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The Inscopix nVueTM system that was released last year has been a game changer for the in-vivo freely behaving imaging field and we are excited about the new application that enables simultaneous imaging of blood flow with cellular activity! If you aren’t familiar, the nVue system is a miniaturized microscope enabling the dual color imaging

Srishti Gulati

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Efforts to develop more effective drugs for treating schizophrenia have received a significant boost with a…

Jonathan Zapata

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Pregnancy and childbirth are extraordinary experiences that profoundly change a mother’s life. But did you know that the…

Yasaman Farshchi

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How do we steadily recognize environments we are in while experiencing joy or possibly trauma? A recent publication by…

Mariko Nishibe

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In an innovative new publication from the Anderson lab at Caltech, ‘An approximate line attractor in the hypothalamus…

Peter Schuette

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Recent breakthroughs in optical-based imaging in nonhuman primates promise to fundamentally advance our understanding of brain function and accelerate the development of next-generation brain-computer interfaces. Two new studies demonstrate complementary approaches for imaging the activity patterns of large populations of neurons in nonhuman primates (NHPs). Bollimunta*, Santacruz* & colleagues used a head-mounted one-photon miniature microscope

Jonathan Nassi and Eric Trautmann

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I’m excited to be writing for the blog again, this time to share my experiences at Inscopix working toward our goal of providing scientists with full solutions for their circuit neuroscience research. Given the multidisciplinary scientific expertise needed to successfully conduct studies at the level of circuits in behaving animals, we recognize how critical this

Jonathan Nassi

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A postdoctoral researcher in Marcos Frank’s lab, she discusses her work examining astroglial biology in sleep and sleep homeostasis. What is your background and how did you become a circuit neuroscientist? I got BS degrees in Biopsychology and General Biology as well as a PhD in Neuroscience from the University of Michigan to study sleep

Sushmitha Gururaj

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Since this is my first blog post, I think a brief introduction is in order! I am currently the Director of Translational Science at Inscopix, overseeing our scientific programs with a translational and preclinical focus – which includes such activities as product and application development and scientific partnerships with academic and pharma/biotech groups. Before joining

Jonathan Nassi

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Believe it or not, this post was on our editorial calendar way back in January, and not even in our wildest imagination had we envisioned that at the time of publishing, life itself would become defined by the topic at hand- fear. Fear and anxiety are all too familiar to the world as a whole

Sushmitha Gururaj

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We’re two months into 2020 and our beloved circuit neuroscience community has already served up so many treats that we’re wondering if it’s still the holidays! We’re excited to share with you our collection of top reads circuit neuroscience papers of 2020 thus far. You’ll find that each of them informs on fundamental biological functions

Sushmitha Gururaj

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