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Academic Symposia
A Gut Microbiome-Brain Interaction Symposium
1:40 p.m.: Jun R. Huh, Ph.D., assistant professor, division of infectious diseases and immunology, department of medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Unexpected Roles of RORgamma-t and Pro-inflammatory Th17 Cells 2:10 p.m.: John F. Cryan, Ph.D., professor and chair, department of anatomy and neuroscience, University College Cork, Microbiota and Neurodevelopmental Windows: Implications for Brain Disorders 3:00 p.m.: Emeran A. Mayer, M.D., Ph.D., professor of medicine, psychiatry and physiology; director, Oppenheimer Center for Neurobiology of Stress, University of California, Los Angeles, Gut Microbiome Brain Communication in Humans 3:30 p.m.: Jane A. Foster, Ph.D., department of psychiatry and behavioural neurosciences, McMaster University, Gut-Brain Axis: How the Microbiome Influences Behavior 4:00 p.m.: Christopher A. Lowry, Ph.D., associate professor, department of integrative physiology and center for neuroscience, University of Colorado, Boulder, A Bioimmunomodulatory Approach for Prevention of Stress-Related Psychiatric Disorders and their Medical Comorbidity 4:50 p.m.: Tracy L. Bale, Ph.D., professor of neuroscience; director, neuroscience center, University of Pennysylvania, Maternal Stress and the Vaginal Microbiome: Impacts on Neurodevelopment 5:20 p.m.: Elaine Y. Hsiao, Ph.D., senior research fellow, division of biology and biological engineering, California Institute of Technology, Microbiome-Gut Brain Interactions in Autism Spectrum Disorder
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