Observing Sleep

Observing Sleep
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This is a past event

Prof Bruce Gluckmann, The Pennsylvania State University

Summary:

The involvement of sleep dynamics and sleep disruption and epilepsy syndromes has been marked in the clinical arena, but a deep understanding of the mechanistic link between the two has been lacking. Sleep state - the awareness level of the brain - is regulated through the interaction of a number of small cell groups between the brain stem and the thalamus. Direct measurement of their activity - and potentially their dysfunction as related to disease such as epilepsy or schizophrenia - is expensive both physically and in terms of damage to the brain of the subject. As an alternate approach to revealing these interactions, we have turned to a model-based data assimilation framework to link mathematical models of the sleep regulatory networks to less-costly experimental observations. I'll describe this framework, challenges we've solved, and open questions.

Speaker
Prof Bruce Gluckmann, The Pennsylvania State University
Hosted by
Prof Bettina Platt
Venue
Level 5 Conference Room, Institute of Medical Sciences
Contact

Prof Bettina Platt