27th Oculomotor Meeting

Our lab has participated in the 27th Oculomotor Meeting, which took place here in Tuebingen, and which brings together oculomotor and vestibular researchers, neurophysiologists, and clinicians to discuss contemporary topics in the field. The meeting has historically involved participants from cities like Tuebingen, Zurich, and Munich, but there are also other participants from farther places,[…]

New paper on saccadic localization in blindsight

We have a new paper just published, investigating the ability to localize visual targets when a portion of the primary visual cortex (V1) is lesioned. Patients with such lesions lose conscious perception within the affected visual field portion, but they exhibit residual performance capabilities (called “blindsight”). Our collaborators Tadashi Isa and Masatoshi Yoshida have established[…]

New article in the Journal of Neurophysiology

We have a new article in press at the Journal of Neurophysiology. In this study, we explored the phenomenon of “saccadic suppression”, in which sensitivity to visual stimuli is reduced if these stimuli are presented around the time of saccadic eye movements. This phenomenon is normally thought to help us have a stable percept of[…]

Fall Vision Meeting 2016

Our lab presented some of our recent neurophysiological results at this year’s Fall Vision Meeting, which took place in Rochester, NY. The meeting featured a session on microsaccades, and we presented results on how visual sensitivity of superior colliculus neurons can be modulated around the time of microsaccades. Other speakers in the symposium were Martin[…]

NIPS-CIN symposium and subsequent visit by Prof. Masatoshi Yoshida

Our lab participated in this year’s sixth CIN-NIPS symposium here in Tuebingen. This symposium was part of a collaboration between our institute and the National Institute for Physiological Sciences in Japan. Several members of our lab gave talks and posters, and the symposium provided a broad range of interesting presentations, sparking potential partnerships between our[…]

Conference of Junior Neuroscientists of Tuebingen

Our graduate student Konstantin Willeke is participating in this year’s “NeNa” conference, a conference organized by and for graduate students. This conference is special because it is attended primarily only by students, along with one experienced keynote speaker who conveys his/her gained wisdom and advice from a celebrated neuroscience career. This conference is one of[…]

Chen wins a 2016 Trainee Professional Development Award from the Society for Neuroscience

Congratulations to our graduate student Chen for winning the Society for Neuroscience’s 2016 Trainee Professional Development Award! This merit based award will help Chen to attend the society’s annual meeting in San Diego, and to also benefit from the many Professional Development Workshops and Short Courses that are offered by the society at this conference.[…]