Past Biological Sciences Seminars & Events

2022 February 15
Biological Sciences Seminar by Drs. Andrew Fink and Carl Schoonover
2025 September 18
Career Exploration: What can I do with an undergraduate degree in neuroscience? Insight from our Alum.
Steven Chu (Credit: Imke Lass/Redux)
2023 April 26
Please join us for the next School of Physic Public Lecture scheduled for Wednesday, April 26th 5:00pm – 6:00pm.
Fossil specimens
2026 February 20
Join the Spatial Ecology and Paleontology Lab for Fossil Fridays! Become a fossil hunter and help discover how vertebrate communities have changed through time.
Dinos love Fossil Fridays!
2024 September 20
Join the fun and become a Fossil Hunter! Sort through fossil specimens up to 30,000 years old. Come anytime between 3 - 5 p.m. every Friday!
2023 MLK Lecture featuring Eddie Glaude, Jr., Thursday, January 12, 2023 at 3 pm in the Exhibition Hall, Midtown Ballroom
2023 January 12
The 12th Annual MLK Lecture will be held on January 12, featuring Eddie Glaude Jr., Ph.D., James S. McDonnell Distinguished University Professor and chair of the department of African American Studies at Princeton University.
2020 April 14
Seth Hutchinson, Ph.D. - Georgia Tech, and Gregory Sawicki, Ph.D. - Georgia Tech
2026 February 26

 From Motion to Meaning: Empowering Neurorehabilitation Across the Lifespan via Wearable Sensing. Researchers have spent decades studying rehabilitation interventions for improving function in people with stroke and other neurological disorders. Trial outcomes are often measured at the activity capacity level, defined as what a person is capable of doing in the structured environment of the clinic or laboratory.  It has long been assumed that improvements in activity capacity result in improvements in real-world activity performance, where activity performance is defined as what a person actually does in daily life, outside of the clinic or laboratory.  We will discuss some of the surprising findings arising from measuring movement in daily life via wearable sensors in persons with stroke and Parkinson disease, beginning inquiries into pediatric motor behavior, and current efforts to move this tool from the research realm into the clinical realm.  Host Young- Hui Chang

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