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DSI Events

Electrophysiology Tech Talks & Toasts


Join us for a relaxed but informative session, where you can listen to topical presentations, mingle with colleagues and see cutting-edge equipment.

Our talks

  • Using high throughput electrophysiology for disease diagnosis and therapeutic development. Andrew Jenkins, PhD. Associate Professor, Emory University
  • A novel device to measure intestinal ion transport in an in vitro rat model. From antibiotics to nitric oxide using a new way to screen intestine. John Geibel, DSc, MD. Professor, Yale University
  • Fitting in: neuronal encoding of naturalistic group social dynamics in mice. William Li. MD/PhD Student, Harvard University
  • Integrating multi-electrode arrays into organ-on-chip platforms. Jonathan Soucy. PhD Student, Northeastern University
Visit the website to learn more.

 

About DSI Events

Data Sciences International (DSI) is involved in over 60 events every year. These include scientific meetings such as industry trade shows, courses and seminars, workshops, as well as educational user groups and symposia all over the world.

DSI supported educational events are scientific meetings organized in cooperation with a local institution or society, pharmaceutical company, university, or local telemetry user group. Educational event meetings serve as an educational forum in which researchers can freely share current scientific information with their peers, students, and other interested scientists.

Common to the general theme of the meetings is the data collected through physiological monitoring of freely moving conscious laboratory animals made possible through the use of fully implantable telemetry technology.

Presentations and posters on the latest methods employed by the presenting researchers enable those attending to benefit from the as yet unpublished work of peers. Presentations can be on a wide range of related research topics including surgical implantation methods, data analysis methods, treatment effects of new pharmaceutical compounds, new animal models, behavioral and physiological interactions, basic research on physiological systems, and numerous other whole animal chronic monitoring research topics.

Meetings are held in classroom style with ample time allowed for questions and discussion among the participants. Typical audience sizes run from 40 to 120.