Date:
Monday, February 12, 2018 (All day)
Location:
Edmond Safra Campus, Givat Ram Jerusalem. Silberman Building, 3rd wing 4th floor (Map attached)
on February 12, 2018, this conference took place on the Givat Ram campus of HUJI. The workshop focused on the importance of circadian clocks for understanding how organisms function, which was acknowledged this year with the award of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. This multidisciplinary workshop covered recent advances in research on plasticity in circadian rhythms and sleep in insects, fishes, birds, and mammals, both in the laboratory and in the field.
participants:
Amita Sehgal -- HHMI, University of Pennsylvania, USA
Michael Hastings -- MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, UK
Niels C. Rattenborg -- Max Planck Institute for Ornithology, Germany
Nicholas S. Foulkes -- University of Heidelberg, Germany.
Jacob Holland --The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel
Yoav Gothilf -- Tel-Aviv University, Israel
Eran Tauber -- University of Haifa, Israel
Noga Kronfeld-Schor -- Tel-Aviv University, Israel
Gad Asher -- The Weizmann Institute, Israel
Oren Froy --The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel
Organizer: Guy Bloch, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Congratulations the poster session winner, Moshe Nagari, for his poster: "The Regulation of Circadian Rhythms in Honeybee (apis mellifera) and Bumblebee (Bombus terrestris) Nurses: A Possible Mechanism for Improved Brood Care"
program.pdf | 272 KB | |
plasticity_in_circadian_rhythms_and_sleep_.pdf | 941 KB |