (Children’s Hospital) Center for Brain Science Harvard University R S V P

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Page 1: Shanghai Colloquium in Neuroeconomics...2016/12/08  · Shanghai Colloquium in Neuroeconomics Balancing Brain Plasticity/Stability across the Lifespan Early life experiences potently

Shanghai Colloquium in Neuroeconomics

Balancing Brain Plasticity/Stability across the LifespanEarly life experiences potently shape brain function, when neural circuits exhibit windows of pro-found plasticity then later stabilize. A cellular/molecular basis for these "critical periods" has begun to emerge: the balance between excitation and inhibition drives onset timing, while molec-ular ‘brakes’ actively limit rewiring thereafter. Manipulations targeting these processes are so powerful that animals of identical chronological age may be at the peak, prior to, or past their plastic window. Thus, critical period timing per se is plastic. Strikingly, most of these regulators converge in and around pivotal inhibitory circuits which are particularly vulnerable in mental illness. Understanding their maturation and maintenance provides novel therapeutic insight into cognitive disorders and the potential to reopen windows of brain plasticity throughout life – for better or worse.

Biography

Takao K. Hensch, Ph.D., is joint professor of Neurology, Harvard Medical School at Boston Chil-dren’s Hospital, and professor of Molecular and Cellular Biology at Harvard’s Center for Brain Sci-ence. After undergraduate studies with Dr. J Allan Hobson at Harvard, he was a student of Dr. Masao Ito at the University Tokyo (MPH) and a Fulbright fellow with Dr. Wolf Singer at the Max-Planck Institute for Brain Research, before receiving a PhD in neuroscience working with Dr. Michael Stryker at the University of California, San Francisco in 1996. He then helped to launch the RIKEN Brain Science Institute as lab head for neuronal circuit development and served as group director (and now special advisor) before returning to the United States in 2006.Professor Hensch has received several honors, including the Society for Neuroscience Young Investigator Award in both Japan (2001 Tsukahara Prize) and the United States (2005), as well as an NIH Director’s Pioneer Award (2007). He currently directs the NIMH Silvio O. Conte Center for Basic Mental Health Research at Harvard.

Dec. 8th, 2016

Part of the

S h a n g h a i

Neuroeconomics

C o l l e c t i v e

www.shanghai-neuroeconomics.org

TIME: 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

VENUE:Room 1504, NYU Shanghai Pudong Campus1555 Century Avenue, Pudong, Shanghai

Takao Hensch

Professor, Molecular & Cellular BiologyProfessor, Neurology (Children’s Hospital)

Center for Brain ScienceHarvard University

R S V P