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letsdothis3 ago

More on Weizmann Institute:

https://www.weizmann.ac.il/conferences/InternationalBoard2015/prof-noam-sobel

Head, Department of Neurobiology

Weizmann Institute of Science

Prof. Noam Sobel was born in Haifa, Israel. After completing his undergraduate education at Tel Aviv University, he joined the prestigious PhD neuroscience program at Stanford University, from which he graduated with high honors, followed by a postdoctoral fellowship at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech, Pasadena). Prior to joining the Weizmann Institute of Science, Noam was an Associate Professor at the Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute at the University of California at Berkeley. He became head of the Department of Neurobiology in the summer of 2013.

Prof. Sobel’s research focuses on unveiling the complex nature and brain mechanisms of the human olfactory system, which plays a key role not only in smelling, but also in our most basic social interactions, emotions, and recollections. Faulty functions of this system may indicate early signs of neurological and cognitive deteriorations, for example, in Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases. His group pioneered the development and construction of olfactometers—devices that precisely generate odors—and contributed to the development of “electronic noses”—devices that mimic the animal nose in its ability to transform molecules to percepts. Using these devices, his group discovered several key concepts in the neurobiology of olfaction, for instance, they have developed a metric that allows measuring smells and predicting the brain response that they will induce; they have discovered that human tears contain a chemical that once smelled induces a host of effects such as drop in testosterone; and they have developed technology that enables severely disabled people to communicate and steer a wheelchair by simply sniffing. ..


'Brain on a chip' reveals how the brain folds - https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2018-02/wios-oa021918.php

Being born with a "tabula rasa" - a clean slate - in the case of the brain is something of a curse. Our brains are already wrinkled like walnuts by the time we are born. Babies born without these wrinkles - smooth brain syndrome - suffer from severe developmental deficiencies and their life expectancy is markedly reduced. The gene that causes this syndrome recently helped Weizmann Institute of Science researchers to probe the physical forces that cause the brain's wrinkles to form. In their findings, reported today in Nature Physics, the researchers describe a method they developed for growing tiny "brains on chips" from human cells that enabled them to track the physical and biological mechanisms underlying the wrinkling process....