Neuro Topics - Sensory and Motor Systems
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cepko_150-1
July 3, 2025
Connie Cepko provides an overview of her lab’s longstanding work developing gene therapies for ocular diseases using mouse and rat models. She shares images from studies on retinitis pigmentosa, the most common cause of inherited retinal degeneration worldwide—showing, for instance, how gene therapy can combat oxidation to prolong the survival of cone photoreceptors in the mouse retina, as well as preserve the retinal pigment epithelium.
Original article in: PNAS >
Comparison between feature representations from an artificial neural network,
June 30, 2025
How does the brain really see? In a new study, Victoria Zhanqi Zhang and the Ponce Lab reveal that neurons across the primate visual cortex are tuned not just to objects, but to animal features—highlighting a surprising bias in how the brain encodes natural scenes. Their findings shed light on the fundamental principles of visual representation.
Original article in: Science Advances >
photo of daniel polley
June 18, 2025
Harvard Gazette interview with Daniel Polley, professor of otolaryngology-head and neck surgery at Harvard Medical School, on his recent publication describing a new way to objectively measure tinnitus which may improve diagnosis and help in developing therapies.
image depicting Effects of selective experience rearing on thalamic neuron properties
June 16, 2025
It was long thought that only neurons in the outermost regions of the brain, called the cortex, could adapt and change their properties in response to visual experience. Takuma Sonoda and Chinfei Chen share new findings revealing that the visual thalamus, a structure in the center of the brain, at an earlier stage in the visual pathway than the cortex, can also change based on what animals see. Their discovery expands our understanding of how sensory systems learn and adapt.
Original article in: Cell >
illustration of a nose
April 1, 2025
Researchers (Mark W. Albers, Alefiya Dhilla Albers, and colleagues, first author Benoît Jobin) have developed an at-home olfactory test that may help ID those at risk of Alzheimer’s years before symptoms appear. Older adults with cognitive impairment scored lower on the test than cognitively normal adults.
Original article in: Scientific Reports >
Mustafa Talay, Harris Kaplan, Catherine Dulac, and Brandon Logeman
March 14, 2025
A new study from Catherine Dulac and colleagues, first author Harris Kaplan explores how one small brain region called the preoptic area (POA) of the hypothalamus changes through early life in mice. Though tiny, the POA is a known hub for neurons that govern basic needs like thirst and hunger, as well as neurons that regulate social behavior.
Original article in: Nature >
Key principles of biological olfaction—gas transport, non-selective sensing, and context-specific signal integration—enhance next-generation gas sensor design, improving accuracy, sensitivity, and adaptability.
February 21, 2025
Haritosh Patel and colleagues explore how nature’s blueprint for smell can inspire next-generation gas sensors. By applying principles from biological olfaction—such as active sniffing, adaptive sensing, and neural-inspired processing—this work presents a new perspective for more sensitive, selective, and robust electronic noses with applications in healthcare, environmental monitoring, and beyond.
Original article in: Advanced Science >
beethoven
January 17, 2025
New research from David Ginty, David Corey, Lisa Goodrich, and colleagues, first author Erica Huey, may help explain why the sense of touch gets stronger and more precise after hearing loss.
Original article in: Cell >
An experimental gene therapy raised levels of the key protein protocadherin-15, shown in green, in light-sensing cells in the retinas of nonhuman primates. Image: Maryna Ivanchenko
November 22, 2024
New research from David Corey and colleagues, first author Maryna V Ivanchenko, delivered a corrected version of the faulty gene that causes Usher syndrome — PCDH15 — and was able to restore hearing in mouse models and also showed potential in retinal organoids and nonhuman primates for improving vision.
The ventral visual stream contains regions selective for categories like faces, scenes, and words, which have been traditionally viewed as independent brain "modules". A competing view suggests that these inputs are instead represented through distributed activity patterns across neural populations, involving many different regions. New research using AI models and neuroimaging data provides a way to resolve this longstanding debate in visual neuroscience
November 18, 2024
Brain regions that preferentially process faces, places, and words may emerge naturally from exposure to diverse images, without requiring built-in structures dedicated to specific categories. By training AI models to distinguish images based on visual differences alone, researchers found that brain-aligned category-selective neurons emerged spontaneously in the model.
Pacinian corpuscles: Two Pacinian neurons (magenta, Neurofilament) innvervating Pacinian corpuscles made of non-neuronal cells (green, S100) in the deep leg tissue of a mouse. Pacinian neurons are mechanosensory neurons found across mammals, from humans to mice, and detect small mechanical vibrations acting on our skin and body.
November 4, 2024
How often do we sense vibration? More than you might think. New work from Josef Turecek & David Ginty reveals how mechanosensory neurons are activated during movement and exploration.
Original article in: Neuron >
Illustration of a human brain with lighted signalling pathways
October 24, 2024
New research in mice from Pascal Kaeser, Nao Uchida, and colleagues, first authors Xintong Cai and Changliang Liuexplains why levodopa, a drug commonly used to treat Parkinson's Disease, works to alleviate some symptoms but not others.
Original article in: Nature >
photo of clifford woolf
October 10, 2024
Clifford Woolf shares a perspectives piece about what scientists can learn from the opioid crisis as they develop new pain treatments. The piece is part of a special Nature Outlook edition on pain.
Serotonin glows green in a microscope image of cells in the mouse brain stem. Image: Giacomo Maddaloni
August 6, 2024
Susan Dymecki and colleagues (First author Giacomo Maddaloni) have identified a mouse brain circuit with multiple groups of neurons that together recognize, decode, and drive behavioral adaptation to changes in the amount of daylight.
Original article in: Nature >
an illustration showing intestines and the brain
July 18, 2024
Boston Children's Hospital Answers profiles the research of clinician-scientists Tamar Katz and Kinga Tomczak, studying potential differences in the microbiomes of individuals with these disorders.
An illustrated outline of the human body with different organs lighting up in red
July 3, 2024
Harvard Medicine News article on ongoing research on the subject of interoception (the perception of internal signals from the body). Wen Chen, Stephen Liberles, and Mark Andermann discuss how we perceive what’s happening inside our bodies, and what that means for our health.
the endings of sensory neurons that detect touch in the skin
July 3, 2024
Until relatively recently, research on touch has lagged behind other senses like hearing and vision. However, new research tools and greater scientific appreciation has led to a "touch renaissance". David Ginty, April Levin, and Lauren Orefice discuss current research on touch, it's role in development, and potential therapies to help those suffering from touch dysfunction.
Rat Stock Photo
July 3, 2024
Scientists create realistic virtual rodent with digital neural network to study how the brain controls complex, coordinated movement.
Original article in: Nature >
Pain-sensing neurons are stained green and red to show activity under a microscope. Image: Tao Deng/NCATS Stem Cell Translation Laboratory/NIH
June 11, 2024
Using mouse and computer model experiments, researchers identified thousands of molecular interactions — most not previously known — between pain-initiating neurons, or nociceptors, and different types of immune cells. These interactions could help explain why pain hypersensitivity sometimes occurs during inflammation — and could also help researchers resolve it.
Original article in: Nature Immunology >
Jason Comander of Mass Eye and Ear performs a surgical procedure to deliver the CRISPR medicine EDIT-101 into the cells of a patient's retina. Image: Mass Eye and Ear
May 9, 2024
Results from a small proof-of-concept study indicate that CRISPR gene editing is safe and can improve vision in some people with inherited blindness. In the multicenter clinical trial, 11 of the 14 individuals treated had measurable improvements on at least one key vision test, while six people experienced improvement on two or more vision outcomes.
a collage of photographs
May 9, 2024
New research reveals that certain visual neurons in the brain simply see what’s in front of the eyes, in real time — a departure from prior thinking that neurons use prediction of future images or analysis of past images to achieve stability.
Original article in: Nature Neuroscience >
an illustration of a human brain made out of puzzle pieces
May 9, 2024
We know that the cerebral cortex is vital for the perception of our somatosensory environment. Yet much remains mysterious. How do we know when something is too hot and what sets that thermostat? Daniel G. Taub and Clifford J. Woolf explain how a specific region called the secondary somatosensory cortex can alter our somatosensory sensitivity.
Original article in: Nature Communications >
a pregnant woman holding a pill
March 27, 2024
Topiramate — an antiseizure medication prescribed to treat epilepsy as well as migraines and bipolar disorder — does not appear to increase the risk of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) among children exposed to it prenatally, according to a new study led by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
illustration of a clock face on a bandage
March 14, 2024
New research from Peter Aungle and Ellen Langer finds that an individual’s perception of how much time has elapsed substantially impacts the speed at which minor bruising fades. This is the first study to demonstrate this psychological effect on the physical healing process.
Original article in: Nature Scientific Reports >
illustration of a yellow road sign
February 23, 2024
Researchers from the Wilson Lab gain new insights into how two distinct brain regions — the seat of the compass and the steering center — communicate during navigation.
Original article in: Nature >
Ext Data Fig 2
February 16, 2024
One cell, the “midget retinal ganglion cell,” carries the vast majority of visual information from the eye to the brain in humans. It has been thought to be a primate-specific innovation, making it impossible to study in accessible model systems. Josh Sanes shares how, using molecular comparison of retinas from 17 vertebrate species, researchers from his team and that of former postdoc Karthik Shekhar, were able to trace back through evolution and identify mouse orthologues of midget cells.
Original article in: Nature >
Gregor Schuhknecht (l) and Dániel Barabási
February 8, 2024
The Engert lab found that in zebrafish, previous visual experience had no effect on the emergence of their optomotor response (OMR). Fish raised in the dark (no visual experience) and fish raised under a strobe light (irregular visual experience) both developed this visually-guided behavior normally.
Original article in: Nature Communications >
Optical coherence tomography shows thickness of nine retinal layers across all individuals studied.
February 8, 2024
By combining retinal imaging, genetics, and big data, physician-researchers from Harvard Medical School, Mass. Eye and Ear, Massachusetts General Hospital, and the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard have found that they can estimate how likely a person is to develop eye and systemic diseases in the future.
Hair cells, shown in magenta, in the snail-shaped cochlea of the inner ear.
February 8, 2024
A novel gene therapy approach has given five children who were born deaf the ability to hear. The method, which overcomes a roadblock presented by large genes, may be useful in other treatments, according to researchers.
Original article in: The Lancet >
image showing viral labeling, whole-brain imaging, and single nucleus RNA sequencing
February 2, 2024
The brain controls nearly all bodily functions via spinal projecting neurons that carry command signals from the brain to the spinal cord. As part of a collaborative effort by the BRAIN Initiative Cell Census Network, research co-led by the Zhigang He Lab and Allen Institute for Brain Science used whole-brain imaging and single nucleus transcriptomics to comprehensively profile the anatomy and molecular makeup of these neurons that connect the brain and the body.
Original article in: Nature >
Alarm clock in the middle of the night
February 2, 2024
Researchers from Mass. General Hospital, University College London, and the University of the Republic in Uruguay found a two-way association between anorexia-related genes and those associated with the morning chronotype (waking early/going to bed early). This contrasts with disorders such as depression, binge eating disorder, and schizophrenia, which are associated with an evening chronotype.
Original article in: JAMA Network Open >
a person suffering from back pain holding their back.
December 7, 2023
Researchers have identified at least one potential link that locks sleep deprivation and chronic pain in an endless loop. Featured in the Harvard Gazette. From Shiqian Shen and colleagues, co-first authors Weihua Ding and Liuyue Yang.
Original article in: Nature Communications >
a close up of a person scratching their arm
December 7, 2023
Using mouse and human models, HMS researchers have shown for the first time that a common skin bacterium — Staphylococcus aureus — can cause itch by acting directly on nerve cells. Featured in HMS News and the Harvard Gazette. From Isaac Chiu and colleagues, first author Liwen Deng.
Original article in: Cell >
image of a retinal neuron. Image: Dr_Microbe/iStock/Getty Images Plus
December 7, 2023
Working with mice, HMS researchers have identified a potential new strategy for replacing retinal ganglion cells to treat glaucoma, one of the leading causes of blindness worldwide. Featured in HMS News From Petr Baranov and colleagues, first author Jonathan R. Soucy.
Original article in: PNAS >
a hand reaching into water
September 13, 2023
HMS News article on new research from David Ginty and colleagues, first author Charalampia Koutsioumpa. Studying mice, they found that sensory neurons develop customized nerve endings based on cues from the skin.
Original article in: Developmental Cell >
an illustration of a maze
August 30, 2023
HMS News article on new research from Chris Harvey, Mike Greenberg, and colleagues, first author Jonathan Green. They identified a specific group of neurons in a brain region involved in navigation that undergo bursts of activity when mice running a maze veer off course and correct their error.
Original article in: Nature >
The part of the optic nerve that traverses the eyeball is called the optic nerve head. Defects in this specialized region play a key role in the pathogenesis of glaucoma. This section was stained with an antibody to a protein called myelin basic protein (orange), which is present in the optic nerve proper but not the optic nerve head. The axons that run from the retina to the rest of the brain are stained with an antibody to tubulin (green).
August 17, 2023
Josh Sanes shares new research from his lab using single cell RNA sequencing to determine the genes expressed by thousands of single cells to complete a cell atlas of the human eye. This now allows scientists to target specific genes when treating conditions such as glaucoma and other ocular diseases.
Original article in: PNAS >
We employed a microfluidics device to immobilize C. elegans and present them with odorant solutions in a controlled manner. During stimulus presentations, the animals were imaged with a spinning disk confocal microscope.
June 13, 2023
Chemosensation is a critical sense through which animals large and small perceive the world around them, yet our understanding of the way in which odorants in the environment are encoded by sensory neurons remains incomplete. Albert Lin and colleagues in the Samuel Lab recorded from chemosensory neurons in the nematode C. elegans as it experienced different odorants, uncovering how olfactory information is encoded in the brain of the worm.
Original article in: Science Advances >
Cross section of the primary visual cortex of a monkey
June 7, 2023
Rick Born shares new research where neural recordings in animals trained on perceptual tasks failed to reveal the “usual suspects” of task-related signals in early visual cortex. This surprising negative finding has forced us to re-think exactly what these signals mean.
Original article in: Journal of Neurophysiology >
MRI scan of the human brain
May 25, 2023
HMS News article on new research from Christopher A. Walsh and Kristopher T. Kahle, co-first authors Sattar Khoshkhoo and Yilan Wang, examining the role of somatic mutations — DNA alterations that occur after conception — in Temporal Lobe Epilepsy (TLE) and suggesting the potential of using existing cancer therapies to treat TLE that is resistant to anti-seizure medications.
Original article in: JAMA Neurology >
Close up of a human eye
May 11, 2023
HMS News article on new research from David Corey, Artur A Indzhykulian, and colleagues, first author Maryna Ivanchenko. Using mice, the team designed a “mini gene” that could in the future be developed into a therapy for Usher Syndrome type 1F, a severe genetic condition that causes blindness and deafness.
Original article in: Nature Communications >
Venki Murthy, Alice Berners-Lee, Elizabeth Shtrahman, and Julien Grimaud
May 11, 2023
Harvard MCB Department news article on new research from Venkatesh Murthy and colleagues, co-first authors Alice Berners-Lee and Elizabeth Shtrahman, examining how odor mixtures are represented in the piriform cortex of mice while they learn to discriminate a unique target odor mixture from hundreds of other odor mixtures. They found that with time the target mixture becomes over-represented--meaning more neurons of this brain region become selective for the target odor mixture than they were at
Original article in: PLOS Biology >
Summary of our findings, showing essential roles of clustered γ-protocadherins in promoting synapse formation and peripheral axonal branching in touch sensory neurons.
May 5, 2023
Shan Meltzer and Emmanuella Asante share new research from the Ginty lab showing that the clustered protocadherin gamma (Pcdhg) gene locus regulates somatosensory neuron synapse formation, mechanosensory neuron branching patterns, and circuit assembly in the mechanosensory dorsal horn.
Original article in: Cell >
The regenerated hair cells (Green/Red double positive) were detected in the mouse cochleae after the cocktail/Ad.Atoh1 reprogramming.
April 25, 2023
Loss of the inner ear sensory cells, the hair cells, is considered one of the most common causes of hearing loss that is generally permanent. Using single-cell RNAseq, advanced imaging, electrophysiology, and lineage tracing, Yizhou Quan, Zheng-Yi Chen, and colleagues identified a cocktail of drug-like molecules that effectively reprograms fully mature wildtype supporting cells for hair cell regeneration, representing a step forward for hearing restoration by HC regeneration.
Original article in: PNAS >
cover of the science journal 'nature' with an image of an octopus on it.
April 20, 2023
The lab of Nick Bellono, along with colleagues at UC San Diego and UT Southwestern Medical Center, recently published two papers in Nature describing the path of divergent sensing capabilities in cephalopods by tracking their evolutionary lineage from common ancestral neurons.
Original article in: Nature >
Fruit fly with its wings up and evidence of a fungal outgrowth. Courtesy of Carolyn Elya
April 20, 2023
Harvard Gazette article profiling the research of postdoc Carolyn Elya (lab of Benjamin de Bivort) into how a parasitic fungus hijacks the nervous system of flies and uses mind control to manipulate behavior as the insects near death
Liberles_Stephen_Headshot
March 31, 2023
The lab of Stephen Liberles was featured in Science News for their recent paper illuminating how the brain becomes aware that there is an infection in the body.
Original article in: Nature >
a younger person helping an elderly person walk
March 31, 2023
HMS News article on new research from Brad Manor and colleagues, co-first authors Junhong Zhou and Gabriele Cattaneo, finding that that the ability to dual-task when walking starts to decline by the age of 55, up to a decade before old age, as traditionally defined by the threshold of 65 years.
Original article in: Lancet Healthy Longevity >
a hand holding a puzzle piece with the word "prosopagnosia" printed on it
March 9, 2023
HMS News article on new research from Joseph DeGutis and colleagues suggesting that as many as one in 33 people (3.08 percent) may meet the criteria for face blindness, or prosopagnosia.
Original article in: Cortex >
yun zhang in her office
March 3, 2023
Harvard Gazette article on new research from Yun Zhang and colleagues, co-first authors Taihong Wu and Minghai Ge, illuminating how pathogens — and pheromones — alter social behavior in animals.
Original article in: Nature >
abstract image of a human head with a patchwork of images for the brain
February 24, 2023
Harvard Gazette article on new research from Jeremy Wolfe and colleagues, showing that while people often think their memory is terrible, they can recall where and when an object appeared with good, if not perfect, precision for a large number of objects.
Original article in: Current Biology >
neon sign in the shape of a human head
February 24, 2023
Harvard Gazette article on new research from Kathryn Rexrode and colleagues, first author Alexandra C Purdue-Smithe, finding that women with pre-pregnancy migraines have a greater risk of complications, including preterm delivery, gestational hypertension, and pre-eclampsia.
Original article in: Neurology >
Anosmia or smell blindness, loss of the ability to smell, one of the possible symptoms of covid-19, infectious disease caused by corona virus. Woman Trying to Sense Smell of a Lemon
January 25, 2023
HMS News article on new research from Sandeep Robert Datta, David Brann, Tatsuya Tsukahara, and colleagues at Duke Health and UC San Diego, finding that long-term loss of smell may be linked to an ongoing immune assault on olfactory nerve cells and an associated decline in the number of those cells.
The image shows serotonin receptor expression on retinal axon terminals in the thalamus. Retinal axons are shown in green, the presynaptic terminals are shown in blue and the serotonin receptors in magenta.
January 13, 2023
Retinal axons convey parallel streams of visual features from the eye to the rest of the brain. A new study from the Andermann and Chen labs looks at how serotonin can filter this visual information at the level of retinal axons.
Original article in: Neuron >
A cross section of the spinal cord showing different types of neurons involved in touch. Dorsal horn neurons (red) and postsynaptic dorsal column neurons (green) work together to receive information about touch from sensory neurons in the skin, process this information, and communicate it to the brainstem. Image: Carmine Chavez-Martinez and Anda Chirila
December 8, 2022
HMS News article on two new research papers from David Ginty, Chris Harvey, and colleagues, first authors Josef Turecek, Anda Chirila, and Genelle Rankin, suggesting the spinal cord and brainstem are essential for processing touch signals as they travel to the brain.
Original article in: Cell >
HMS researchers have identified the molecular conversation that occurs between pain neurons (red) in the gut and intestinal goblet cells (green) as a mechanism involved in protective pain signaling that shields the gut from damage. Image: Chiu Lab/HMS
November 28, 2022
HMS News article on new research from Isaac Chiu and colleagues, first author Daping Yang, illuminating how pain neurons shield the gut from damage.
Original article in: Cell >
blue award ribbon illustration
November 28, 2022
Round up of awards and honors earned by the HBI Community
The TMC1 proteins, modelled as dimers (each subunit shown with a different color), are responsible for turning sound vibrations into sound into electrical signaling – the language of our brain.
October 5, 2022
Nurunisa Akyuz of the Corey lab describes a new study focused on the inner-ear mechanosensory channel, TMC1 (Transmembrane Channel Like 1). Structural modeling, mutagenesis, viral gene delivery and hair-cell physiology experiments were used to determine aspects of TMC1 gating.
Original article in: Science Advances >
illustration of neurons
September 20, 2022
HMS News article on new research from the labs of Christopher Harvey and Michael Greenberg, first author Noah Pettit, and second author Lynn Yap, finding that a gene called Fos is a key player in spatial mapping. It helps the brain use specialized navigation cells to form and maintain stable representations of the environment.
Original article in: Nature >
a doctor looking inside a person's ear
September 20, 2022
HMS News article on new research from Matthew Crowson, Christopher Hartnick, and colleagues at HMS and Mass. Eye and Ear. They built an artificial intelligence model that they have shown to outperform clinicians in diagnosing pediatric ear infections.
Axons (nerve fibers) regrowing through the injured optic nerve are visualized by green fluorescent staining
September 16, 2022
Yuqin Yin and Larry Benowitz describe a new study using RNA sequencing and bioinformatics to identify the transcription factor REST (a.k.a. NRSF) as a key repressor of the genetic program required for neurons to regenerate axons in the central nervous system. Counteracting the inhibitory effects of REST enhances the ability of retinal ganglion cells to regenerate axons through the injured optic nerve and of cortical neurons to regenerate axons in the corticospinal tract.
Original article in: Nature Communications >
a gloved hand holding a vial of blood
August 1, 2022
HMS News article on new research from Bob S. Carter, Leonora Balaj, and colleagues, first author Syeda Maheen Batool, describing improvements in a blood test for gene mutations linked to gliomas, the most common type of adult brain tumors. The test previously focused on mutations in the TERT gene, and now has added capability to detect mutations in the EGFR gene.
Original article in: Clinical Cancer Research >
a person holding a dropper of cbd oil
August 1, 2022
HMS News article profiling the research of Bruce Bean and Clifford Woolf, who are studying how CBD inhibits pain-sensing neurons in order to develop more effective pain medicines.
a collage of baby photos
August 1, 2022
Harvard Gazette article on new research from Samuel Mehr and colleagues, co-first authors Courtney Hilton and Cody J. Moser. They studied 21 cultures, from San Diego to East Africa and found striking similarities in infant-directed speech and song.
Original article in: Nature Human Behavior >
Portion of a mouse retina showing surviving retinal ganglion cells following injury to the optic nerve.
July 22, 2022
Neurons called retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) send axons from the retina to the rest of the brain through the optic nerve. When the optic nerve is crushed, most RGCs die and few if any survivors regrow new axons. The labs of Josh Sanes (Harvard) and Zhigang He (Boston Children’s Hospital) recently published two papers defining gene expression programs that regulate RGC survival and regeneration.
Original article in: Neuron >
a female doctor wearing a surgical mask and writing on a notepad
July 15, 2022
HMS News article on new research from Hadine Joffe and colleagues, first author Alexandra Z. Sosinsky, showing that females are underrepresented in key disease clinical trials, with the largest gap observed in psychiatric clinical trials.
Original article in: Contemporary Clinical Trials >
a person wearing a hearing aid
July 15, 2022
HMS News article on the development of a new word-score model from Stéphane Maison and colleagues, first author Kelsie J. Grant, which leads to better evaluations of cochlear nerve damage.
Original article in: Scientific Reports >
HMS Logo
June 30, 2022
HMS News profiling PiNBAC, a new post-bac program that seeks to increase diversity in neuroscience by providing research experience and professional development to college graduates from underrepresented groups. PiNBAC is led by Tari Tan and Bob Datta of the Dept of Neurobiology at HMS.
In a brain region called the area postrema, a dense network of inhibitory neurons (red) suppresses the activity of nearby nausea-causing excitatory neurons (white), which has the effect of reducing nausea behaviors in mice.
June 30, 2022
HMS News article on new research from Stephen Liberles and colleagues, first author Chuchu Zhang, using mice to describe how different cell types in the brain work together to suppress nausea.
Original article in: Cell Reports >
cartoon of a man sleeping
June 30, 2022
Harvard Gazette article on new research from Sydney Cash, Leigh R. Hochberg, and colleagues, first author Daniel B. Rubin, may help explain how humans form memories and learn, and could eventually aid the development of assistive tools for people affected by neurologic disease or injury.
Original article in: Journal of Neuroscience >
photo of 4 members of the murthy lab standing outside
June 30, 2022
Harvard MCB News article on new research from the lab of Venki Murthy, first author Nuné Martiros, providing insight into the workings of neural circuits in the ventral striatum’s olfactory tubercle during odor association learning.
Original article in: eLife >
Images generated to strongly activate face neurons using a computer algorithm
June 23, 2022
Do face neurons respond to the semantic category of faces, or to visual features associated with faces? Alex Bardon and Will Xiao in the labs of Gabriel Kreiman, Marge Livingstone, and Carlos Ponce use generated images to find that face neurons are better described as tuned to visual attributes associated with faces.
Original article in: PNAS >
blue award ribbon illustration
June 15, 2022
Round up of awards and honors earned by the HBI Community
Illustration of skull with brain showing
May 24, 2022
Harvard Gazette article on new research from Matthias Nahrendorf and colleagues, co-first authors Fadi E. Pulous and Jean C. Cruz-Hernández, finding that cerebrospinal fluid (also known as “brain water”) can exit the brain into the skull’s bone marrow through tiny channels in the skull, and this may be key to detecting infection and injury.
Original article in: Nature Neuroscience >
yun zhang in her office
May 4, 2022
Harvard Gazette article on new research from Yun Zhang and colleagues, co-first authors He Liu and Taihong Wu, showing that forgetting generates a novel brain state that is different from the one before learning happened or the one that exists after a memory is formed.
Original article in: Science Advances >
Microscope image of the developing fruit fly visual system
May 4, 2022
HMS News article from Claude Desplan (NYU) and colleagues, co-first authors Nikolaos Konstantinides, Isabel Holguera, and Anthony M. Rossi, on new research uncovering factors that regulate neuron development in fruit fly visual system.
Original article in: Nature >
aleena garner
April 21, 2022
Harvard Medicine News Q+A with Aleena Garner about her research, focusing on how memory affects perception of visual and auditory information.
screenshot from film 'arrival'
April 21, 2022
Harvard Gazette article on a recent conversation with between Harvard’s Mind Brain Behavior Interfaculty Initiative with Professor of Psychology Jesse Snedeker and Professor and author Avi Loeb. This panel discussed the potential challenges of communicating with aliens who may be much more intelligent than us.
transparent person with nerves and skin highlighted
April 21, 2022
Harvard Gazette article on new research from Anne Oaklander and colleagues, suggesting that that some patients with long COVID have lasting nerve damage that appears to be caused by a potentially treatable infection-triggered immune dysfunction.
ophthalmologist examining older man's eyes
April 21, 2022
Harvard Health Publishing article discussing recent research suggesting that cataract surgery may protect against dementia.
blue award ribbon illustration
April 21, 2022
Round-up of awards and honors earned by the HBI community.
reference_frames_preview-150×150
March 9, 2022
Jenny Lu and colleagues in Rachel Wilson’s lab share new work on a neural circuit in the fly that transforms velocity from body-centric to world-centric reference frames. This work reveals how vector computations can be performed in the brain.
dalimouse-cropped-150×150
February 25, 2022
Allison E. Hamilos from the lab of John Assad shares new insights into the role of dopaminergic signaling in modulating the moment-to-moment probability of planned movement.
Original article in: eLife >
020722_Memento_045-150×150
February 24, 2022
Harvard Gazette article on a recent panel sponsored by the Harvard Mind Brain Behavior Initiative featuring Kirk R. Daffner, Daniel L. Schacter, and Susanna C. Siegel using the plot of the film Memento to discuss memory, amnesia, and personality.
photo of Alexandra Touroutoglou
February 7, 2022
Harvard Gazette Q+A with Alexandra Touroutoglou about her research on 'super agers' and a related new study getting underway to test whether a neurostimulation intervention can restore function in those experiencing age-related decline.
Cells infected with Epstein-Barr, a common herpes virus that can cause mononucleosis and establishes a latent, lifelong infection of the host.
February 7, 2022
Harvard Gazette article on new research from Alberto Ascherio, Kassandra L. Munger, and colleagues, first authors Kjetil Bjornevik and Marianna Cortese, providing the first compelling evidence of causality between Epstein-Barr and MS.
Original article in: Science >
blue award ribbon illustration
January 21, 2022
Round up of awards and honors earned by the HBI community.
A time lapse of the semicircular canals forming in the inner ear of a two-day-old zebrafish embryo. Image: Akankshi Munjal/Acquired using Zeiss LSM 710 and 3D rendered with FlouRender
January 21, 2022
HMS News article on a new discovery by Sean Megason and colleagues, first author Akankshi Munjal, of mechanical process by which sheets of cells morph into the delicate, looping semicircular canals of the inner ear.
Original article in: Cell >
magnifying glass over the word anthrax
January 21, 2022
HMS News article on new research from Isaac Chiu and colleagues, first author Nicole Yang, suggesting that anthrax has an unexpected benefit— one specific type of anthrax toxin can silence multiple types of pain in animals.
Original article in: Nature Neuroscience >
tan-yang center for autism research at harvard logo
January 18, 2022
The Tan-Yang Center seeks a Program Manager who will be responsible for planning scientific events and outreach activities, running a postdoctoral fellowship program, managing a website, newsletter, and social media, developing new community-building activities, and liaising with the related scientific and administrative units at Harvard University, as well as our sister Center at the McGovern Institute at MIT.
machine generated image of a jellyfish
January 3, 2022
How does the brain represent the visual world around us? In this study from the lab of Carlos Ponce, led by Olivia Rose and James Johnson, visual cortex neurons “team up” with machine learning models to generate synthetic images—revealing the density of information in such representations.
Original article in: Nature Communiccation >
harvard university veritas logo
December 9, 2021
Harvard Gazette article on the establishment of the Kempner Institute for the Study of Natural and Artificial Intelligence at Harvard, launched with a $500M gift from Priscilla Chan and Mark Zuckerberg. The Institute will be led by neurobiologist Bernardo Sabatini of Harvard Medical School and computer scientist Sham Kakade of the University of Washington, who will join the Harvard faculty in January 2022.
Seeing is more than just vision. Artwork is watercolor painting by Nancy L. Murray.
December 7, 2021
Aleena Garner, a new faculty member in the Department of Neurobiology at HMS, describes her latest research, together with Georg Keller of the Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research, on how neural circuits between auditory and visual cortex communicate learned associations and create predictions. They show that experience with an audio-visual stimulus reshapes direct input from auditory cortex to visual cortex—suppressing predictable visual input to amplify the unpredictable.
Original article in: Nature Neuroscience >
The human brain is pictured with its mesoscopic interactome. Coherence measurements from 6,024 hours of human electrophysiological data in 48 subjects were used to build the mesoscopic interactome and demonstrate rapid communication via small-world networks
December 6, 2021
Jiarui Wang and colleagues in the Kreiman lab share key insights from a study of invasive neurophysiological activity from 48 human subjects to build a map of functional connections in the cerebral cortex at the mesoscale. These results (www.braininteractome.com) can help neurologists to better understand pathology, and neuroscientists to better understand computations in the human brain.
Original article in: Cell Reports >
Science Clubs International Logo
November 17, 2021
Bruna Paulsen of the Arlotta lab at Harvard, together with colleagues Rogelio Hernandez-Lopez and Laura Peña-Hernandez, describes the outreach work of Science Clubs International, a STEM outreach organization that serves students in eight different countries. They highlight in particular the 2021 online edition of Clubes de Ciencia, supported by a grant from the American Society for Cell Biology.
MERFISH, a single cell transcriptome imaging method, identifies 95 molecularly defined cell types in the mouse primary motor cortex (MOp) and records their spatial information in intact tissue. These cells form complex spatial organizations with an overall layered structure as shown here in one of the coronal slices imaged by MERFISH. L1 to L6 are layers of cortex; wm refers to white matter (myelinated axons).
November 15, 2021
Meng Zhang of the Zhuang lab describes new work using a single-cell transcriptome-imaging method, MERFISH, to generate a detailed cell map of the mouse primary motor cortex (MOp), revealing nearly 100 molecularly defined cell types and their spatial locations. Integrating MERFISH with retrograde tracing technique further allowed the team to understand how these different cell types connect with other brain regions.
Original article in: Nature >
A close up of a hand applying an acupuncture needle.
November 12, 2021
HMS News article on new research from Qiufu Ma and colleagues, co-first authors Shenbin Liu and Zhifu Wang, elucidating the underlying neuroanatomy of acupuncture that activates a specific signaling pathway.
Original article in: Nature >
Reversing Hearing Loss
November 12, 2021
HMS News article on new research from Albert Edge and colleagues, first author Yushi Hayashi, identifying the role of the protein behind rare Norrie disease.
Original article in: PNAS >
The Epilepsy Genetics Program has helped discover dozens of genetic causes of epilepsy, including some that are treatable. (Image: KC Cohen, Boston Children's Hospital)
November 12, 2021
Boston Children's Hospital Answers article highlighting the research of Annapurna Poduri and the Epilepsy Genetics team at Boston Children's Hospital.
blue award ribbon illustration
November 12, 2021
Round up of awards and honors earned by the HBI community.
Serial section electron microscopy revealed warming and cooling processing circuits with pathways that converge anatomically and physiologically (via the green neurons shown to the right).
November 10, 2021
Luis Hernandez-Nunez shares new research conducted as a part of his PhD research in the lab of Aravinthan Samuel uncovering new molecular receptors, cells, circuits and behavioral strategies that underlie the thermosensitivity of fly larvae.
Original article in: Science Advances >
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November 6, 2021
Abdulkadir Canatar, Blake Bordelon and Cengiz Pehlevan share new research exploring why neural networks do not overfit.
Grp mRNA (magenta) was visualized in a coronal slice of the mouse brain using fluorescent in situ hybridization. Two additional common markers were added in the right hemisphere for better visualization of cortical and hippocampal brain areas.
November 2, 2021
Sarah Melzer from the Sabatini lab shares new work on the functions of the neuropeptide GRP in regulating fear memories. Their work highlights the mechanisms through which GRP modulates a specialized neuronal circuit in the cortex during fear conditioning.
Original article in: Cell >
blue award ribbon illustration
October 26, 2021
Round up of awards and honors earned by the HBI community.
mystery of touch
October 26, 2021
HMS News article on new research from the labs of David Ginty and Christopher Harvey, with first authors Brendan P. Lehnert and Celine Santiago, that reveals mechanisms that may underlie the greater sensitivity of certain skin regions.
Original article in: Cell >
hormone_affects_society
September 29, 2021
Harvard Gazette article summarizing a recent online lecture by Carole Hooven on the wide-reaching effects of testosterone in the human body, and across society, powering acts of aggression, violence, and the large disparity in their commission between men and women.
Vlad Susoy in front of a tacking microscope measuring brain activity in behaving C. elegans nematodes
September 29, 2021
Harvard MCB Department News article on new research from the lab Aravi Samuel, first author Vladislav Susoy, using whole-brain calcium imaging to examine the mechanisms behind the mating behavior of male worms at single-neuron resolution.
Original article in: Cell >
a person breathing through a mask
September 14, 2021
HMS News article on new research from Frank Scheer and colleagues showing that the endogenous circadian system plays a significant role in modulating pulmonary function and asthma severity independent of sleep and other daily behavioral or environmental cycles.
Original article in: PNAS >
michael pollan leaning against a blackboard
September 14, 2021
Harvard Gazette Q+A with Michael Pollan on his new book investigating how opium, caffeine, and mescaline affect the mind.
illustration of a woman holding baby, and a bottle pouring medicine into a spoon
September 14, 2021
Boston Children's Hospital Answers article on new research from the labs of Basil Darras and colleagues showing that the oral drug Risdiplam improves motor function in infants, including the ability to sit unassisted for a period of time. They were also more likely than the controls to achieve motor milestones and lived longer than would be expected.
blue award ribbon illustration
August 11, 2021
Round up of awards and honors earned by the HBI community.
a jumping spider on scientific equipment
August 11, 2021
Harvard Gazette article on new research from the lab of Paul Shamble, first author Massimo De Agrò, demonstrating that jumping spiders can distinguish between animate and inanimate objects — an ability previously detected only in humans and other vertebrates.
Original article in: PLOS Biology >
Abstract neurons system
July 29, 2021
HMS News article on new research from the lab of Bradford Lowell and colleagues, first author Janet Berrios, on how neurons and the feeling of hunger they cause actually drive an animal to find and consume food.
Original article in: Nature >
Visualizing_pain
July 29, 2021
HMS News article on new research from Clas Linnman and colleagues, on the development of a new imaging technique allowing researchers to capture images of injuries caused by whiplash that previously eluded scans.
Original article in: Pain >
Two different models for how vagal motor neurons coming from the brain may connect to and control digestive system organs
July 13, 2021
Ken Tao and Brad Lowell share a new study characterizing vagal motor neurons that innervate the digestive system. This work demonstrates a labeled-line model of the vagus motor nerve where genetically-defined subtypes of vagal motor neurons project to specific regions of the digestive system and engage neurochemically-distinct subtypes of enteric neurons.
Original article in: Neuron >
image showing portion of the mouse retina showing that the CNTFR (red), the receptor through which CNTF acts, is not present in retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) or their axons (green). Other experiments show that the cells that express the receptor are astrocytes
June 21, 2021
Lili Xie shares new research from the lab of Larry Benowitz showing that the chemokine CCL5 promotes optic nerve regeneration and mediates many of the beneficial effects of Ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) gene therapy.
Original article in: PNAS >
blue award ribbon illustration
June 11, 2021
Round up of awards and honors earned by the HBI community.
Williams-on-60minutes-900×600
June 4, 2021
Harvard Gazette Q+A with David R. Williams on the mental and physical tolls discrimination take on Black lives and what individuals can do to help mitigate them.
Viral Winter
June 4, 2021
Harvard Gazette article profiling the research of Deirdre Barrett into how our dreams have changed during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Gorillas_2500-1600×900
June 4, 2021
Harvard Gazette article on new research from a collaboration of more than 50 international scientists finding that Neanderthals and ancient humans adapted to eating starch-rich foods as far back as 100,000 years ago.
Original article in: PNAS >
spinal cord_preview-01
May 5, 2021
Miao He, Jessica Page and Zhigang He share a new study achieving precise targeting of intra-spinal propriospinal networks with targeted non-invasive AAV vector labeling. Selectively modulating specific populations of propriospinal neurons in injured and paralyzed mice resolved their contributions to key locomotor behaviors-- demonstrating the potential of this strategy for functional restoration following spinal cord injury.
Original article in: Nature Communications >
a woman experiencing tooth pain after eating something cold
May 4, 2021
HMS News article on new research from Jochen Lennerz and colleagues uncovering the molecular and cellular mechanisms behind cold-induced tooth pain and hypersensitivity.
Original article in: Science Advances >
image of japanese fried dumplings
May 4, 2021
HMS News article on new research from Stephen Liberles and Nao Horio into the neurobiology that underlies food attraction and how hungry mice choose to pay attention to one object in their environment over another.
Original article in: Nature >
blue award ribbon illustration
May 4, 2021
Round up of awards and honors earned by the HBI community.
image of C. elegans
April 23, 2021
HMS News article highlighting a new project from Max Heiman, Keith Blackwell, and Monica Colaiácovo, looking into why some species of wild Caenorhabditis elegans are able to thrive in in high temperature environments.
a person scratching their arm
April 23, 2021
HMS News article on new research from K. Frank Austen and Isaac Chiu, first author Tiphaine Voisin, suggesting that cysteine leukotriene receptor 2 (CysLT2R) may be a new target for designing treatments to target intractable chronic itch.
Original article in: PNAS >
success in sight
April 23, 2021
HMS News article on new research from the lab of Connie Cepko, first author Yunlu Xue, marking an important first step in developing a gene therapy to treat retinitis pigmentosa, or RP, an inherited form of progressive blindness that affects around 20 million people worldwide.
Original article in: eLife >
Fluorescently labeled L3 lamina neurons in the fly visual system. L3 neurons are labeled in green, photoreceptors in blue, and dFezf transcription factor in magenta.
March 26, 2021
Jing Peng and Ivan Santiago share new research revealing a temporally precise transcriptional cascade that orchestrates the assembly of synaptic layers in the fly visual system. This story is a special piece honoring the memory of their mentor Matt Pecot, who sadly passed away in 2019, with words of remembrance in addition to the scientific update.
Original article in: PNAS >
cartoon illustrating how neurons are recorded in the mouse visual cortext
March 25, 2021
MohammadMehdi Kafashan and Anna Jaffe share their work on the saturation of sensory information in larger neuronal populations, as well as on how this information is distributed across the many neurons in these populations.
Original article in: Nature Communications >
Artists rendering of CAPTURE
March 24, 2021
Jesse Marshall (Olveczky Lab) shares research on a new technique they developed, CAPTURE, that allowed them to continuously track the position of the head, trunk, and limbs of freely behaving rats over days and weeks. CAPTURE provides an unprecedentedly detailed portrait of rat behavior, and opens the door to new advances in understanding the mathematical structure of natural behavior, the behavioral effects of drugs and disease, and the relationship between movement and the brain.
Original article in: Neuron >
Head of larvae under the microscope.
March 19, 2021
Katrin Vogt shares new research from the lab of Aravi Samuel identifying how feeding state-dependent neuronal modulations affect processing of olfactory information and olfactory choice behavior in Drosophila larvae.
Original article in: Science Advances >
Atala hairstreak (Eumaeus atala) hanging delicately under a leaf of its cycad hostplant.
March 9, 2021
Harvard Gazette article on new research from Naomi Pierce and colleagues, first author Marjorie A. Liénard, describing a novel method for isolating opsins, light-sensitive proteins found in the eyes of insects, and detailing their molecular history, structure, and function to determine what colors an insect can see.
Original article in: PNAS >
A scanning electron microscope image of a hair bundle protruding from a sensory cell in the inner ear. )
February 26, 2021
HMS News article on research from the labs of David Corey and Wesley Wong, first author Eric Mulhall, providing new insight into the functioning of the tip link—the tiny apparatus of hair cells in the ear that converts auditory signals into electrical ones.
Original article in: Nature Communications >
2020 Beauty of the Brain-web preview
February 23, 2021
Congratulations to Masahito Yamagata, Isle Bastille, Kadir Ozkan, Carla Carol Winter, Ayush Noori, and Clara Muñoz-Castro
pint sized science logo
January 28, 2021
Pint-Sized Science, a podcast of Science in the News, features HBI co-director Venkatesh Murthy. In an interview with graduate students Ana-Andreea Stoica (Columbia Univ) and Anastasia Repouliou (Harvard Univ), Murthy discusses our sense of smell—why it matters, how it works, and what are some of the big questions in olfaction research today.
motor control thumbnail
January 28, 2021
HMS News article on new research from the labs of Wei-Chung Allen Lee and colleagues, co-first authors Jasper Phelps, David Grant Colburn Hildebrand, and Brett J. Graham, on the development of GridTape, an automated electron microscopy system enabling comprehensive, high-resolution imaging of large neural circuits.
Original article in: Cell >
Layer 6 corticothalamic neurons in the auditory cortex of a behaving mouse recorded using two-photon calcium imaging.
January 5, 2021
Kameron Clayton shares new research from the lab of Daniel Polley. Using a combination of physiological and anatomical tools to access specific types of cortical neurons, they demonstrate that descending projection neurons in mouse auditory cortex are active prior to movements that are expected to generate sound.
Original article in: Current Biology >
cartoon illustrating touch and pain pathways in a mouse
November 13, 2020
Seungwon (Sebastian) Choi shares new research from the labs of David Ginty and colleagues at the University of Pittsburgh. They applied new mouse genetic tools in conjunction with anatomical, physiological and behavioral approaches to better understand the functional organization of ascending touch, thermal and pain pathways.
Original article in: Nature >
motion sequencing data set
November 13, 2020
Tatsuya Tsukahara shares new research from the lab of Sandeep Robert Datta, on the use of their Motion Sequencing (MoSeq) behavioral analysis technique, built on 3D animal postures and unsupervised machine learning, to organize large and complex behavioral datasets from mice treated with neuroactive and psychoactive drugs.
Original article in: Nature Neuroscience >
Topographical organization of basal ganglia recipient thalamus
November 12, 2020
Jaeeon Lee shares new research from the lab of Bernardo Sabatini confirming that distinct pathways of the basal ganglia remain segregated in all the output nuclei of the basal ganglia when sensory information is transformed to motor commands.
Original article in: Nature Neuroscience >
bellono cover-01
November 2, 2020
MCB News piece on new research from the Bellono lab, first author Lena van Giesen, uncovering the molecular basis of chemotactile sensation in octopuses.
Original article in: Cell >
a baby lying in a crib
November 2, 2020
Harvard Gazette article on new research from Harvard’s Music Lab, revealing that infants relax in response to lullabies even when those lullabies are in an unfamiliar foreign language. Co-first authors Constance M. Bainbridge and Mila Bertolo, senior author Samuel A. Mehr.
Original article in: Nature Human Behavior >
Flock of Birds_thumbnail
October 30, 2020
Johannes Bill of the Drugowitsch and Gershman labs explores how our brains might exploit hierarchical motion relations when solving perceptual tasks.
Original article in: PNAS >
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October 14, 2020
Davide Valeriani shares new research from the Dystonia and Speech Motor Control Laboratory on the development of DystoniaNet, a 3D convolutional neural network capable of diagnosing dystonia from raw structural MRI data.
Original article in: PNAS >
blue award ribbon illustration
October 6, 2020
Round up of awards and honors earned by the HBI community.
Nyitrai_thumbnail
October 2, 2020
Hajnalka “Sunny” Nyitrai shares new research from the lab of Pascal Kaeser addressing how neurons transport material to the synapse and how they ensure delivery to the appropriate destinations.
Original article in: Cell Reports >
A cone photoreceptor in the primate fovea.
October 1, 2020
Michael Do shares new findings from his lab on the question of why humans and other primates see more sharply than other mammals.
Original article in: Neuron >
Eddie Rodriguez, Caroline Palavicino-Maggio, Michael Mazzola sitting outside HMS
September 29, 2020
Caroline Palavicino-Maggio writes about the Journal of Emerging Investigators Mini PhD Camp, a unique program introducing underserved middle and high school students to the sciences, how to conduct research, and how to write scientific papers.
blue award ribbon illustration
September 23, 2020
Round up of awards and honors earned by the HBI community.
Beauty of touch
September 23, 2020
Harvard Medicine Magazine article showcasing many beautiful images taken by members of the lab of David Ginty at HMS showing cutaneous sensory neurons in action.
Original article in: Harvard Medicine Magazine >
Corey Harwell
September 22, 2020
Corey Harwell was interviewed for a SFN Neuronline feature on diversifying the field through mentorship and scientific exposure.
Liang_thumbnail
September 14, 2020
Liang Liang, Mark Andermann and Chinfei Chen discuss new findings suggesting that the modulation of visual responses to certain stimuli can occur at very early stages of visual processing, when visual signals first enter the brain.
Illustration showing Usher Syndrome treatment.
September 8, 2020
Gwenaelle Geleoc shares her lab's new research into improving hearing and balance in mice. They targeted an Acadian human mutation in a gene essential for hearing and vision using local applications of antisense oligonucleotides.
Original article in: Molecular Theory >
Dorsal root ganglion cells stained for Mpz (Schwann cells), Tubb3 (Neurons), Apoe (satellite glia).
September 8, 2020
Will Renthal & Ivan Tochitsky share recent work from Renthal & Woolf labs, suggesting that transcription factors induced early after peripheral nerve injury confer the cellular plasticity required for damaged sensory neurons to regenerate their axons
Original article in: Neuron >
cartoon of a cup of coffee
September 8, 2020
Joseph Zak shares new research from the labs of Venkatesh Murthy and colleagues in France on how blends of odors are detected and encoded by olfactory receptor neurons.
Original article in: Nature Communications >
Electron microscope images showing Müller glial junctions in the human retina
August 28, 2020
Charles Zucker and John Dowling (Laboratory of Jeff Lichtman) share new research using a targeted high-throughput connectomics approach to investigate the underlying cause of a neurodegenerative disease of the retina.
Original article in: PNAS >
schematic of the human eye
August 24, 2020
Wenjun Yan shares three new papers from the lab of Josh Sanes using high throughput single cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) in order to better understand cell types in the anterior segment and the retina of the human eye.
close up of a hand applying an accupuncture needle to a patient
August 24, 2020
HMS News and Harvard Gazette article on new research from the labs of Qiufu Ma and colleagues, first author Shenbin Liu, demonstrating that acupuncture activates inflammation-regulating pathways and tames cytokine storms in mice.
Photo to illustrate anger during Coronavirus. Rose Lincoln/Harvard Staff Photographer
August 24, 2020
Harvard Gazette interview with David H. Rosmarin, Assistant Professor of Psychology, clinician at McLean Hospital, and director of McLean's Spirituality and Mental Health program, offering perspective on the pandemic’s raging effects.
blue award ribbon illustration
August 13, 2020
Round up of awards and honors earned by the HBI community.
lab rat
August 11, 2020
Grigori Guitchounts shares new research from the lab of David Cox showing that movement information in the visual cortex is far richer than previously known.
Original article in: Neuron >
image of C. elegans
August 10, 2020
Myung-Gyu Choi and Yun Zhang share new research on C. elegans providing the first set of findings that demonstrate the causal role of gap junction plasticity in regulating learning in behavior.
Original article in: Nature Communications >
A ring neuron in the fly brain that responds to wind direction.
August 7, 2020
Tatsuo Okubo shares new research from the lab of Rachel Wilson describing a pathway connecting mechanoreceptors to compass neurons, in addition to how mechanosensory signals are transformed within this pathway.
Original article in: Neuron >
Anosmia or smell blindness, loss of the ability to smell, one of the possible symptoms of covid-19, infectious disease caused by corona virus. Woman Trying to Sense Smell of a Lemon
July 28, 2020
HMS News article on new research from the lab of Sandeep Robert Datta and colleagues, co-first authors David H. Brann, Tatsuya Tsukahara, and Caleb Weinreb, demonstrating that olfactory support cells are vulnerable to novel coronavirus infection.
Original article in: Science Advances >
Image depicting sound waves travelling into the ear
July 28, 2020
HMS News article on new research from the lab of M. Charles Liberman, first author Pei-zhe Wu, on a new study that uncovers damage to hair cells as an underlying cause of age-related hearing loss.
Original article in: Journal of Neuroscience >
hand holding a white pill
July 28, 2020
HMS News article on new research from the labs of Konstantina Stankovic and Albert Edge, first authors Richard Seist and Mingjie Tong, suggesting that bone disease medications may reverse hearing loss.
Cross section of a Meissner corpuscle traced from an image taken with electron microscopy.
July 9, 2020
A new study from the labs of David Ginty, Jan Drugowitsch, Christopher Harvey, & Wade Regehr (co-first authors Nicole Neubarth, Alan Emanuel, & Yin Liu) used mouse genetic tools to gain new insights into the anatomy & function of Meissner corpuscles.
Original article in: Science >
artistic drawing of a mouse
July 1, 2020
BCH Discoveries article on new research from the labs of Jeffrey Holt, David Liu, and colleagues at the Broad and MIT, co-first authors Wei-Hsi Yeh and Olga Shubina-Oleinik, restoring hearing in deaf mice using a new genetic engineering technique.
HBI Brain Logo
June 11, 2020
Prof. Venki Murthy will assume the directorship of the Center for Brain Science at Harvard on July 1st. We are pleased to announce that he will accordingly assume the position of co-director for HBI at that time.
Mouse looking at image of burger on model tv
June 11, 2020
New research from Arthur Sugden and colleagues in the lab of Mark Andermann examines how the brain changes during learning in mice—specifically, how the cortex replays neural activity patterns linked to recent sensory experiences.
Original article in: Nature >
Human brain tumor X-ray scan , Medically accurate 3D illustration
June 1, 2020
HMS News article on new research from the labs of Tomas Kirchhausen & colleagues, co-first authors Mootaz Salman, Philip Kitchen, & Andrea Halsey, demonstrating that a drug that reduces swelling may help protect against brain and spinal cord injury.
Original article in: Cell >
blue award ribbon illustration
June 1, 2020
Round up of awards and honors earned by the HBI community.
Cartoon of two mice boxing
May 27, 2020
Skyler Jackman and colleagues in the lab of Wade Regehr provide strong evidence that the cerebellum regulates aggression & suggest that genetically-tractable mice can be used to better define the neurons and activity patterns modulating aggression.
Original article in: eLife >
Single fruit fly (drosophila melanogaster) on white background
May 26, 2020
A collaborative study from the Crickmore & Rogulja labs showing that the quick onset and slow decay of CaMKII’s kinase activity is used by the male fly to know when he’s been mating long enough to transfer sperm to the female fly.
Original article in: Neuron >
Newly identified P2RY1 neurons in the mouse larynx by the Liberles lab.
May 6, 2020
HMS News article on new research from the lab of Stephen Liberles, co-first authors Sara Prescott and Benjamin Umans, identifying rare throat-innervating sensory neurons that guard upper airways against threats.
Original article in: Cell >
Gray mouse isolated on white background
April 22, 2020
MCB news article on new research from the lab of Venkatesh Murthy on recent developments in reinforcement learning in mice.
Original article in: Journal of Neuroscience >
Stress level conceptual meter indicating maximum
April 16, 2020
Harvard Gazette article where the Chan School’s Karestan Koenen discusses rising mental health concerns in the coronavirus era.
Alarm clock in the middle of the night
April 16, 2020
Harvard Gazette article summarizing a recent Chan School forum led by Donn Posner, who says problem is becoming more common, and offers tips for falling and staying asleep.
Photo of Venki Murthy, Beth Stevens, and Jenelle Wallace
April 8, 2020
MCB News article on new research from the labs of Venkatesh Murthy and Beth Stevens, first author Jenelle Wallace, suggesting that microglial regulation of adult-born neuron development could contribute to ongoing plasticity in the olfactory system.
Original article in: eLife >
photo of Josh Morgan and Jeff Lichtman
April 8, 2020
MCB News article on new research from the lab of Jeff Lichtman, first author Josh Morgan, using serial section EM to map the hundreds of synaptic inputs and outputs of a single inhibitory interneuron in the mouse thalamus.
Original article in: Neuron >
Image by Elizabeth Cebul
March 4, 2020
HMS News article on new work from the lab of Max Heiman, first authors Elizabeth Cebul and Ian McLachlan, revealing a new molecular mechanism for sensory neuron dendrite growth by retrograde extension.
Original article in: Development >
Brain-purple-600
February 7, 2020
Harvard Gazette article on new research from the labs of Adam Cohen, Anne Takesian, and colleagues, first author Linlin Fan, on the development of new technology that can help dissect how the brain ignores or acts on information.
Original article in: Cell >
Josh Sanes
February 6, 2020
The McGovern Institute announced that HBI co-director Joshua Sanes has been selected for the 2020 Edward M. Scolnick Prize in Neuroscience, in recognition of his pioneering research into the way synapses are built.
Human Brain stock photo from deposit photos
February 3, 2020
BIDMC News article on new research from the lab of Mark Andermann (first author Yoav Livneh) shedding new light on interoception.
Original article in: Neuron >
iStock
February 3, 2020
Harvard Gazette Q+A with David Ginty and Lauren Orefice on a novel approach to treating tactile hypersensitivity in patients with autism-spectrum disorders.
Going Gray - Deposit photos
February 3, 2020
New findings from the lab of Ya-Chieh Hsu (first author Bing Zhang) involving nervous system and stem cells suggest just how stress may trigger the change.
Original article in: Nature >
Michela Fagiolini
February 3, 2020
Michela Fagiolini (Associate Professor of Neurology, Boston Children’s Hospital) was selected for a researcher profile video, highlighting her work on Rett Syndrome and an adaptive swim program developed for girls with this condition.
Jenelle Wallace
February 3, 2020
This prize honors original essays written by Harvard graduate students about their research. (Click here to read the essay, “To Change the Brain”).
Klein_Allon_PhD
February 1, 2020
This award, given by the International Society of Stem Cell Research, recognizes the exceptional achievements of an investigator in the early part of his or her independent career in stem cell research. 
Longwood Chorus Logo
December 19, 2019
Are you an artist in your spare time? Do you draw, paint, sculpt or make crafts? HBI will collaborate with the Longwood Chorus on an Art & Music event in 2020! The program will feature singing, visual arts and short talks.
photo of soha ashrafi
December 19, 2019
The Daniel D. Federman Staff Award was established in 2014 to recognize staff for exceptional institutional engagement and service in supporting the missions of Harvard Medical School and Harvard School of Dental Medicine.
Nadine Gaab
December 19, 2019
The Jacobs Foundation Research Fellowship Program is a globally competitive fellowship program for early and mid-career researchers from all scholarly disciplines working on child and youth development.
facial-recog-large
December 19, 2019
HMS News article on new research from the labs of Joseph DeGutis and colleagues, first author Maruti V. Mishra, suggesting a country’s degree of gender equality can affect men’s ability to recognize famous female faces.
Original article in: Scientific Reports >
Reversing Hearing Loss
December 19, 2019
HMS News article on new research from the lab of Zheng Yi-Chen, joint first authors Yilai Shu, Wenyan Li, Mingqian Huang, and Yi-Zhou Quan, introducing a new strategy to reprogram and regenerate inner-ear cells.
Original article in: Nature Communications >
Harvard Mousekepedia
December 19, 2019
HMS News article on new research from the lab of Isaac Chiu and colleagues, first author Nicole Y. Lai, demonstrating in mice that the nervous system is able to detect and actively defend against Salmonella.
Original article in: Cell >
Developing Motor Neurons and Muscles
December 16, 2019
Congratulations to Isle Bastille (Goodrich lab), Jaeeon Lee (Sabatini lab), Isabel D’Alessandro (Wilson lab), Jess Bell and Mary Whitman (Engle Lab), Ellen DeGennaro (Walsh lab), and Joseph Zak (Murthy lab).
diagram of an eye
November 27, 2019
New research from the labs of Joshua Sanes, Zhigang He and colleagues provides novel insights into the CNS injury response of axons and how it might be improved.
Original article in: Neuron >
Neural Compass Thumbnail
November 27, 2019
HMS News article on new research from the lab of Rachel Wilson, first author Yvette Fisher, on virtual reality experiments that reveal how visual cues reorganize direction-sensing 'compass neurons' in fruit flies.
Original article in: Nature >
Rat Stock Photo
November 7, 2019
Harvard Gazette article on new research from the lab of Bence Ölveczky, first author Ashesh Dhawale, on how the brain uses performance to regulate variability in motor functions.
Original article in: Current Biology >
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September 6, 2019
HMS News article on new research from the lab of Stéphane Maison suggesting that chronic conductive hearing loss may interfere with speech recognition deficits.
crow thumbnail
August 22, 2019
After using tools, the birds behave more optimistically, study suggests.
Original article in: Current Biology >
bernardo sabatini headshot
August 14, 2019
The Landis Award is granted annually, with five researchers receiving $100,000 each to support their efforts in advancing the careers of students and postdoctoral fellows in their labs.
decoding touch thumbnail
August 8, 2019
New research points to potential therapy for abnormal touch sensitivity in autism spectrum disorders.
christopher reid headshot
August 1, 2019
They were one of 44 doctoral advisor-student pairs awarded a Gilliam Fellowship for Advanced Study from HHMI.
Saving Beethoven
July 3, 2019
HMS News article on new research from the labs of David Corey, Jeffrey Holt and Gwenaëlle Géléoc. They used a newly optimized gene-editing tool to prevent hearing loss in mice with hereditary deafness without detectable off-target effects.
Original article in: Nature Medicine >
visual-systems-85012500-1
May 2, 2019
Artificial intelligence reveals what neurons in the visual cortex prefer to look at.
Original article in: Cell >
retinal-microglia-850 (https://hms.harvard.edu/sites/default/files/media/retinal-microglia-850.jpg)
April 30, 2019
HMS News article highlighting new research from the lab of Kip Connor (first author Yoko Okunuki), on how unraveling microglia’s role in neuroinflammation could improve treatment for visual disorders like uveitis.
Original article in: PNAS >
New Insects Thumbnail
March 25, 2019
Bees and ants have begun to play key roles in neuroscience research. At Harvard alone, at least five labs have recently turned to these non-traditional model organisms to answer questions about social and navigational behaviors.
close up of human eye
February 21, 2019
Harvard Gazette story on first cellular atlas of primate retina and its value in understanding blinding diseases, from the lab of Joshua Sanes and colleagues
Original article in: Cell >
ORNs
February 21, 2019
How does our brain distinguish changes in the identity of a smell from changes in the intensity of that smell? Paper highlight by Jess Kanwal, Guangwei Si, and Aravi Samuel.
Original article in: Neuron >
Alt_Frederick_Headshot
January 28, 2019
This award recognizes an investigator who has made outstanding contributions to the field of immunology in the area of B cell biology.
Emery Brown
January 28, 2019
This award is given by Carnegie Mellon University and recognizes substantial achievements in the natural sciences, engineering, computer science or mathematics.
Frank Scheer
January 28, 2019
This award is given by the Sleep Research Society and recognizes individuals who have made noteworthy contributions to sleep and circadian science.
Michael Charness
January 28, 2019
This award is given by the American Society of Addiction Medicine and recognizes work that has significantly contributed to solving the problem of alcoholism.
NAS Logo
January 28, 2019
These awards are given by the National Academy of Science to recognize extraordinary scientific achievements in a wide variety of fields.
Ant
January 22, 2019
New York Times article on recent research from the lab of Venkatesh Murthy providing new insight into how ants use their antennas to navigate their world.
Breakthrough science thumbnail
December 21, 2018
Harvard Gazette article highlighting breakthrough studies tracking the development of zebrafish and frog embryos from the labs of Alexander Schier (Harvard), Allon Klein, Sean Megason, and Marc Kirschner.
Josh Sanes
December 20, 2018
Along with along with Larry Zipursky, Josh Sanes has been awarded the 2018 Perl-UNC Neuroscience Prize for the “discovery of cell-surface proteins that control circuit assembly in the visual system.”
alzheimers thumbnail
December 20, 2018
Isaac Chiu and Debora Marks were awarded Ben Barres Early Career Acceleration Awards. David Walt and George Church were awarded a Collaborative Science Award by the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative.
Qiufu Ma
December 20, 2018
HMS News article on new research from the lab of Qiufu Ma identifying the nerve pathway that drives sustained pain following injury.
Original article in: Nature >
Paola Arlotta in her lab
December 11, 2018
In the glimpse of the past provided by organoids, Paola Arlotta sees a chance to shape the future of how we fight neurological disease
December 3, 2018
Congratulations to Carl Nist-Lund, Bifeng Pan, Jeffrey Abbott, Tianyang Ye, Swathi Ayloo, Brian Wai Chow, and Kevin Sitek. Each winner will receive $200 and a customized desk plaque with their image.
teasing out diversity thumbnail
December 1, 2018
HMS News article on new research from the labs of Beth Stevens and Steven McCarroll on identifying which microglia in the brain are "good" and which are "bad".
MEEI
November 27, 2018
Boston Globe story on new work from Eric Holbrook and colleagues, taking initial steps towards a potential treatment for anosmia, the loss of the sense of smell.
HMS Logo
November 21, 2018
They were recognized for scientifically and socially distinguished work
HMS Logo
November 5, 2018
HMS News article on an announcement by the Bertarelli Foundation and HMS of four new collaborative research grants given to Harvard neuroscientists tackling sensory disorders--from hearing loss, deafness and blindness to acute and chronic pain.
andermann
October 11, 2018
BIDMC News Brief on study from the lab of Mark Andermann, suggesting there is a division of labor between intermingled ensembles of neurons in the visual association cortex which encode the potential value vs. identity of a visual stimulus
Original article in: Neuron >
Woolf S1 neurons 850
September 12, 2018
HMS News article highlighting a new study from the labs of Zhigang He, Clifford Woolf and colleagues identifying neurons in the brain that influence touch sensitivity.
Original article in: Nature >
Swan Lake ballet Painting Acrylic and Full spectrum on Cardboard”nbrush, palette and artist’s hand
August 31, 2018
HMS News article highlighting recent work from the Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital Motion Analysis Lab (Paolo Bonato and colleagues) unveiling the complexities of arm and head movements.
Original article in: Nature Scientific Reports >
Running Mouse
August 30, 2018
Harvard Gazette story on an open-source AI tool for studying movement across behaviors and species, from the of labs of Mackenzie Mathis, Venkatesh Murthy and colleagues.
Original article in: Nature Neuroscience >
Dunn-Erin
August 29, 2018
The One Mind Rising Star Awards encourage the community of researchers to innovate in basic and translational science to benefit patients, while supporting the research of emerging leaders in the field.
image of a cochlea
August 27, 2018
Harvard Gazette story on new work from the labs of Jeffrey Holt, David Corey and colleagues, revealing identity of a sensor protein that helps inner ear hair cells translate sound and head movements into electrical signals that the brain can process
Original article in: Neuron >
Pereira_Ana
August 21, 2018
Ana Pereira and Yun Zhang describe a new project that was recently awarded funding from the Dean's Competitive Fund for Promising Scholarship
Cochlear-Wholemount-scaled
August 13, 2018
HMS News article highlighting new work on sensory neuron diversity in the inner ear, from the labs of Lisa Goodrich and Charles Liberman at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts Eye and Ear
Original article in: Cell >
Lieber&Sanes image
August 11, 2018
A new collaborative study from the labs of Charles Lieber and Josh Sanes reveals how injectable mesh electronics can revolutionize the way scientists study the retina
Original article in: Science >
Uchida_Nao_Headshot
August 6, 2018
The prize is named in honor of the late neuroscientist Nakaakira Tsukahara of Osaka University and honors outstanding Japanese life sciences researchers.
August 4, 2018
Lauren is a postdoc in David Ginty's lab; Clara is a graduate student in Nao Uchida's lab. This award is designed to recognize, reward and foster talented early-career biomedical scientists.
Sensory Refinement Graphic Summer2018
July 24, 2018
New work from the labs of Michael Greenberg and Chinfei Chen reveals role of the Fn14 protein in visual experience-dependent synapse refinement 
Original article in: Neuron >
Thumbnail for Reviving Dominant Nerves Summer2018
July 23, 2018
New study from the lab of Zhigang He at Boston Children's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, on a compound that gets mice with spinal cord injury to recover their stepping ability
Original article in: Cell >
HBI Brain Logo
July 18, 2018
Earlier this year, 52 awards were made to students & fellows in neuro labs across Harvard, to support travel for advanced training & the sponsorship of visiting scholars. This month we highlight two awardees who hosted collaborators.
Worms from Zhang Kaplan paper
July 17, 2018
An eLife press release on new work from the labs of Yun Zhang and Joshua Kaplan, exploring how C. elegans sense and avoid nitric oxide in their environments
Original article in: eLife >
Fruit flies
July 13, 2018
HMS News article on new work from the labs of Dragana Rogulja and Michael Crickmore, who use Drosophila courtship as a way to study the neurobiology of motivation
manuel baizabal
July 6, 2018
Postdoc Manuel Baizabal's synopsis of new research in the lab of Corey Harwell, on how the regulatory DNA landscape in neural stem cells contributes to architecture of cerebral cortex.
daniela_di_bella
June 29, 2018
Daniela Di Bella, a postdoc in Paola Arlotta’s lab, has been named to the Pew Latin American Fellows Program in the Biomedical Sciences. Each fellow will receive two years of funding to study with a principal investigator in the United States.
Neuron cell network on white
June 27, 2018
HMS News article on a new study from the lab of Amar Sahay, examining workings of Klf9, a stress-responsive transcription factor important in the hippocampus
SomethingYouAte
June 26, 2018
HMS News article on a recent Molecular Psychiatry paper from the lab of C. Ronald Kahn on the connection between gut microbiota, depression, and anxiety in individuals who are obese or have type II diabetes.
Brain waves
June 20, 2018
Harvard Gazette article on new study from the lab of Sara Lazar, comparing the neural mechanisms underlying two popular mindfulness-based stress reduction programs
Absent minded Child
June 19, 2018
Harvard Gazette article on a recent Psychological Science paper from the lab of Dan Schacter suggesting that wandering minds are not always detrimental to completing a task.
wells_michael
June 12, 2018
Michael Wells, a postdoc in Kevin Eggan’s lab, has been selected to participate in the Linton-Poodry SACNAS Leadership Institute and has also been selected for the Burroughs Wellcome Fund’s Postdoctoral Enrichment Program.
Baby-eyes-600
May 31, 2018
BIDMC News Release on recent study from the labs of Mark Andermann and Chinfei Chen, examining functional logic of neural connections between the retina and thalamus.
Print
May 31, 2018
HMS News article on magnetic resonance spectroscopy discoveries from the lab of Ovidiu Andronesi, interested in developing targeted new therapies for glioma patients
right-moves-large
May 17, 2018
HMS News article highlights new collaborative study from the labs of Bob Datta and Bernardo Sabatini, on how the brain orchestrates 3D motion behaviors
May 14-neuron-large
May 14, 2018
HMS News article on a recent Neuron paper from the lab of Pascal Kaeser.
HMS Logo
May 11, 2018
Eight faculty honored by the American Academy of Neurology at their annual meeting this past April.
HarperDymeckiWalshPierce
May 4, 2018
HBI Congratulates Susan Dymecki, Wade Harper, Naomi E. Pierce, and Christopher A. Walsh on being elected as 2018 Fellows of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences!
motor nerve cells in microscopy with DNA peak
April 26, 2018
Harvard Medicine News article about a recent Neuron paper from the labs of Jesse Gray (HMS), Mark Andermann (BIDMC), Ramendra Saha (University of California, Merced) and Serena Dudek (National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences).
Jasper
April 19, 2018
Congratulations to Jasper Maniates-Selvin on winning an HBI Community Resource Award! This small grant is part of a newly launched Young Scientist Development program, supported by funding from the Office of the Provost at Harvard University.
Walsworth_Ronald_Headshot
April 19, 2018
Harvard Gazette article highlighting Ronald Walsworth's research using atom-scale impurities in diamonds read cell-sized magnetic resonance signals.
April 17, 2018
The Harvard Brain Science Initiative (HBI) Bipolar Disorder Seed Grant Program supports research relevant to the basic understanding and eventual treatment of bipolar disorder.
neuron_stock
April 17, 2018
Harvard Gazette article on the launch of a the Quantitative Biology Initiative
LogoMultiplication_Template
April 12, 2018
HMS News article on this year's Bertarelli Symposium which showcased research on using gene therapy to treat sensory disorders.
neuron space
April 12, 2018
HMS News article on a recent Nature paper from the lab of Christopher Walsh on the genes that regulate brain size.
BI-Circadian-Alzheimers-600
April 11, 2018
HMS News article highlighting a recent Nature Neuroscience paper by Clifford Saper, William Todd, and colleagues' research on the relationship between the circadian clock and aggressive behavior of patients with Alzheimer's.
Brain-purple-600
March 30, 2018
HMS News article highlighting Global Mental Health Day.
cajal-chick-cerebellum
March 30, 2018
HMS News on a recent Nature paper from the labs of Gordon Fishell and Rahul Satija detailing the emergence and diversification of interneurons.
john campbell
February 12, 2018
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center researcher John Nelson Campbell, PhD is one of six recipients of the 2018 Pathway to Stop Diabetes (Pathway) grants awarded by the American Diabetes Association (ADA).
bob datta in his lab
February 12, 2018
Bob Datta, MD, PhD, Associate Professor of Neurobiology at Harvard Medical School, was recently awarded an Edward N. And Della L. Thome Memorial Foundation Award in Alzheimer's Disease Drug Discovery research.
Alt_Frederick_Headshot
February 12, 2018
Frederick Alt, was recently awarded a 2018 Major Grant Award by the Charles Hood Foundation for his work on the role of recurrent DNA break cluster genes in brain development and disease.
Illustration about the secretion and function of dopamine in the neuron synapse
February 1, 2018
Harvard Medicine News article on a recent Cell paper from the lab of Pascal Kaeser.
Botulinum_toxin_3BTA
January 29, 2018
Harvard Medicine News article on a recent Cell Host and Microbe paper from the lab of Min Dong.
January 17, 2018
The program seeks to bolster the career development of neuroscience trainees by providing flexible small grants to support creative training endeavors not easily covered by other funding sources, including the building of community resources.
Paola Arlotta in her lab
December 20, 2017
Dr. Paola Arlotta, Professor of Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology, has been awarded the George Ledlie Prize by the President and Fellows of Harvard College.
brain_network
December 19, 2017
Harvard Gazette article on a recent Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences paper by Michael Fox.
bruce-rosen-2016
December 19, 2017
Dr. Bruce Rosen, director of the MGH Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, has been elected as a Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors (NAI).
SFARI
December 15, 2017
Awarded by The Simons Foundation Autism Research Initiative (SFARI), the Bridge to Independence grants help talented early-career scientists with an interest in autism transition from mentored training positions to independent research careers.
NIH Brain Initiative Photo
December 6, 2017
Six Harvard scientists are among those receiving $150 million in Funding from the NIH Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN) Initiative.
hgf_graphic
October 8, 2017
Congratulations to Lynne Chantranupong, PhD, Sabatini Lab; Yvette Fisher, PhD, Wilson Lab; and Molly Schumer, PhD, Reich Lab for being awarded 2017 HHMI Hanna Gray Fellowships.
Gu_Chenghua_Headshot
October 6, 2017
On October 6th, the Department of Neuroscience celebrated Chengua Gu becoming a tenured Professor of Neurobiology at Harvard Medical School.
melanopsin-cells-milner-and-do-2017-green-only-copy
October 2, 2017
HMS News article about a recent paper from the lab of Michael Do.
Circadian-large
September 7, 2017
Harvard Medicine News story about Molecular Cell paper from the lab of Charles Weitz, revealing the macromolecular organization of proteins in the mammalian circadian clock.
Baby-eyes-600
September 4, 2017
Harvard Medicine News story about Nature Neuroscience paper from the lab of Margaret Livingstone, revealing that the experience of seeing faces is necessary for the formation of face domains in the brain.
Active Neurone
August 17, 2017
Harvard Gazette article on a Cell paper from the lab of Christopher Harvey, using a virtual reality task to reveal the flexibility of neural circuits that link sensory stimuli with behavioral actions.
Brain waves
July 5, 2017
Today the Paul G. Allen Frontiers Group announced a $10M grant to launch the Allen Discovery Center for Human Brain Evolution at Boston Children’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School.
Schier_Alexander_Headshot
July 5, 2017
In early July, the Allen Discovery Center for Cell Lineage Tracing at UW Medicine, in collaboration with labs at Caltech and Harvard, launched alongside the Allen Discovery Center for Human Brain Evolution at Boston Children’s Hospital and HMS.
paola-arlotta-and-giorgia-quadrato_605
May 1, 2017
Stanley Center member Paola Arlotta (left) and postdoctoral fellow Giorgia Quadrato have produced long-cultured brain organoids that have the potential to advance our understanding of brain development and disorders.
sma_human-motor-neurons_605
April 16, 2017
SMN protein (red) is necessary for the survival of spinal cord neurons (motor neurons) responsible for breathing and all movement. Harvard researchers have found a compound that stabilized this protein in mouse and human motor neurons.
gene_hearing605
January 29, 2017
To super-charge a specific virus as a gene carrier into the inner ear, the team used a form of the virus wrapped in protective bubbles called exosomes (tiny bubbles made of cell membrane).
Genetic-repurp-orig
November 14, 2016
Mammalian bone gene may be repurposed to fuel cognition in humans
Murthy
September 21, 2016
In experiments echoing mice behavior, researchers emulate how brains recognize specific smells
brain605
September 13, 2016
New research reveals how some older adults appear to be “super-agers” with unusually resilient memories.
yuan_junying
August 24, 2016
HMS News story highlights Science paper from HBI ALS Seed Grant Awardee Prof. Junying Yuan
Pascal Kaeser
August 17, 2016
HMS News story highlights Neuron paper from HBI Bipolar Seed Grant Awardee Prof. Pascal Kaeser
ASD-DGinty
June 9, 2016
Mouse study suggests autism is not just a disorder of the brain