Opendata, web and dolomites

DRIVOME

Multi-modal interrogation of instinctive behaviours and intrahypothalamic connectivity

Total Cost €

0

EC-Contrib. €

0

Partnership

0

Views

0

 DRIVOME project word cloud

Explore the words cloud of the DRIVOME project. It provides you a very rough idea of what is the project "DRIVOME" about.

demonstrated    2013    anomalies    emotions    ripe    indicators    disorders    recording    2007    intrahypothalamic    marital    populations    tinbergen    encoded    adaptive    anorexia    imaging    aggression    difficult    newer    gaining    adamantidis    evident    reside    infidelity    behaviours    pace    hunger    drive    familiar    optrode    connectome    ethology    episodic    deep    hypothalamus    wiring    transgenic    2015    genetically    drives    diagram    context    mouse    marlin    mammalian    opsins    feeding    psychologically    insights    sexual    older    manipulations    modern    betley    guide    uncovered    neuronal    2014    displays    lorenz    instincts    anatomical    aponte    1951    architecture    instinctive    potentially    drivome    structures    swanson    wakefulness    probing    networks    lin    et    animal    parental    orchestrated    sleep    calcium    circuits    syndrome    al    outlined    everyone    hypothalamic    2000    1981    species    coherent    brain    sex    possibly    dyscontrol    mice    2011    cell    daily    network    techniques    organization    elucidate    charge    lee    jego    wu    fundamental    photon    excessive    hypotheses    kingdom    cruder    situations   

Project "DRIVOME" data sheet

The following table provides information about the project.

Coordinator
KING'S COLLEGE LONDON 

Organization address
address: STRAND
city: LONDON
postcode: WC2R 2LS
website: www.kcl.ac.uk

contact info
title: n.a.
name: n.a.
surname: n.a.
function: n.a.
email: n.a.
telephone: n.a.
fax: n.a.

 Coordinator Country United Kingdom [UK]
 Project website https://kclpure.kcl.ac.uk/portal/en/persons/mahesh-karnani
 Total cost 183˙454 €
 EC max contribution 183˙454 € (100%)
 Programme 1. H2020-EU.1.3.2. (Nurturing excellence by means of cross-border and cross-sector mobility)
 Code Call H2020-MSCA-IF-2015
 Funding Scheme MSCA-IF-EF-RI
 Starting year 2016
 Duration (year-month-day) from 2016-03-01   to  2018-02-28

 Partnership

Take a look of project's partnership.

# participants  country  role  EC contrib. [€] 
1    KING'S COLLEGE LONDON UK (LONDON) coordinator 183˙454.00

Map

 Project objective

Mammalian behaviour is driven by instincts such as hunger, sex and aggression which are familiar to everyone from daily experience. Anomalies in these instincts cause disorders such as anorexia, excessive sexual drive and episodic dyscontrol syndrome, and potentially also psychologically difficult situations like marital infidelity. Neuronal circuits that drive these instincts reside in the hypothalamus where research is gaining pace rapidly. Recent work has uncovered hypothalamic neuronal populations in mouse, that can drive the following fundamental mammalian behaviours: feeding (Aponte et al., 2011, Betley et al., 2015), sex/aggression (Lee et al., 2014, Lin et al., 2011), sleep/wakefulness (Adamantidis et al., 2007, Jego et al., 2013) and parental behaviours (Marlin et al., 2015, Wu et al., 2014). Older work has demonstrated similar effects with cruder manipulations of the hypothalamus in several species. Classical work in ethology (Lorenz, 1981, Tinbergen, 1951) as well as newer anatomical insights (Swanson, 2000) have outlined hypotheses for how neuronal network architecture may guide the organization of instinctive behaviours into the coherent, adaptive, context-relevant displays evident throughout the animal kingdom. Modern techniques (opsins, genetically encoded calcium indicators, transgenic mice, multi photon imaging of deep brain structures and optrode recording) are now ripe for comprehensive cell-type specific probing of the hypothalamic networks in charge of fundamental drives and possibly emotions. We propose to use these methods to elucidate the intrahypothalamic wiring diagram (the connectome of drives, or 'DRIVOME') that can explain how instincts are orchestrated.

Are you the coordinator (or a participant) of this project? Plaese send me more information about the "DRIVOME" project.

For instance: the website url (it has not provided by EU-opendata yet), the logo, a more detailed description of the project (in plain text as a rtf file or a word file), some pictures (as picture files, not embedded into any word file), twitter account, linkedin page, etc.

Send me an  email (fabio@fabiodisconzi.com) and I put them in your project's page as son as possible.

Thanks. And then put a link of this page into your project's website.

The information about "DRIVOME" are provided by the European Opendata Portal: CORDIS opendata.

More projects from the same programme (H2020-EU.1.3.2.)

NSTree (2020)

Understanding substrate delivery for cell wall biosynthesis in plants

Read More  

BB-SLM (2020)

Polychromatic digital optics for structured light

Read More  

MetEpiC (2020)

P53-dependent Metabolic and Epigenetic Reprogramming in Carcinogenesis

Read More