Memorandum of understanding between the following ... files/CAJAL/2019/WBI 2019/Final Cajal...

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CAJAL Neuroscience Training Course Whole Brain Imaging Bordeaux, September 8-28, 2019 The CAJAL Advanced Neuroscience Training Programme www.cajal-training.org 1 Instructors Eduardo BELLOMO (Brain Product - UK) Eduardo Bellomo is a Scientific Consultant part of Brain Products’ Sales team with a background in cognitive neuroscience and clinical psychology. He is about to complete PhD in Motor Control and Sport Psychophysiology at the School of Sport, Health, and Exercise Sciences of Bangor University (UK). Eduardo’s PhD research adopted a multi- measure interdisciplinary approach to investigate mechanistic questions at the core of human motor performance. Specifically, he tried to improve our understanding on the role of explicit versus implicit movement knowledge during motor skill acquisition, and motor performance under competitive and evaluative psychological pressure. In his experiments he combined fine grained measures of performance (i.e., chunking, movement kinematics) and psychophysiological measures (i.e., EEG, ECG, EMG, eye-gaze). Eduardo was also involved in additional projects. At Bangor University, was involved in a feasibility study for alpha neurofeedback treatment in Parkinson patients (ENact-PD) and collaborated as an EEG data analyst at the AXA Research funded driving safety project. Prior to his PhD, he studied a MSc in Sport Psychology (Bangor University), a MSc in Clinical Psychology (Padua University), and a BSc in Cognitive Psychology and Psychobiology (Padua University). During these years, he was also involved in different projects, including a pilot study using tDCS on psychotic patients and an ERP study using emotionally charged stimuli. Talk : Thursday 12th September 11:45 Selected publications: - Bellomo, E., Cooke, A., Hardy, J. (2018). Chunking, conscious processing, and EEG during sequence acquisition and performance pressure: a comprehensive test of reinvestment theory. Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology, 40, 135-145. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1123/jsep.2017- 0308. - Cooke, A., Bellomo, E., Gallicchio, G., Ring, C., (2018). Neurofeedback research in sport: A critical review of the field. In R. Carlsted (Ed.), Handbook of Sport Neuroscience and Psychophysiology (pp 282-303). Routledge: Abingdon, UK. - Bellomo, E., Cooke, A., Hardy, J. (2017). Reinvestment theory: Assembling the puzzle. Motor chunks, conscious processing, and EEG activity during sequence acquisition and performance under pressure. Psychophysiology, 54, S174. - Ferrucci, R. Bortolomasi, M., Tessari, E., Bellomo, E., Trabucchi, L., Gainelli, G., Priori, A. (2014). EPA-1392 – Transcranial direct-current stimulation (tDCS) in patients with schizophrenia. EPW45 - Stimulation methods and Rehabilitation, 29, 1. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0924- 9338(14)78600-6

Transcript of Memorandum of understanding between the following ... files/CAJAL/2019/WBI 2019/Final Cajal...

Page 1: Memorandum of understanding between the following ... files/CAJAL/2019/WBI 2019/Final Cajal WBI...Computer Science at the University of Koblenz in 2006, and earned his PhD at the University

CAJAL Neuroscience Training Course

Whole Brain Imaging Bordeaux, September 8-28, 2019

The CAJAL Advanced Neuroscience Training Programme www.cajal-training.org

1

Instructors

Eduardo BELLOMO (Brain Product - UK) Eduardo Bellomo is a Scientific Consultant part of Brain Products’ Sales team with a background in cognitive neuroscience and clinical psychology. He is about to complete PhD in Motor Control and Sport Psychophysiology at the School of Sport, Health, and Exercise Sciences of Bangor University (UK). Eduardo’s PhD research adopted a multi-measure interdisciplinary approach to investigate mechanistic questions at the core of human motor performance. Specifically, he tried to improve our understanding on the role of explicit versus implicit movement knowledge during motor

skill acquisition, and motor performance under competitive and evaluative psychological pressure. In his experiments he combined fine grained measures of performance (i.e., chunking, movement kinematics) and psychophysiological measures (i.e., EEG, ECG, EMG, eye-gaze). Eduardo was also involved in additional projects. At Bangor University, was involved in a feasibility study for alpha neurofeedback treatment in Parkinson patients (ENact-PD) and collaborated as an EEG data analyst at the AXA Research funded driving safety project. Prior to his PhD, he studied a MSc in Sport Psychology (Bangor University), a MSc in Clinical Psychology (Padua University), and a BSc in Cognitive Psychology and Psychobiology (Padua University). During these years, he was also involved in different projects, including a pilot study using tDCS on psychotic patients and an ERP study using emotionally charged stimuli. Talk : Thursday 12th September 11:45 Selected publications:

- Bellomo, E., Cooke, A., Hardy, J. (2018). Chunking, conscious processing, and EEG during sequence acquisition and performance pressure: a comprehensive test of reinvestment theory. Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology, 40, 135-145. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1123/jsep.2017-

0308. - Cooke, A., Bellomo, E., Gallicchio, G., Ring, C., (2018). Neurofeedback research in sport: A

critical review of the field. In R. Carlsted (Ed.), Handbook of Sport Neuroscience and Psychophysiology (pp 282-303). Routledge: Abingdon, UK.

- Bellomo, E., Cooke, A., Hardy, J. (2017). Reinvestment theory: Assembling the puzzle. Motor chunks, conscious processing, and EEG activity during sequence acquisition and performance under pressure. Psychophysiology, 54, S174.

- Ferrucci, R. Bortolomasi, M., Tessari, E., Bellomo, E., Trabucchi, L., Gainelli, G., Priori, A. (2014). EPA-1392 – Transcranial direct-current stimulation (tDCS) in patients with schizophrenia. EPW45 - Stimulation methods and Rehabilitation, 29, 1. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0924-

9338(14)78600-6

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Whole Brain Imaging Bordeaux, September 8-28, 2019

The CAJAL Advanced Neuroscience Training Programme www.cajal-training.org

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- Bellomo, E., Cooke, A., Hardy, J. (in prep). How do you putt it? Instructional vs motivational self-talk during golf putting. Effects on accuracy, movement kinematics, cardiac, muscular, and cortical oscillatory EEG activity.

Anne-Karine BOUZIER, PhD (University of Bordeaux - France)

Neuroenergetics, or understanding how the brain produces energy to maintain its functions, has attracted much attention recently. From the improvement of cognitive performances through lifestyle changes (e.g. exercise and nutrition) to novel neuroprotective strategies against neurodegenerative diseases, it appears that neuroenergetics is central for several and diverse aspects of neurobiology. More particularly, studying the cellular links between neuronal activity and energy homeostasis is of utmost importance to elucidate the mechanisms of energy supply dictated by costly neuronal

activity. It has also direct impact for neuroprotection. Talk : Wednesday 25th September 11:00 Selected publications:

- The metabolism of [3-(13)C]lactate in the rat brain is specific of a pyruvate carboxylase-deprived compartment. Bouzier AK, Thiaudiere E, Biran M, Rouland R, Canioni P, Merle M. J Neurochem. 2000 Aug;75(2):480-6.

- [1-(13)C]glucose metabolism in the tumoral and nontumoral cerebral tissue of a glioma-bearing rat. Bouzier AK, Quesson B, Valeins H, Canioni P, Merle M. J Neurochem. 1999 Jun;72(6):2445-55.

- Glucose and lactate metabolism in C6 glioma cells: evidence for the preferential utilization of lactate for cell oxidative metabolism. Bouzier AK, Voisin P, Goodwin R, Canioni P, Merle M. Dev Neurosci. 1998;20(4-5):331-8.

- Compartmentation of lactate and glucose metabolism in C6 glioma cells. A 13c and 1H NMR study. Bouzier AK, Goodwin R, de Gannes FM, Valeins H, Voisin P, Canioni P, Merle M. J Biol Chem. 1998 Oct 16;273(42):27162-9.

Svenja CASPERS, PhD (Institute Jülich - Germany) Svenja Caspers is working in the field of systems neuroscience, with a particular focus on the brain’s connectivity architecture in relation to its structure and function. For this, she combines state-of-the-art neuroimaging techniques, e.g. diffusion and resting-state magnetic resonance imaging, in-vivo and post-mortem, respectively, with high-resolution microscopic techniques for multi-level understanding of the fiber anatomy of the brain. A particular focus of her research is the variability of structure, function and connectivity in the aging brain in relation to environmental and genetic influences, investigated

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Whole Brain Imaging Bordeaux, September 8-28, 2019

The CAJAL Advanced Neuroscience Training Programme www.cajal-training.org

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in large population-based cohorts such as 1000BRAINS and the German National Cohort, both of which she is responsibly involved in. Svenja Caspers is full professor for Anatomy and is heading the Institute for Anatomy I of the Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf (Germany). At the same time, she is deputy director and working group leader “Connectivity” at the Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine (INM-1) of the Research Centre Jülich (Germany). She has published around 50 publications and several book chapters and received several awards, among them the Young Investigator Award of the Anatomical Society. From 2013 to 2015, she was appointed member of the Young Seminar of the Northrhine-Westphalian Academy of Sciences and Arts (Germany). Talk : Tuesday 10th September 11:00 Selected publications:

- Bittner N, Jockwitz C, Mühleisen TW, Hoffstaedter F, Eickhoff SB, Moebus S, Bayen U, Cichon S, Zilles K, Amunts K, Caspers S. 2019. Combining lifestyle risks to disentangle brain structure and functional connectivity differences in older adults. Nat Commun 10: 621.

- Jockwitz C, Mérillat S, Liem F, Oschwald J, Amunts K, Caspers S*, Jäncke L*. 2019. Generalizing age effects on brain structure and cognition – a two-study approach. Hum Brain Mapp, epub ahead of print. *equal contribution

- Richter M, Amunts K, Mohlberg H, Bludau S, Eickhoff SB, Zilles K, Caspers S. 2019. Cytoarchitectonic segregation of human posterior intraparietal and adjacent parieto-occipital sulcus and its relation to visuomotor and cognitive functions. Cereb Cortex 29 (3): 1305-1327.

- Jockwitz C, Caspers S*, Lux S, Jütten K, Schleicher A, Eickhoff SB, Amunts K, Zilles K. 2017. Age- and function-related regional changes in cortical folding of the Default Mode Network in older adults. Brain Struct Funct 222: 83-99.

Mahipal CHOUDHARY, PhD (NIRx Medizintechnik GmbH – Germany) Mahipal Choudhary is a Scientific Consultant at NIRx Medizintechnik GmbH, Berlin. With a PhD and Master in Biomedical Engineering, he has a diverse background- ranging from research and development of Neuromodulation devices to functional imaging of brain. His current job profile at NIRx involves consulting and providing technical support to users of NIRx Functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy platforms.

Selected publications:

- The frequency spectrum of bladder non‐voiding activity as a trigger‐event for conditional stimulation: Closed‐loop inhibition of bladder contractions in rats. Mahipal Choudhary Ron van Mastrigt Els van Asselt. https://doi.org/10.1002/nau.23504

- Effect of tibial nerve stimulation on bladder afferent nerve activity in a rat detrusor overactivity model. Mahipal Choudhary Ron van Mastrigt Els van Asselt. https://doi.org/10.1111/iju.13033 - Inhibitory effects of tibial nerve stimulation on bladder neurophysiology in rats. Mahipal

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Whole Brain Imaging Bordeaux, September 8-28, 2019

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Choudhary,corresponding author Ron van Mastrigt, and Els van Asselt. Doi: 10.1186/s40064-016-1687-6 - Frequency analysis of urinary bladder pre-voiding activity in normal and overactive rat detrusor. Clavica F, Choudhary M.S., van Asselt E., van Mastrigt R., (2014). Neurourol Urodyn. doi:10.1002/nau.22664

Cameron CRADDOCK, PhD (University of Texas - USA) R. Cameron Craddock, PhD, is a computer engineer who combines an extensive R. Cameron Craddock, PhD, is a computer engineer who combines an extensive knowledge of MRI acquisition and analysis methods with computational sciences to research the impact of development and mental health disorders on brain function. He obtained his undergraduate and graduate degrees in the department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Georgia Tech and completed post-doctoral fellowships at Baylor College of Medicine and the Virginia Tech Carilion Research Institute. Dr.

Craddock spent 5 years in New York City working at the Child Mind Institute and Nathan S. Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research before joining the Department of Diagnostic Medicine in the Dell Medical School at The University of Texas at Austin in 2017. Talk : Thursday 19th September 11:00 Selected publications:

- Assessment of the impact of shared brain imaging data on the scientific literature. Milham MP, Craddock RC, Son JJ, Fleischmann M, Clucas J, Xu H, Koo B, Krishnakumar A, Biswal BB, Castellanos FX, Colcombe S, Di Martino A, Zuo XN, Klein A. Nat Commun. 2018 Jul 19;9(1):2818

- Neuroimage special issue on brain segmentation and parcellation - Editorial. Craddock RC, Bellec P, Jbabdi S. Neuroimage. 2018 Apr 15;170:1-4.

- Clinically useful brain imaging for neuropsychiatry: How can we get there? Milham MP, Craddock RC, Klein A. Depress Anxiety. 2017 Jul;34(7):578-587

- The Healthy Brain Network Serial Scanning Initiative: a resource for evaluating inter-individual differences and their reliabilities across scan conditions and sessions. O'Connor D, Potler NV, Kovacs M, Xu T, Ai L, Pellman J, Vanderwal T, Parra LC, Cohen S, Ghosh S, Escalera J, Grant-Villegas N, Osman Y, Bui A, Craddock RC, Milham MP. Gigascience. 2017 Feb 1;6(2):1-14

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Whole Brain Imaging Bordeaux, September 8-28, 2019

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Timo DICKSHEID, PhD (Institute Jülich - Germany) Timo Dickscheid is heading the "Big Data Analytics" group at the Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine (INM-1), Forschungszentrum Jülich, Germany. He graduated in Computer Science at the University of Koblenz in 2006, and earned his PhD at the University of Bonn in 2011, where he worked on the 3D reconstruction of buildings from images under the supervision of Prof. Wolfgang Förstner. In 2010, he joined INM-1 as a post-doc to build high-resolution 3D models of the human brain from microscopic images. After accepting a position as the head of Information Technology at the

German Federal Institute of Hydrology in Koblenz in 2012, Dickscheid returned back to Jülich in 2014 to build his own research group. His work now focuses on Machine Learning methods for microscopic image analysis, data management for high throughput imaging, and neuroinformatics solutions for brain atlasing. In the Human Brain Project (HBP), Dickscheid is co-leading the neuroinformatics platform, and responsible for the development of a publicly accessible multi-level human brain atlas. Talk : Monday 23rd September 11:00 Selected publications:

- Spitzer H, Kiwitz K, Amunts K, Harmeling S, Dickscheid T (2018). Improving Cytoarchitectonic Segmentation of Human Brain Areas with Self-supervised Siamese Networks. Medical Image Computing and Computer Assisted Intervention (MICCAI'18)

- Spitzer H, Amunts K, Harmeling S, Dickscheid T (2018). Compact feature representations for human brain cytoarchitecture using self-supervised learning. Medical Imaging with Deep Learning (MIDL'18)

- Spitzer H, Amunts K, Harmeling S, Dickscheid T (2017). Parcellation of visual cortex on high-resolution histological brain sections using convolutional neural networks. IEEE International Symposium on Biomedical Imaging (ISBI)

- Amunts K, Lepage C, Borgeat L, Mohlberg H, Dickscheid T, Rousseau MÉ, Bludau S, Bazin PL, Lewis LB, Oros-Peusquens AM, Shah NJ, Lippert T, Zilles K, Evans AC (2013). BigBrain: an ultrahigh-resolution 3D human brain model. Science 340(6139):1472-5

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Whole Brain Imaging Bordeaux, September 8-28, 2019

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Jérémy FERRIER, PhD (ICONEUS - France) Jeremy Ferrier obtained his PhD in Neuroscience from the University of Clermont-Ferrand in 2013 working on brain plasticity in the context of chronic pain. As a postdoc, he joined the Brain Plasticity Unit at ESPCI Paris, a French Grande Ecole for industrial physics and chemistry, where he contributed to apply ultrafast ultrasound imaging for functional brain imaging in conscious mice. His scientific career gave him practical and theoretical knowledge in both physics and neuroscience. He is currently working at ICONEUS as a Scientific Application Specialist.

Talk : Wednesday 11th September 11:45 Selected publications:

- Tiran E, Ferrier J, Deffieux T, Gennisson JL, Pezet S, Lenkei Z, Tanter M. Transcranial Functional Ultrasound Imaging in Freely Moving Awake Mice and Anesthetized Young Rats without Contrast Agent. Ultrasound Med Biol. 2017 Aug;43(8):1679-1689.

- Ferrier J, Bayet-Robert M, Dalmann R, El Guerrab A, Aissouni Y, Graveron-Demilly D, Chalus M, Pinguet J, Eschalier A, Richard D, Daulhac L, Marchand F, Balayssac D. Cholinergic Neurotransmission in the Posterior Insular Cortex Is Altered in Preclinical Models of Neuropathic Pain: Key Role of Muscarinic M2 Receptors in Donepezil-Induced Antinociception. J Neurosci. 2015 Dec 16;35(50):16418-30.

- Ferrier J, Bayet-Robert M, Pereira B, Daulhac L, Eschalier A, Pezet D, Moulinoux JP, Balayssac D. A polyamine-deficient diet prevents oxaliplatin-induced acute cold and mechanical hypersensitivity in rats. PLoS One. 2013 Oct 30;8(10):e77828.

- Ferrier J, Pereira V, Busserolles J, Authier N, Balayssac D. Emerging trends in understanding chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy. Curr Pain Headache Rep. 2013 Oct;17(10):364. doi: 10.1007/s11916-013-0364-5. Review.

Camilla HAGEN BLIXHAVN, PhD (University of Oslo – Norway) Camilla Hagen Blixhavn is a researcher at the University of Oslo and team coordinator for atlas integration of rodent brain research data in the Human Brain Project. She couples her experience from organizational and creative leadership positions together with her studies in psychology, biology, didactics and neuroscience, and continues to strategize towards the needs of researchers in science and health. Camilla is MSc in neuroscience and is preparing for an interdisciplinary PhD in neuroscience data management.

Selected publication:

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CAJAL Neuroscience Training Course

Whole Brain Imaging Bordeaux, September 8-28, 2019

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- Bjerke IE, Øvsthus M, Andersson KA, Blixhavn CH, Kleven H, Yates SC, Puchades MA, Bjaalie JG, Leergaard TB. Navigating the Murine Brain: Toward Best Practices for Determining and Documenting Neuroanatomical Locations in Experimental Studies. Front Neuroanat. 2018 Nov 2;12:82. doi: 10.3389/fnana.2018.00082. PubMed PMID: 30450039; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC6224483.

Christiane JOCKWITZ, PhD (Institute Jülich - Germany) Dr. rer. medic. Christiane Jockwitz obtained her M.Sc. in Cognitive and Clinical Neuroscience (Neuropsychology) from Maastricht University, the Netherlands in 2011. Afterwards, she did her PhD at the Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine (INM-1), Research Center Jülich, Germany on “Structure-Function Relationships in Resting-State-Networks of older adults”. Currently, Dr. Jockwitz is Post-Doc working in the Connectivity group of the INM-1 and Institute of Anatomy I, Heinrich-Heine-University Dusseldorf, Germany, employed by the Department of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, RWTH Aachen University, Germany. In her research

Dr. Jockwitz investigates the structural and functional organization of the aging brain in relation to cognitive functions, especially during older ages. Dr. Jockwitz has expertise with population neuroimaging and is part of the study committee of the population-based cohort study 1000BRAINS investigating the inter-individual variability of the normal aging brain. In 2017, the Swiss National Science Foundation awarded her an International Short Visit at the University Research Priority Program “Dynamics of Healthy Aging” at the University of Zurich to cross-validate age-related changes in cognitive performance and brain structure in two large cohorts consisting of older adults.

Selected publications: - Jockwitz, C., Mérillat, S., Liem, F., Oschwald, J., Amunts, K., Caspers, S. and Jäncke, L., 2019.

Generalizing age effects on brain structure and cognition: A two‐study comparison approach. Human brain mapping, 40(8), pp.2305-2319.

- Caspers, S., Röckner, M.E., Jockwitz, C., Bittner, N., Teumer, A., Herms, S., Hoffmann, P., Nöthen, M.M., Moebus, S., Amunts, K. and Cichon, S., 2019. Pathway-Specific Genetic Risk for Alzheimer’s Disease Differentiates Regional Patterns of Cortical Atrophy in Older Adults. Cerebral Cortex.

- Heim, S., Stumme, J., Bittner, N., Jockwitz, C., Amunts, K. and Caspers, S., 2019. Bilingualism and “Brain Reserve”: A Matter of Age. Neurobiology of Aging.

- Bittner, N., Jockwitz, C., Mühleisen, T.W., Hoffstaedter, F., Eickhoff, S.B., Moebus, S., Bayen, U.J., Cichon, S., Zilles, K., Amunts, K. and Caspers, S., 2019. Combining lifestyle risks to disentangle brain structure and functional connectivity differences in older adults. Nature communications, 10.

- Jockwitz, C., Caspers, S., Lux, S., Jütten, K., Schleicher, A., Eickhoff, S.B., Amunts, K. and Zilles, K., 2017. Age-and function-related regional changes in cortical folding of the default mode network in older adults. Brain Structure and Function, 222(1), pp.83-99.

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Whole Brain Imaging Bordeaux, September 8-28, 2019

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- Jockwitz, C., Mérillat, S., Liem, F., Oschwald, J., Amunts, K., Caspers, S. and Jäncke, L., 2019. Generalizing age effects on brain structure and cognition: A two‐study comparison approach. Human brain mapping, 40(8), pp.2305-2319.

Marc JOLIOT, PhD (University of Bordeaux - France) Marc Joliot, Ph.D., HDR, is a research director in multimodal biomedical imaging at the French Atomic Energy Commission (CEA) and co-head of the human brain connectome thematic in the “Groupe d’Imagerie Neurofonctionnelle” (GIN) a team of “Institut des Maladies Neurodégénératives“ (IMN). His primary focus of research on the intrinsic connectivity observed in functional MRI in the resting state. The developed approach is based on multiscale modeling of the organization of this activity. This search has for object the study of the variability of this organization through the population. His

second focus is on the development of new methodology in bioimaging data analysis and management: AAL atlas (Citation index of 9453), AICHA functional homotopic atlas, a Multi-scale Independent Component Clustering Algorithm (MICCA), the BIOMIST database. His third focus is on electromagnetic / hemodynamic and metabolic multimodal imaging. Talk : Friday 13th September 11:00

Selected publications: - Chou YH, Sundman M, Whitson HE, Gaur P, Chu ML, Weingarten CP, Madden DJ, Wang L, Kirste

I, Joliot M, Diaz MT, Li YJ, Song AW, Chen NK (2017) Maintenance and Representation of Mind Wandering during Resting-State fMRI. Scientific reports 7:40722.

- Allanic M, Herve PY, Pham QC, Lekkal M, Durupt A, Brial T, Grioche A, Matta N, Boutinaud P, Eynard B, Joliot M (2017) BIOMIST: A Platform for Biomedical Data Lifecycle Management of Neuroimaging Cohorts. Frontiers in ICT.

- Joliot M, Tzourio-Mazoyer N, Mazoyer B (2016) Intra-hemispheric intrinsic connectivity asymmetry and its relationships with handedness and language Lateralization. Neuropsychologia. doi : 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2016.03.013.

- Doucet G, Naveau M, Petit L, Zago L, Crivello F, Jobard G, Delcroix N, Mellet E, Tzourio-Mazoyer N, Mazoyer B, Joliot M (2012) Patterns of hemodynamic low-frequency oscillations in the brain are modulated by the nature of free thought during rest. Neuroimage 59:3194-3200.

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Whole Brain Imaging Bordeaux, September 8-28, 2019

The CAJAL Advanced Neuroscience Training Programme www.cajal-training.org

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Hugo KERAUDRAN (University of Bordeaux – France) I'm currently a student at the University of Bordeaux in second year Master’s degree program majoring in Neurosciences. I had the opportunity to study the theoretical and practical principles of NIRS during two laboratory internships at the Institute of Neurodegenerative Diseases. Under the supervision of research engineer Gaëlle Leroux, with whom I developed specific knowledge of the NIRS technique, acquiring and comparing results obtained in NIRS and IRMf for an identical motor task in humans. In addition, the influence of using the real-world positions of the optodes was also one

of the main focuses of my previous internship. I just completed a four months internship in the Multimodal Functional Imaging Laboratory in Montreal during summer. The main aim of my work was the using of simultaneous Electroencephalography (EEG)/ Near Infra-Red Spectroscopy (NIRS) in the assessment of the epileptic focus in awake and sleep conditions. I will perform another 5 months internship in the same lab to work on real effects of sleep stages on interictal epileptic discharges using again EEG/NIRS.

Alexandre LAURENT (University of Bordeaux - France) Alexandre studied applied mathematics and obtained a Master’s degree in Statistical and Stochastic Modeling in 2012. Having a strong interest in programming, he has the ideal job profile to carry out the development of algorithms and computer software and statistics. He joined the GIN in January 2016. His first project focused on predicting hemispheric language specialization from functional data as well as resting-state data using Support Vector Machine. This resulted in a friendly-user program that allows the model to be easily launched on a distributed computing infrastructure such as

the MCIA. After this and after a few weeks to manage the quality control and maintenance of the MRi-Share database acquisitions, he found himself involved in the WAIMEA project. The purpose of this project is to investigate brain anomalies such as white matter hyperintensities or dilated perivascular spaces that are potential early markers for late-life neurological disorders. To organize their collection and measurements, we need an automated procedure. The WAIMEA project aims to develop an algorithm for the automatic detection of these white matter anomalies. Talk : Monday 16th September 11:00 Selected publications:

- Zago, L., Hervé, P. Y., Genuer, R., Laurent, A., Mazoyer, B., Tzourio-Mazoyer, N., and Joliot, M. (2017) Predicting hemispheric dominance for language production in healthy individuals using

support vector machine, Human brain mapping.

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- Krol, A., Mauguen, A., Mazroui, Y., Laurent, A., Michiels, S., and Rondeau, V.(2017) Tutorial in joint modeling and prediction : A statistical software for correlated longitudinal outcomes,

recurrent events and a terminal event, Journal of Statistical Software. - Rondeau, V., Mauguen, A., Laurent, A., Berr, C., and Helmer, C. (2017) Dynamic prediction

models for clustered and interval censored outcomes : Investigating the intra-couple

correlation in the risk of dementia, Statistical methods in medical research. - Mauguen, A., Rachet, B., Mathoulin-Pélissier, S., Lawrence, G. M., Siesling, S., MacGrogan, G.,

Laurent, A., and Rondeau,V.(2015). Validation of death prediction after breast cancer relapses

using joint models, BMC Medical Research Methodology.

William LEFRANÇOIS (University of Bordeaux - France) William Lefrançois (Assistant professor in Physics in the University of Bordeaux), works in the Centre de Résonance Magnétique des Systèmes Biologiques (UMR5536, CNRS/University of Bordeaux, www.rmsb.u-bordeaux.fr). He is involved in the methodological developments in cardiovascular MRI in small animals.

Talk : Wednesday 11th September 11:00

Selected publications:

- Trotier AJ, Lefrançois W, Ribot EJ, Thiaudiere E, Franconi JM, Miraux S. Time-resolved TOF MR angiography in mice using a prospective 3D radial double golden angle approach.Magn Reson Med. 2015 Mar;73(3):984-94.

- Castets CR, Ribot EJ, Lefrançois W, Trotier AJ, Thiaudière E, Franconi JM, Miraux S. Fast and robust 3D T1 mapping using spiral encoding and steady RF excitation at 7 T: application to cardiac manganese enhanced MRI (MEMRI) in mice. NMR Biomed. 2015 Jul;28(7):881-9.

- Trotier AJ, Lefrançois W, Van Renterghem K, Franconi JM, Thiaudière E, Miraux S. Positive contrast high-resolution 3D-cine imaging of the cardiovascular system in small animals using a UTE sequence and iron nanoparticles at 4.7, 7 and 9.4 T. J Cardiovasc Magn Reson. 2015 Jul 7;17:53.

- Trotier AJ, Castets CR, Lefrançois W, Ribot EJ, Franconi JM, Thiaudière E, Miraux S. USPIO-enhanced 3D-cine self-gated cardiac MRI based on a stack-of-stars golden angle short echo time sequence: Application on mice with acute myocardial infarction. J Magn Reson Imaging. 2016 Aug;44(2):355-65. doi: 10.1002/jmri.25150. Epub 2016 Jan 18.

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Gaelle LEROUX, PhD (University of Lyon/CNRS - France) I received my PhD in neurosciences in 2005 at the University of Caen Basse-Normandie, France. It was about a conservation-of-number task from Jean Piaget studied in young adults with psycho-experiments and using functional MRI, MEG and EEG techniques. In 2006-07, I investigated the development of the numerical abilities and working memory in children and young adults using fMRI as a post-doc at Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden. I was then recruited on a tenure track position as a research engineer at Paris-Descartes University where I’ve been working on the

cognitive development of executive functions, still using fMRI, with children aged from 5 to 10 years. In 2012, I moved to Bordeaux with the GIN team and my assignments were focused on the BIL&GIN database and the set-up of the NIRS system. Due to family reasons, I recently moved to the CRNL lab in Lyon to assist neuroimaging projects across teams. Talk : Friday 20th September 11:45 Selected publications:

- Mellet E., Mazoyer B., Leroux G., Joliot M. and Tzourio-Mazoyer N. (2016) Cortical Asymmetries during Hand Laterality Task Vary with Hand Laterality: A fMRI Study in 295 Participants. Front Hum Neurosci 10:628

- Mazoyer B., Mellet E., Perchey G., Zago L., Crivello F., Jobard G., Delcroix N., Vigneau M., Leroux G., Petit L., Joliot M. and Tzourio-Mazoyer N. (2016) BIL&GIN: A neuroimaging, cognitive, behavioral, and genetic database for the study of human brain lateralization. NeuroImage. 1;124(Pt B):1225-31

- Houdé O.1, Pineau A.1, Leroux G.1, Poirel N.1, Perchey G., Lanoë C., Lubin A., Turbelin MR., Rossi S., Simon G., Delcroix N., Lamberton F., Vigneau M., Wisniewski G., Vicet JR. and Mazoyer B. (2011) Functional MRI study of Piaget’s conservation-of-number task in preschool and school-age children: a neo-piagetian approach. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology. 110: 332-346. (1 equal contributions)

- Joliot M., Leroux G., Dubal S., Tzourio-Mazoyer N., Houdé O., Mazoyer B. and Petit L. (2009). Cognitive inhibition of number/length interference in a Piaget-like task: Evidence by combining ERP and MEG. Clinical Neurophysiology, 120, 1501-1513.

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Daniel MARGULIES, PhD (Institut de Cerveaux et de la Moelle épinière - France) Daniel Margulies is a tenured researcher with the Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS) in Paris. He previously led the Neuroanatomy & Connectivity Research Group at the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences in Leipzig. He has worked at NYU and Humboldt University, and was awarded the Otto Hahn Medal for his doctoral dissertation (2010) and the Young Investigator Award from the Organization for Human Brain Mapping (2018). His research investigates the organization of large-scale brain networks, primarily through the analysis of intrinsic activity as

measured with fMRI. He has developed approaches to define subregions within complex cortical areas, conducted cross-species comparative neuroanatomical studies, and related variation in these networks to phenotypic differences across individuals. His current research addresses the emergence of network topography and its relationship to cortical structure. Talk : Friday 20th September 11:00

Selected publications: - Huntenburg JM, Bazin P-L, Margulies DS (2018). Large-Scale Gradients in Human Cortical

Organization. Trends Cogn Sci 22(1): 21–31. - Oligschlager S, Huntenburg JM, Golchert J, Lauckner ME, Bonnen T, Margulies DS (2017)

Gradients of connectivity distance are anchored in primary cortex. Brain Struct Funct 222(5): 2173–2182

- Margulies DS, Ghosh SS, Goulas A, Falkiewicz M, Huntenburg JM, Langs G, Bezgin G, Eickhoff SB, Castellanos FX, Petrides M, Jefferies E, Smallwood J (2016). Situating the default-mode network along a principal gradient of macroscale cortical organization. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 113(44): 12574–12579

- Jakobsen E, Bottger J, Bellec P, Geyer S, Rubsamen R, Petrides M, Margulies DS (2016). Subdivision of Broca’s region based on individual-level functional connectivity. Eur J Neurosci 43(4): 561–571

Emmanuel MELLET, MD, PhD (University of Bordeaux - France) Emmanuel Mellet is research director at the CNRS, specialist in cognitive neuroimaging.After a MD (specialist in psychiatry), a PhD in neurosciences and a post-doctoral training at the Cycéron center in Caen, he was recruited at the CNRS in the GIN Group, now part of the IMN UMR 5293 in Bordeaux (Dir., E. Bezard).From 2003 to 2011, he was Professor of Neurosciences at the University of Caen Basse-Normandie and created and managed the Master’s Degree in Neurosciences and Imaging of Health until 2010. He is research director at the CNRS since 2011 and a member of the National Committee of the CNRS (Brain, Cognition and

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Behavior) from 2012 to 2016. As a specialist in cognitive neuroimaging, his early work focused on the neural bases of visual mental imagery, topographic memory and the relationships between verbal and visual representations at the brain and behavioural level. In particular, he shows how visual and language brain areas cooperate to build internal representations. He then worked on the relationships between manual laterality, hemispheric specialization and cognitive performances. He is now working on mental content during the resting state and is developing a theme on the evolution of cognitive functions in collaboration with archaeologists.

Talk : Monday 23rd September 11:45 Selected publications :

- Mellet, E., Salagnon, M., Majkic, A., Cremona, S., Joliot, M., Jobard, G. et al. (2018). Neuroimaging supports the representational nature of the earliest human engravings.

- Constant, M., & Mellet, E. (2018). The Impact of Handedness, Sex, and Cognitive Abilities on Left-Right Discrimination: A Behavioral Study. Front Psychol, 9, 405.

- Mellet, E., Mazoyer, B., Leroux, G., Joliot, M., & Tzourio-Mazoyer, N. (2016). Cortical Asymmetries during Hand Laterality Task Vary with Hand Laterality: A fMRI Study in 295 Participants. Front Hum Neurosci, 10, 628.

- Zago, L., Petit, L., Jobard, G., Hay, J., Mazoyer, B., Tzourio-Mazoyer, N. et al. (2017). Pseudoneglect in line bisection judgement is associated with a modulation of right hemispheric spatial attention dominance in right-handers. Neuropsychologia, 94, 75-83.

Laurent PETIT, PhD (University of Bordeaux - France) After a Ph.D. in Cognitive Sciences dealing with the anatomo-functional bases of the self-paced horizontal saccadic eye movements as revealed by Positron Emission Tomography in healthy humans (GIN, B. Mazoyer / LPPA, A. Berthoz), I made a first post-doctoral fellowship in 1995 in the Laboratory of Neurophysiology (A. Roucoux, Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium) and a second post-doctoral fellowship from 1996 to 1998 at NIMH in Bethesda (USA) in the Laboratory of Brain and Cognition (L. Ungerleider). Recruited at the CNRS in 1998 as a researcher in the GIN, today integrated in the IMN UMR 5293 in Bordeaux. Specialist in cognitive neuroimaging, my early

researches concerned the neural basis of eye movements (saccades, pursuit, fixation), and those of spatial attention and spatial working memory.My recent research focuses on the human hemispheric specialization and its anatomo-functional and cognitive underpinnings, a project ignited with the BIL&GIN cohort. The BIL&GIN database includes psychometric measurements, anatomical MRI, diffusion imaging (dMRI), neural bases of language and visuo-spatial functions, and functional resting-state data in 450 healthy subjects balanced for left and right handedness. I’m currently working more particularly on the white matter connectivity by studying the structural connectome, i.e. the architecture of the brain’s

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connectome, assessed with diffusion imaging-based tractography to provide information on the intra- and inter-hemispheric patterns of connectivity and their association with grey matter, and task-induced functional markers of hemispheric specialization. Talk : Friday 13th September 11:45

Selected publications:

- Sarubbo S, Petit L, De Benedictis A, Chioffi F, Ptito M, Dyrby TB (2019) Uncovering the inferior fronto-occipital fascicle and its topological organization in non-human primates: The missing connection for language evolution. Brain Structure and Function, in press.

- Chenot Q, Tzourio-Mazoyer N, Rheault F, Descoteaux M, Crivello F, Zago L, Mellet E, Jobard G, Joliot M, Mazoyer B, Petit L (2018) A population-based atlas of the human pyramidal tract in 410 healthy participants. Brain Structure and Function, in press.

- Mandonnet E, Sarubbo S, Petit L (2018) The nomenclature of human white matter association pathways: Proposal for a systematic taxonomic anatomical classification. Frontiers in Neuroanatomy 12:94.

- Maier-Hein KH et al. (2017) The challenge of mapping the human connectome based on diffusion tractography. Nature Communication 8:1349.

Maja PUCHADES, PhD (University of Oslo - Norway) Maja A. Puchades is a Senior researcher in Anatomy at the Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, University of Oslo, Norway. She received her PhD in 2003, from Gothenburg University, Sweden, with a thesis focused on developing proteomic methods for studying biomarkers of Alzheimer’s disease. Main research interest is in neurodegenerative related diseases (Alzheimer, Parkinson and Huntington), studying energy metabolism perturbations, vascular disturbance, protein aggregation and the involvement of inflammatory signals in the Brain. The methodologies used range from classical immunohistochemistry, mass spectrometry, electron and

confocal microscopy, stereology to more recent techniques like whole brain STP Tomography, high resolution scanning and neuroinformatic tools for whole brain analysis Use of rodent digital atlasing and development of analytical pipelines for brain protein characterization. Selected publications:

- Puchades MA, Csucs G, Lederberger D, Leergaard TB and Bjaalie JG. Spatial registration of serial microscopic brain images to three-dimensional reference atlases with the QuickNII tool. PLosONE, 2019, 14(5): e0216796. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0216796

- Lillehaug S, Yetman MJ, Puchades MA, Checinska MM, Kleven H, Jankowsky JL, Bjaalie JG and Leergaard TB. Brain-wide distribution of reporter expression in five transgenic tetracycline-transactivator mouse lines. Scientific Data, 2019, 6:190028/ https://doi.org/10.1038/sdata.2019.28.

- Bjerke IE, Øvsthus M, Papp EA, Yates SC, Silvestri L, Fiorili J, Pennartz CMA, Pavone FS, Puchades MA, Leergaard TB and Bjaalie JG. Data integration through brain atlasing: Human

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Brain Project tools and strategies. European Psychiatry, 2018, 50:70-76. Doi: 10.1016/j.eurpsy.2018.02.004

- Heiland T, Zeitschel U, Puchades MA, Kuhn PH, Lichtenthaler SF, Bjaalie JG, Hartlage-Rubsamen M, Rossner S and Hofling C. Defined astrocytic expression of human amyloid precursor protein in Tg2576 mouse brain. Glia. 2018. DOI: 10.1002/glia.23550

- Bjerke IE, Ovsthus M, Andersson KA, Blixhavn CH, Kleven H, Yates SC, Puchades MA, Bjaalie JG and Leergaard TB. Navigating the murine brain: towards best practices for determining and documenting neuroanatomical locations in experimental studies. Frontiers in Neuroanatomy. 2018 Nov 2; 12: article 82. Doi: doi: 10.3389/fnana.2018.00082.

- Plank AC, Canneva F, Raber KA, Urbach YK, Dobner J, Puchades M, Bjaalie JG, Gillmann C, Bäuerle T, Riess O, Nguyen HHP, von Hörsten S. Early Alterations in Operant Performance and Prominent Huntingtin Aggregation in a Congenic F344 Rat Line of the Classical CAGn51trunc Model of Huntington Disease. Front Neurosci. 2018 Jan 25;12:11. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2018.00011. eCollection 2018.

Emeline RIBOT, PhD (University of Bordeaux – France) Emeline J Ribot is a Scientist in the Centre de Résonance Magnétique des Systèmes Biologiques (UMR5536, CNRS / University of Bordeaux, France). Her research focuses on the development of MR sequences in order to get more knowledge in the metastatic process, and also to establish an early diagnosis of the metastases growth, an accurate prognosis and a precise assessment of their response to therapies. To do so, her team develops MR sequences that can give anatomical informations, and also quantitative informations, with high spatial resolution (3D), artifact-free

and rapidly. The team works both on preclinical small-animal scanners (4.7T and 7T) and a 3T scanner dedicated to human research. Selected publications:

- Radial MP2RAGE sequence for rapid 3D T1 mapping of mouse abdomen: application to hepatic metastases. TL Faller, AJ Trotier, S Miraux, EJ Ribot. Eur Radiol. DOI: 10.1007/s00330-019-06081-3. In press

- Compressed-Sensing MP2RAGE sequence: application to the detection of brain metastases in mice at 7T. AJ Trotier, S Rapacchi, T Faller, S Miraux, EJ Ribot. Magn Reson Med. 2019;81(1):551-559

- In vivo MEMRI characterization of brain metastases using a 3D Look-Locker T1 mapping sequence. Castets CR, Koonjoo N, Hertanu A, Voisin P, Franconi JM, Miraux S, Ribot EJ. Sc Rep. 2016;6:39449

- Free-breathing 3D diffusion MRI for high-resolution hepatic metastasis characterization in small animals. Ribot EJ, Trotier AJ, Castets CR, Dallaudière B, Thiaudière E, Franconi JM, Miraux S. Clin Exp Metastasis. 2016;33(2):167-78

- Water or Fat selective imaging and bSSFP banding artefact correction on humans and small animals at 3T and 7T, respectively. EJ Ribot, D Wecker, AJ Trotier, B Dallaudère, W Lefrançois, E Thiaudière, JM Franconi, S Miraux. PLoS One. 2015;10(10):e0139249

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Aurélien TROTIER (University of Bordeaux - France) Aurélien J Trotier is a MRI Physicist/Engineer involved in sequence programming for clinical (Siemens MR IDEA) and preclinical (Bruker) MR systems and in reconstruction (Matlab, C/C++), acquisition strategies and experimental set-up. His current interest involves the development, validation and application of novel MRI techniques based on non-Cartesian trajectories for parametric data and quantification of cardiac flow in small animals. Talk : Wednesday 25th September 11:45

Selected publications: - Trotier AJ, Rapacchi S, Faller TL, Sylvain M, Ribot EJ. Compressed-Sensing MP2RAGE sequence:

application to the detection of brain metastases in mice at 7T. Magn Reson Med. 2019: 81(1):551-559

- Trotier AJ, Castets CR, Lefrançois W, Ribot EJ, Franconi JM, Thiaudière E, et al. USPIO-enhanced 3D-cine self-gated cardiac MRI based on a stack-of-stars golden angle short echo time sequence: Application on mice with acute myocardial infarction. J Magn Reson Im. 2016; 44(2):355-65

- Ribot EJ, Trotier AJ, Castets CR, Dallaudière B, Thiaudière E, Franconi J-M, et al. Free-breathing 3D diffusion MRI for high-resolution hepatic metastasis characterization in small animals. Clin Exp Metastasis. 2016;33(2):167–78. Available from: http://link.springer.com/10.1007/s10585-015-9766-6

- Trotier AJ, Lefrançois W, Ribot EJ, Thiaudiere E, Franconi JM, Miraux S. Time-resolved TOF MR angiography in mice using a prospective 3D radial double golden angle approach. Magn Reson Med. 2015;73(3):984–94.

Ami Tsuchida, PhD (University of Bordeaux - France)

My long-term research interests are about understanding functional organization of the human brain, and learning the impacts of different kinds of lesions on local and global functional architectures of the brain, and how in turn they affect cognition. For my PhD at McGill University, I investigated the functional specialization of human frontal lobes through neuropsychological studies of a large number of patients with chronic, focal prefrontal lesion. I became interested in how the focal lesions may alter the network organizations of the brain. I went on do my postdoc training

with Dr. Brenda Milner at the same university, to get trained in neuroimaging and methods to study intrinsic functional connectivity networks and their relation to individual variability in memory performance in healthy subjects. I joined the Neurofunctional Imaging Group (GIN) team at Bordeaux University in 2017 to work on a project to investigate the effects of

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small white matter lesions on the local white matter microstructure as well as on global intrinsic connectivity architecture. I am involved in the processing and management of the multi-modal neuroimaging data from the MRi-Share study, a database of 1,870 students enrolled in Bordeaux University. In particular, I have been responsible for the processing and analyses of anatomical data for morphometry and diffusion imaging data for investigation of structural connectivity and white matter microstructure. Talk : Thursday 19th September 11:45 Selected publications:

- A Tsuchida and LK Fellows. Are core component processes of executive function dissociable within the frontal lobes? Evidence from humans with focal prefrontal damage. Cortex, 2012 49(7): 1790-1800

- A Tsuchida and LK Fellows. Are you upset? Distinct roles for orbitofrontal and lateral prefrontal cortex in detecting and distinguishing facial expressions of emotion. Cerebral Cortex, 2012 22(12): 2904-2912

- N Camille, A Tsuchida, and LK Fellows. Double dissociation of stimulus-value and action-value learning in humans with orbitofrontal and anterior cingulate cortex damage. Jounal of Neuroscience, 2011 31(42): 15048-15052

- A Tsuchida, B Doll, and LK Fellows. Beyond reversal: A critical role for human orbitofrontal cortex in learning from probabilistic feedback. Journal of Neuroscience, 2010 30(50): 16868-16875

Susanne WEIS, PhD (Institute Jülich - Germany)

Susanne Weis studied Mathematics and Computer Science at RWTH Aachen University and received her PhD in Medical Research from the Medical Department at Aachen University. After working at the University of Durham, UK for eight years, she returned to Germany in 2017 und is now the leader of the research group “Brain Variability” within the Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine, Brain and Behaviour (INM-7) at Research Center Jülich, Germany. Her research focusses on the relation between individual differences in experience and behavior and variability of structural and functional brain

organization. These individual differences include both "systematic variability" such as sex differences and age effects and the "individual variability" in connection with personality traits, performance differences or cognitive impairments, as well as other influences like hormone fluctuations, time-of-day rhythms, motivation, and other internal and external factors. At Research Centre Jülich, her research uses “big data” samples and machine learning approaches to make predictions about individual differences based on multi-modal brain imaging data. Talk : Tuesday 24 September 11:00

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Selected publications: - Weis S, Hodgetts S, Hausmann M. Sex differences and menstrual cycle effects in cognitive and

sensory resting state networks. Brain Cogn. 2017, doi: 10.1016/j.bandc.2017.09.003. - Alderson-Day B, Weis S, McCarthy-Jones S, Moseley P, Smailes D, Fernyhough C. The Brain’s

Conversation With Itself: Neural Substrates of Dialogic Inner Speech. Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci 2016, 11:110-120.

- Hodgetts S, Hausmann M, Weis S. High estradiol levels improve false memory rates and meta memory in highly schizotypal women. Psychiatry Research 2015, 229:708-714.

- Weis S, Hausmann M, Stoffers B, Sturm W. Dynamic changes in functional cerebral connectivity of spatial cognition during the menstrual cycle. Hum Brain Mapp 2011, 32:1544-1556.

- Weis S, Hausmann M, Kellermann T, Stoffers B, Vohn R, Sturm W. Estradiol modulates functional brain organization during the menstrual cycle: An analysis of interhemispheric inhibition. J Neurosci 2008; 28:13401-13410.

Laure ZAGO, PhD (University of Bordeaux - France) Laure Zago is a cognitive neuroscientist (CNRS) at the Neurofunctional Imaging Group within the Neurodegenerative Diseases Institute (UMR 5293, Team 5, CEA - CNRS - Université de Bordeaux, France). Her research interests concern the cerebral lateralization of visuospatial attention and number cognition. She develops three main projects in the field of hemispheric specialization. The first one concerns the study of the cerebral bases of spatial attention associated to attentional behavioral biases, called “pseudoneglect” in healthy subjects. The second project is

aimed at investigating the cerebral bases of calculation in relationship with the cerebral lateralization of visuo-spatial processes and language. The third one is to evidence the different patterns of complementary hemispheric specialization of language and spatial attention, and to explore their effects on cognition in healthy subjects. She uses a multimodal approach by combining structural and functional neuroimaging data, cognitive and behavioral laterality data. Talk : Thursday 12th September 11:00 Selected publications :

- Ochando, A., & Zago, L. (2018). What Are the Contributions of Handedness, Sighting Dominance, Hand Used to Bisect, and Visuospatial Line Processing to the Behavioral Line Bisection Bias. Frontiers in Psychology, 9. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01688

- Zago, L., Hervé, P.-Y., Genuer, R., Laurent, A., Mazoyer, B., Tzourio-Mazoyer, N., & Joliot, M. (2017a). Predicting hemispheric dominance for language production in healthy individuals using support vector machine. Hum Brain Mapp. doi:10.1002/hbm.23770

- Zago, L., Petit, L., Jobard, G., Hay, J., Mazoyer, B., Tzourio-Mazoyer, N., . . . Mellet, E. (2017b). Pseudoneglect in line bisection judgement is associated with a modulation of right hemispheric

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spatial attention dominance in right-handers. Neuropsychologia, 94, 75-83. doi:10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2016.11.024

- Zago, L., Petit, L., Mellet, E., Jobard, G., Crivello, F., Joliot, M., . . . Tzourio-Mazoyer, N. (2016). The association between hemispheric specialization for language production and for spatial attention depends on left-hand preference strength. Neuropsychologia, 93, 394-406. doi:10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2015.11.018

Lyuba ZEHL, PhD (University of Cologne - Germany) Lyuba Zehl studied Biology and Neuroscience at the University of Cologne. During this time of study, she worked on kinematic of insect legs during locomotion (BSc thesis, supervisor: Prof. Ansgar Büschges), and the anatomical cartography of auditory nuclei in the brain stem of toothed whales using cluster analysis (Msc thesis, supervisor: Prof. Wolfgang Walkowiak). For her doctoral studies, she switched to the RWTH Aachen University and joint the Statistical Neuroscience Group of Prof. Sonja Grün at the Institute for Neuroscience and Medicine (INM-6) of the Jülich Research Centre. In her thesis, she

worked on analysing multi-electrode array recordings of monkey motor cortex and, in particular, on data and metadata management of complex neuroscience experiments. After receiving her doctorate degree (Dr. rer. nat.) in 2017, she started working as a junior scientist in the curation team of the Neuroinformatics Platform of the Human Brain Project (HBP), located at the Jülich Research Centre as part of the Big Data Analytics Group from Timo Dickscheid at the Institute for Structural and Functional Organisation of the Brain (INM-1) led by Prof. Katrin Amunts. Having a high interdisciplinary orientation towards computational neuroscience and software development for data and metadata management and a broad experience in various neuroscience laboratories, she focuses now on developing and implementing concepts, standards and tools for neuroscience data and metadata management. With her current work, she strongly supports the integration of heterogeneous neuroscience data into the unified data sharing platform and the interactive atlas viewers of the HBP.

Selected publications: - Lyuba Zehl, Florent Jaillet, Adrian Stoewer, Jan Grewe, Andrey Sobolev, Thomas Wachtler,

Thomas G Brochier, Alexa Riehle, Michael Denker, Sonja Grün (2016) Handling metadata in a neurophysiology laboratory. Frontiers in neuroinformatics, 10: 26; doi: 10.3389/fninf.2016.00026

- Thomas Brochier*, Lyuba Zehl*, Yaoyao Hao, Margaux Duret, Julia Sprenger, Michael Denker, Sonja Grün, Alexa Riehle (2018) Massively parallel recordings in macaque motor cortex during an instructed delayed reach-to-grasp task. Scientific Data, 5: 180055; doi: 10.1038/sdata.2018.55

- Michael Denker, Lyuba Zehl, Bjørg E Kilavik, Markus Diesmann, Thomas Brochier, Alexa Riehle, Sonja Grün (2018) LFP beta amplitude is linked to mesoscopic spatio-temporal phase patterns. Scientific Reports, 8: 5200; doi: 10.1038/s41598-018-22990-7

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- Christopher Holdgraf, Stefan Appelhoff, Stephan Bickel, Kristofer Bouchard, Sasha D’Ambrosio, Olivier David, Orrin Devinsky, Benjamin Dichter, Adeen Flinker, Brett L Foster, Krzysztof J Gorgolewski, Iris Groen, David Groppe, Aysegul Gunduz, Liberty Hamilton, Christopher J Honey, Mainak Jas, Robert Knight, Jean-Philippe Lachaux, Jonathan C Lau, Christopher Lee-Messer, Brian N Lundstrom, Kai J Miller, Jeffrey G Ojemann, Robert Oostenveld, Natalia Petridou, Gio Piantoni, Andrea Pigorini, Nader Pouratian, Nick F Ramsey, Arjen Stolk, Nicole C Swann, François Tadel, Bradley Voytek, Brian A Wandell, Jonathan Winawer, Kirstie Whitaker, Lyuba Zehl, Dora Hermes (2019) iEEG-BIDS, extending the Brain Imaging Data Structure specification to human intracranial electrophysiology. Scientific Data, 6: 102; doi: 10.1038/s41597-019-0105-7