18 novembre 2020
9am-5pm
Online
Due to the current sanitary crisis your favourite work event - Young Researcher Day - will be held online this year.
Already next Wednesday 18/11 you will have the opportunity to enjoy directly from the comfort of your living room 9 talks and 13 blitz talks delivered by young researchers of our institute.
The new form brings some changes to the general structure of the event. Most importantly, we have decided to replace poster presentations with Blitz Talks. For those who are not familiar with the format, these are short oral presentations (5 mins) with maximum 5 slides. This way presenters will be able to communicate the key facts to all attendees and interested public can approach them to discuss the details of presented projects. For this purpose we will set up Breakout rooms for each Blitz Talk presenter that will be available during breaks. Longer Talks will keep the traditional format of 10 - 15 mins of presentations followed by time for questions, this time also in a written form. And as usual we will award amazing financial prizes to the best Talk and the best Blitz Talk based on YOUR vote.
On top of that, we have a couple of extras this time:
Dr. Remi Gau from the Cross-modal perception and plasticity lab will present CPP_BIDS, a MATLAB toolbox for behavioral experiments data management.
Prof. Gunter Kenis from Maastrich University will introduce the European Graduate School of Neuroscience - EURON - and all it has to offer (not only) to PhD students of partner universities.
Prof. Frederick Verbruggen from Ghent University will give the most anticipated keynote talk with the title 'Towards Open (Psychological) Science'.
We are also very proud to announce that this year YRD prizes are sponsored by Trinoma and Promega. Representatives of both companies will give a blitz talk during the event, so stay connected and check them out!
Preliminary agenda
9:00 - 10:10 - Welcome + First session of oral presentations
- Talk 1: Thibaut Toussaint - Control of energy dissipation when landing from a jump
- Talk 2: Mattia Ferraiolo - Treating Parkinson’s Disease: a matter of density?
- Talk 3: Julien Lambert - Transcranial focused ultrasonic stimulation to modulate the human primary somatosensory cortex
10:10 – 10:20 - Break
10:20 – 11:45 - Second session of oral presentations
- Talk 4: Lars Stumpp - Vagus nerve electroneurogram based detection of acute Pentylenetetrazol induced seizures in rats
- Talk 5: Elisa Calvo Jimenez - Reelin-Regulated Functions of FGFRs during the Development of the Mammalian Cerebral Cortex
- Talk 6: Dominika Šulcová - GABAergic neurotransmission in human brain characterized by single- and paired-pulse TMS with EEG co-registration and pharmacological GABAA activation
Special Talk Presentation EURON
11:45 – 11:50 - Break
11:50 - 12:35 - First Data Blitz session
- Blitz 1: Igor Iarrobino - Right and left inferior frontal opercula are involved in discriminating angry and sad facial expressions
- Blitz 2: Andrea Angla Navarro - Non-cell autonomous regulation of pre-motor interneuron development in the chicken embryonic spinal cord
- Blitz 3: Astrid Carton de Tournai - Sensitivity and responsiveness of the modified Jebsen-Taylor Test of Hand Function for children with unilateral cerebral palsy: an experimental retrospective study
- Blitz 4: Inci Cakiroglu - Case report of ipsilateral motor evoked potentials induced by transcranial magnetic stimulation over the left hemisphere of a Parkinson Disease patient implanted with Deep Brain Stimulation
- Blitz 5: Georges Chehade - The fragile balance between proliferation and neoplasia in neural stem cells: Role of DIAPH3 in glioblastoma
- Blitz 6: Sophie van Doorslaer de ten Ryen - The regulation of satellite cells by resistance training in hypoxia
SPECIAL BLITZ Sponsor PROMEGA
12:35 – 13:30 - Break + private discussion Data Blitz Session 1
13:30 – 14:55 - Third session of oral presentations
- Talk 7: Rémi Gau - CPP_BIDS: a lightweight toolbox for behavioral experiments to help you with good data management practices
- Talk 8: Pegdwendé Kabore - False beliefs of patients and management of chronic low back pain in Burkina Faso’s Health services
- Talk 9: Estelle Balan - Endurance training status reduced inflammation and TERRA expression without influencing senescence in skeletal muscle of older individuals
- Talk 10: Ghady El Khoury - Development of a hand activities monitoring device
14:55 – 15:00 - Break
15:00 – 15:45 - Second Data Blitz session
- Blitz 7: Anne Hoffmann - Combined influence of visual and proprioceptive feedback on motor control and adaptation
- Blitz 8: Lars Stumpp - Electro Neurogram Recording and Single Unit Activity detection in the Vagus nerve for seizure detection
- Blitz 9: Geoffrey Warnier - Effects of sprint interval training at different altitudes on cycling performance at sea-level
- Blitz 10: Fanny Fievez - Post-error adjustments reflect the joint impact of strategic and automatic processes
- Blitz 11: Charlotte Baudouin - Generation and characterization of tamoxifen-inducible Vsx1-CreERT2 reporter mice line
- Blitz 1:2 Seyma Kilcioglu – From selective motor control to motor skill learning in cerebral palsy
- Blitz 13: Florence Blondiaux - Saccadic adaptation of Essential Tremor patients
15:45 - 16:15 - Vote + private discussion Data Blitz Session 2
16:15 - 16:20 - Sponsor Presentation TRINOMA
16:20 - 16:30 - Word of the IoNS President + Prizes
16:30 - 17:45 - Keynote talk : Prof. Frederick Verbruggen from the Ghent University (Department of Experimental psychology).
Abstract: Towards Open (Psychological) Science
In the last couple of years, there have been calls from governments, research funders, publishers, as well as grassroots activists, for science to be more open. To some extent, this has to do with recent cases of scientific misconduct or bad research practice that have troubled many disciplines. However, a much more positive case can be madefor Open Science as well. In this presentation, I will discuss why Open Science is important for psychology and why we should embrace it (even though it undeniably comes with certain challenges). I will also discuss how we implement certain principles in my research group (including a 'co-pilot' system).
Download here the Program & Abstract book
Don't forget to brush up you cocktail making skills, so we can share a virtual drink or two.