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"Badische Zeitung" interviews BCF director Ad Aertsen
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The "Badische Zeitung", regional newspaper in the southwest of Germany, interviewed director Ad Aertsen on the occasion of the foundation of the Bernstein Center Freiburg.
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"Biologie in unserer Zeit" publishes article on Computational Neuroscience
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The German journal "Biologie in unserer Zeit" has published an article by Bernstein Professor Stefan Rotter and Gunnar Grah on computational neuroscience and recent findings.
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"Doctor" or "Darling": The Subtle Differences of Speech
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Scientists from Freiburg Find Brain Signals That Tell Who Someone Is Talking To
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"Dynamics of Neuronal Systems"
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Bernstein Center Freiburg hosts conference on March 18-20
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"Leopoldina" elects Ad Aertsen as new member
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The German Academy of Sciences "Leopoldina" has elected Ad Aertsen, director of the Bernstein Center Freiburg, as a new member of the society.
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“Emotions”: Art exhibition at the BCF
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During November and December, the hallways of the BCF will become the venue of an art exhibition:
Oliver Wrobel presents a series of his works, titled “Emotions”.
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‘Brain waves’ challenge area-specific view of brain activity
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Our understanding of brain activity has traditionally been linked to brain areas – when we speak, the speech area of the brain is active. New research by an international team of psychologists led by David Alexander and Cees van Leeuwen (Laboratory for Perceptual Dynamics), including researchers from the Bernstein Center and BrainLinks-BrainTools at the University of Freiburg, shows that this view may be overly rigid. The entire cortex, not just the area responsible for a certain function, is activated when a given task is initiated. Furthermore, activity occurs in a pattern: Waves of activity roll from one side of the brain to the other.
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A Light Switch inside the Brain
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Scientists from Freiburg Build a Microimplant that Uses a Laser to Control Individual Nerve Cells
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A mere urge or a deliberate intention?
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Scientists address the relevance of philosophical intention theories to brain-machine interfaces
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A model of song syntax generation in the Bengalese finch
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Bengalese Finches are domestic songbirds that have a long history of helping scientists to understand the generation of complex sequential behavior. Each male Bengalese Finch learns a song from his father that exhibits a distinct and individual syntax. Researchers at the Bernstein Center Freiburg wanted to understand how, on the level of networks of nerve cells, such song formation might come about.
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