Thanks to Dr. Michael D. Greicius for providing videos (http://restingstate.stanford. edu/) of the resting-state fMRI symposium in Stanford University, June 17, 2009. Below are the topic and speakers.
Bharat Biswal
University of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey, USA
Multi-site Validation of Resting State fMRI
Michael Greicius
Stanford University School of Medicine, USA
Plasticity in Resting-State Networks
Vesa Kiviniemi
Oulu University, Finland
Functional segmentation of the brain cortex based on resting state signal sources
Andreas Kleinschmidt
INSERM, France
Probing the functional significance of spontaneous activity fluctuations
Vinod Menon
Stanford University School of Medicine, USA
Development of large-scale functional and structural brain networks in children
Michael Milham
New York University School of Medicine, USA
Establishing the significance of inter-individual differences in resting state functional connectivity
Marcus Raichle
Washington University School of Medicine, USA
Time
Serge Rombouts
Leiden University, Netherlands
Pharmacologically induced changes in resting state networks
William Seeley
UCSF School of Medicine, U.S.A.
Network-based Neurodegeneration
Steve Smith
University of Oxford, UK
Recent ICA-related advances: The functional hierarchy of the resting & active brain, and Methodology for cross-subject RSN comparisons
Yufeng Zang
Beijing Normal University, China
Episodic memory consolidation, ApoE genotype and resting-state fMRI
Bharat Biswal
University of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey, USA
Multi-site Validation of Resting State fMRI
Michael Greicius
Stanford University School of Medicine, USA
Plasticity in Resting-State Networks
Vesa Kiviniemi
Oulu University, Finland
Functional segmentation of the brain cortex based on resting state signal sources
Andreas Kleinschmidt
INSERM, France
Probing the functional significance of spontaneous activity fluctuations
Vinod Menon
Stanford University School of Medicine, USA
Development of large-scale functional and structural brain networks in children
Michael Milham
New York University School of Medicine, USA
Establishing the significance of inter-individual differences in resting state functional connectivity
Marcus Raichle
Washington University School of Medicine, USA
Time
Serge Rombouts
Leiden University, Netherlands
Pharmacologically induced changes in resting state networks
William Seeley
UCSF School of Medicine, U.S.A.
Network-based Neurodegeneration
Steve Smith
University of Oxford, UK
Recent ICA-related advances: The functional hierarchy of the resting & active brain, and Methodology for cross-subject RSN comparisons
Yufeng Zang
Beijing Normal University, China
Episodic memory consolidation, ApoE genotype and resting-state fMRI
Forums