On 28th November OxTalks will move to the new Halo platform and will become 'Oxford Events' (full details are available on the Staff Gateway).
There will be an OxTalks freeze beginning on Friday 14th November. This means you will need to publish any of your known events to OxTalks by then as there will be no facility to publish or edit events in that fortnight. During the freeze, all events will be migrated to the new Oxford Events site. It will still be possible to view events on OxTalks during this time.
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Brain development is a tremendously complex process in which a myriad of neuronal and non-neuronal cell types is generated and assembled into functional circuits in a highly organized manner. Many psychiatric disorders arise when developmental processes are perturbed by various genetic and environmental factors. Given high cellular diversity in the brain, for most psychiatric disorders, we are still far from understanding how they arise and what types of neurons and circuits underlie functional impairments in psychiatric disorders. Recent technological advance in single-cell analysis allowed us to address how psychiatric risk factors perturb brain development at single-cell resolution. In my presentation, I will show recently published and unpublished data from my lab, where we implemented single-cell analysis to identify how neuronal subtypes and their networks are perturbed during brain development in schizophrenia risk factor models, followed up by functional experiments to validate single-cell data.