Program
Download as PDF. Note: The program is subject to change (last updated: 2023-09-10).
Poster presentations for the two Quick-fire sessions will be announced later.
Sunday,
September 17, 2023
17:00 - 20:00
Registration / Information desk open
17: 00 - 21:00
Get-together
w/ beverages and finger food
19:00 - 20:00
Keynote lecture
Jason Kerr | MPI-NB Bonn, Germany
Tracking the visual and retinal scene in mice, rats, ferrets, and tree shrews chasing prey.
Monday,
September 18, 2023
8:00 - 16:45
Registration / Information desk open
9:00 - 10:25
Session 1.1 | Retinal Circuit Function (1)
Chair: Antonio Hinojosa
Supported by the DFG Heisenberg program
9:00 - 9:10
Welcome & Announcements
9:10 – 9:40
Teresa Puthussery | UC Berkeley, USA
Identification of ON-type direction selective ganglion cells in primate retina.
9:40 – 9:55
Wei Wei | U Chicago, USA
Voltage-gated mechanisms compartmentalize starburst amacrine cell dendrites for motion detection.
9:55 – 10:25
Jonathan Oesterle | U Tübingen, Germany
Regional difference in dendritic signal processing in mouse sON alpha retinal ganglion cells.
10:25 – 10:45
Coffee break w/ beverages & snacks
10:45 – 12:00
Session 1.2 | Retinal Circuit Function (2)
Chair: Anna Vlasits
Supported by the Bernstein Award 2015
10:45 – 11:15
Stephanie Palmer | U Chicago, USA
Sparse, common correlation structure in retinal populations across natural scenes.
11:15 – 11:30
Saad Idrees | York U, Toronto, Canada
Photoreceptor biophysics enables deep learning models to capture dynamic retinal computation.
11:30– 11:45
Christian Puller | MPI-NB Bonn, Germany
The divergence of S-cone pathways in the inner primate retina.
11:45 – 12:00
Gergely Szarka | U Pécs, Hungary
Transient OFF alpha cell gap junctions subserve the detection of approach motion.
12:00 – 13:30
Lunch break
13:30 – 14:45
Session 2.1 | From the Retina to the Brain (1)
Chair: Florencia Gonzalez Fleitas
Supported by the CRC 1233 "Robust vision"
13:30 – 14:00
Katja Reinhard | SISSA, Italy
Neural basis of flexibility in visually-guided defensive behaviors.
14:00 – 14:15
Alina Heukamp | Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel
Direction and axis selective responses in LGN neurons suggest multiple modes of retinal convergence.
14:15 – 14:45
Laura Busse | LMU Munich, Germany
Neuronal circuit dynamics in the visual thalamus.
14:45 – 15:00
Coffee break w/ beverages & snacks
15:00 – 16:00
Session 2.2 | From the Retina to the Brain (2)
Chair: Lea Ankri
15:00 – 15:30
Max Jösch | ISTA, Austria
A corollary discharge hub for visuomotor transformation.
15:30 – 16:00
Sylvia Schröder | U Sussex, UK
The impact of locomotion, arousal and reward on early visual processing in the mouse.
16:00 – 16:30
Quick-fire presentations from Poster Session 1
16:45 – 19:00
Poster Session 1
w/ open bar and finger food
19:15 – 20:45
City tours (to be booked w/ registration)
Tuesday,
September 19, 2023
8:00 – 17:00
Registration / Information desk open
9:00 – 10:30
Session 3.1 | Primate Retina
Chair: Paul Martin
Supported by the Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience (CIN)
9:00 – 9:30
Alexandra Kling | Stanford, USA
Functional Diversity of Novel Amacrine and Ganglion Cell Types in the Primate Retina.
9:30 – 10:00
Irene Aji | MPI-NB Bonn, Germany
Correlated electrophysiological and connectomic analysis of neural circuitry in the primate retina.
10:00 – 10:30
Petri Ala-Laurila | U Helsinki, Finland
Linking human perception to retinal function at the sensitivity limit of vision.
10:30 – 10:50
Coffee break w/ beverages & snacks
10:50 – 12:20
Session 3.2 | New Perspectives
Chair: Dominic Gonschorek
10:50 – 11:20
Karthik Shekhar | UC Berkeley, USA
Evolutionary conservation of retinal cell types: a single-cell transcriptomic perspective
11:20 – 12:20
(10+2 min)
Sacha Sokoloski | U Tübingen, Germany
Modelling ecological constraints on visual processing with deep reinforcement learning.
Thomas Buffet | Paris Vision Institute, France
Estimating the surround of ganglion cells in large-scale recordings.
Tim C. Hladnik | U Tübingen, Germany
A spherical visual stimulation arena for chromatic stimulation and RF mapping during behavioral and 2-photon calcium imaging.
Samuel A. Budoff | U Colorado, Denver, USA
Spatial Assessment of Murine RGC Subclasses.
Tessa Herzog | U Sussex, Brighton, UK
Information encoding at the first synapse in vision.
12:20 – 13:45
Lunch break
13:45 – 15:00
Session 4.1 | Disease & Restoration (1)
Chair: Marius Ueffing
13:45 – 14:15
Marius Ader | CRTD / TU Dresden, Germany
Transplantation of human photoreceptors into mouse models of retinal degeneration.
14:15 – 14:30
Annalisa Bucci | IOB, Basel, Switzerland
Propagation speeds of action potentials in the human retina compensate for traveling distances.
14:30 – 15:00
Deniz Dalkara | Paris Vision Institute, France
Innovative therapies for retinal dystrophies and their tailored delivery mechanisms.
15:00 – 15:15
Coffee break w/ beverages & snacks
15:15 – 16:15
Session 4.2 | Disease & Restoration (2)
Chair: Noora Nevala
15:15 – 15:45
Sonja Kleinlogel | U Bern / Hoffmann-La Roche, Switzerland
Designer optogenetic gene therapies targeted at the ON-bipolar cells to restore fundamental features of vision.
15:45 – 16:00
Varsha Ramakrishna | U Göttingen, Germany
Visual encoding by retinal ganglion cells in optogenetic models for vision restoration.
16:00 – 16:15
Maya Carleton | UCSD, La Jolla, USA
Inhibition selectively gates Off-cell response in the degenerated retina.
16:15 – 16:45
Quick-fire presentations from Poster Session 2
17:00 – 19:15
Poster Session 2
w/ open bar and finger food
20:15 – 22:30
Conference Dinner
(to be booked w/ registration)
Wednesday,
September 20, 2023
8:30 - 15:00
Information desk open
9:00 – 10:30
Session 5.1 | Vision across Species (1)
Chair: Inbal Shaine
Supported by EMBO
9:00 – 9:30
Aristides Arrenberg | U Tübingen, Germany
Motion processing in zebrafish: receptive field code and spatial anisotropies supporting optomotor behavior.
9:30 – 9:45
Michael Forsthofer | LMU, Munich, Germany
Tuning of visual behaviors during metamorphosis of frogs.
9:45 – 10:00
Einat Hauzman | Natural History Museum, London, UK
Probing the inner retina of snakes: a first glance into the photoreceptor-bipolar cell synapses.
10:00 – 10:30
Ines Ribeiro | LMU Munich, Germany
Friend or foe: processing visual cues in insect social behavior
10:30 – 10:50
Coffee break w/ beverages & snacks
10:50 – 12:20
Session 5.2 | Vision across Species (2)
Chair: Carola Yovanovich
10:50 – 11:20
Tiffany Schmidt | Northwestern University, USA
Visual circuits underlying threat anticipation.
11:20 – 11:35
Anja Günther | MPI-NB, Bonn, Germany
Species-specific wiring in bipolar cell types in two avian retinas.
11:35 – 11:50
Marvin Seifert | U Sussex, Brighton, UK
"On-Off” switching across seven input channels: A multiplexed approach to visual processing in the bird retina.
11:50 – 12:05
Max Manackin | U Oldenburg, Germany
Direction selective ganglion cells in quail retina.
12:05 – 12:35
Henrik Mouritsen | U Oldenburg, Germany
Light-dependent, quantum-based, magnetoreception in the bird retina.
12:35 – 13:15
Lunch break (catered light lunch)
13:15 – 14:00
Kerstan ERM Poster Award ceremony
Business Meeting, Goodbye
14:00
End of Meeting