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[23 Dec 12: 13:20]
Inbox zero! I don't even remember the last time I could say that!

[06 Aug 12: 14:21]
Phew! Done with nine 20min oral exams, three more to go. To be continued tomorrow...

[14 Oct 11: 11:45]
Just received an email from a computer science student - with an AOL email address?

[03 Jul 11: 22:26]
Google citation alerts suck: I just found out by accident I rolled over h-index of 13 and 500 citations http://blogarchive.brembs.net/citations.php

[21 May 11: 18:14]
6.15pm: Does god have Alzheimer? No #rapture in Europe...

[01 May 11: 11:31]
w00t! Just been invited to present at OKCon 2011! #OKCon2011


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Learning and Memory has published our work on a new, integrated Aplysia preparation. Check it out:
http://www.learnmem.org/cgi/content/abstract/11/4/412?etoc
Or get it from my downloads section.
Posted on Saturday 31 July 2004 - 16:31:36 comment: 2

The Novartis symposium on Molecular Mechanisms Influencing Aggressive Behaviours is over. It was a very interesting meeting with extended discussions into the classification of and neural networks involved in aggressiveness and aggression. I learned about the involvement of subsystems of the serotonergic system, the NO system, the pheromone system and the hormonal system (vasopressin, testosterone) in mammalian aggression. I also learned a great deal on the evolutionary background without which the different roles of the various subsystems could not be understood. Aggression is rarely spontaneous, but reactive to secondary behavioral systems and is one channel of communication between animals. Due to this context specificity, the different subsystems have different roles in different circumstances. Such diversity leads e.g. to certain mouse gene knock-out strains to have increased agressiveness in males but decreased in females.
In about 9 months time a book will come out with all the presentations and discussions. I will post the reference to this volume here.
Posted on Tuesday 27 July 2004 - 10:34:44 comment: 2
Novartis   aggression   molecular   drosophila   

I'm in London as I type this and I'm sitting in the library of 41 Portland street, where the Novartis Foundation has it's HQ. I'll be here all week discussing the molecular foundations of aggressive behaviors. If I find the time, I'll post a brief synopsis of what's going on every evening or at least at the end of the symposium. The informal reception this evening already promised for some interesting discussions!
Posted on Monday 19 July 2004 - 22:15:11 comment: 4
Novartis   aggression   molecular   drosophila   

After getting some more parts needed to prepare the Drosophila flies for the flight simulator and after breeding fruitflies for 10 days (that's their generation time) I could test the flight simulator.
This is a screenshot of the data I got from the 5 flies I tested until the ancient belt that connects the motor to the arena lost too many of it's teeth

The upper panel shows the average of the five flies. The lower panel the average of 230 flies I measured in the course of my theses. Red bars are training (reinforcement on), black bars are test (reinforcement off). You can see that they are very similar, showing that the test worked first try! Whohoo!
Posted on Thursday 17 June 2004 - 10:13:03 comment: 4294967292

Yesterday I sent the last grant application (this one went to the DFG) out. It's the second try at the Emmy-Noether second phase (see my previous post on the topic). Now I can only wait and see. With a little luck, I can then really start to do the science I always wanted to do.
Posted on Wednesday 16 June 2004 - 09:06:57 comment: 1

After driving 500km to Essen for corrosion prevention by application of Mike Sander's anti-corrosion grease, I gave the Miata an inside out thorough cleaning, including a claybar treatment of the paint and subsequent acrylic sealant! Now my shoulder hurts from all that polishing, but the car looks like new from the outside and is all nice and grease covered from the inside!
You can see some pictures of the anti-rust treatment in my article on the Mike Sander's grease.
Posted on Monday 07 June 2004 - 09:59:35 comment: 4

Finally! After many trials and tribulations, long nights and intensive discussions we submitted the application for a Marie Curie Excellence grant today. The grant is worth approx. 1.4M€ and would fund a small group of scientists and me for 4 years. I'm happy to have this one off my chest. It is a great project and it would be a dream to get it funded, but the bureaucracy around the application was mind-numbing!

I'm excited to write the next proposal now and am confident that one of them will fly.
Posted on Tuesday 18 May 2004 - 17:53:27 comment: 4294967294

At the National Team Handball Championships in Houston, Texas, my team, the Atlanta Metro Condors won the title of National Champion! Head on over to condorhandball.com and congratulate them!
It was my old club (co-founded by me) in Houston that hosted the event and will host it again next year. Hope to see y'all there!
Posted on Tuesday 18 May 2004 - 17:47:26 comment: 1

I'll be flying to Houston and New York this Thursday. My first trip back after the move. I'll be visiting Sarah in Houston and I'll also be talking to a few people in my old lab to discuss future projects (experiments and computational modelling). On the weekend, I'll be attending the USA Team Handball National Championships my old club in Houston is hosting. Tuesday I'll fly to New York to visit the Mount Sinai School of Medicine. I'll be working with Elizabeth Cropper and her group to finally finish the computer model of the small neuronal network in Aplysia they're investigating electrophysiologically.
Posted on Tuesday 04 May 2004 - 08:26:05 comment: 1

With help from the designer of the Drosophila Flight Simulator, Reinhard Wolf, I finally managed to solve the problem of the noise in the torque compensator! The system now works flawlessly.

[ Read the rest ... ]
Posted on Tuesday 04 May 2004 - 08:13:02 comment: 1

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