Lectures and seminars Adaptive and Pathological Network Connectivity in Parkinson’s Disease Networks
This is part of the “Hot-topics in multimodal imaging” seminar series hosted by the Division of Imaging Core Facilities at the department of Clinical Neuroscience.
Title: Adaptive and Pathological Network Connectivity in Parkinson’s Disease Networks
Speaker: Dr. David Eidelberg, Professor of Neurology and Director of the Center for Neurosciences at the Feinstein Institutes in New York. He is internationally recognized for pioneering research in functional brain imaging and for developing network-based methods to identify disease-specific metabolic patterns, particularly in Parkinson’s disease. His work is widely used to improve diagnosis, monitor progression, and evaluate treatments, and his laboratory currently applies artificial intelligence to refine network biomarkers for brain disorders. He has published over 450 peer-reviewed articles and is a member of the Association of American Physicians.
Hot-topics in multimodal imaging" is a seminar series hosted by the Division of Imaging Core Facilities with a focus on multimodal imaging, which will cover the latest research in the fields Neurology, Psychiatry and Cognitive Neuroscience and will give our audience an overview of the state-of-the-art instruments, computational and AI assisted data analysis being applied in the field by top international researchers.
See our seminar calendar here and join us on Zoom. Welcome!
