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Academic Events


Events

| CASPARY AUDITORIUM
Academic Lectures, Friday Lecture Series

Quorum Sensing Across Domains: From Viruses to Bacteria to Eukaryotes

The Norton Zinder Lecture

Bonnie Bassler, Ph.D., Squibb Professor and Chair, department of molecular biology, Princeton University; investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute
| CASPARY AUDITORIUM
Academic Lectures, Thesis Presentations

From Gaps to Junctions: Revealing Smc5/6’s Differential Binding to Diverse DNA Topologies

Jeremy Chang, biomedical fellow, The Rockefeller University
| CARSON FAMILY AUDITORIUM (CRC)
Seminars, Other Seminars

Molecular Mechanisms of Maintainers and Stressors of Genome Stability: From Mesoscale to Single Molecules

Johannes Stigler, Ph.D., professor, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
| 105 ZRC, MSKCC, 417 E. 68TH ST.
Tri-Institutional Events (at MSK & WCM), Molecular Pharmacology and Chemistry Program

A New Family of Metabolites-mediated Lysine Acylation Pathways: Biochemistry, Epigenetics, and Pathophysiology

Yingming Zhao, Ph.D., professor, Ben May Department for Cancer Research, University of Chicago
| 305 WRB
Seminars, Scientific Resource Center Lecture Series

The BALM and a SCAPE—Good Optics for a Happy Life: Introducing the New Center for Pre-commercial Lightsheet Microscopy in the Bio-Imaging Resource Center

Alison North, Ph.D., senior director, Frits and Rita Markus Bio-Imaging Resource Center, research associate professor, The Rockefeller University
Behzad Khajavi, Ph.D., optical engineer, Frits and Rita Markus Bio-Imaging Resource Center, The Rockefeller University
| CASPARY AUDITORIUM
Lectures and Symposia, Insight Lecture Series

Second Avenue Subway: Building New York City's Most Famous Thing Never Built

Dan McNichol, author
Bill Goodrich, former executive vice president, New York State Metropolitan Transit Authority
Patrick J. Cashin, photographer
| A LEVEL PHYSICS SEMINAR ROOM, ROOM A30, SMITH HALL ANNEX (CRC)
Seminars, Center for Studies in Physics and Biology Seminars

Hidden Traveling Waves in Artificial Recurrent Neural Networks Encode Working Memory

Arjun Karuvally, Ph.D. candidate, University of Massachusetts Amherst
| CASPARY AUDITORIUM
Academic Lectures, Friday Lecture Series

Molecular and Neurobiological Studies in Rett Syndrome and MECP2 Disorders

The Joshua Lederberg Distinguished Lecture in Molecular Genetics

Huda Y. Zoghbi, M.D., distinguished service professor, departments of pediatrics, molecular and human genetics, neurology and neuroscience, Baylor College of Medicine; director, Jan and Dan Duncan Neurological Research Institute at Texas Children's Hospital; investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute
| A LEVEL PHYSICS SEMINAR ROOM, ROOM A30, SMITH HALL ANNEX (CRC)
Seminars, Center for Studies in Physics and Biology Seminars

Quantitative Model Inference for Living Matter

Jorn Dunkel, Ph.D., professor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

More on Academic Events & Lectures

The Monday Lecture Series provides a forum for Rockefeller scientists to learn about the full range of research being carried out at the university. Monday lectures are informal – a chance for heads of laboratories to share new data and discuss research in progress. The Monday series also offers a venue for talks by visiting faculty who spend an extended period of time at the university. Lectures take place in the university’s Carson Auditorium at 4:00 p.m. (preceded by a tea/coffee reception at 3:45 p.m.) Monday lectures are open to Rockefeller community members only.

The Friday Lecture Series is one of the principal university-wide activities of the academic year. Scientists from around the world, and from varying disciplines, are invited to speak to the Rockefeller community and members of neighboring institutions to share their recent research, techniques and findings. Lectures take place in the university’s Caspary Auditorium at 3:30 p.m. (preceded by a tea/coffee reception at 3:00 p.m.)

The Special Seminar Series was established in the winter of 2007 to provide an opportunity for the University to highlight specific areas of research. The topical focus of these seminars changes based on campus initiatives, and the Series also includes speakers with potential interest to our ongoing faculty recruitment process. Seminars will be held on Mondays or Wednesdays at 4 p.m. in the Carson Family Auditorium and will be preceded by a tea/coffee reception at 3:45 p.m. Special seminars are open to Rockefeller community members only.

Academic Symposia are hosted throughout the year to honor, celebrate, and acknowledge scientific achievements of the University’s faculty, as well as national and international leaders spanning various fields of research.


Questions?

Jill Benz
Program Director, Academic Events and Initiatives
1230 York Avenue
New York, NY 10065