Shanghai ICPB'04
FINAL PROGRAM
Shanghai International Conference on Physiological Biophysics
November 9 - 13, 2004,
Shanghai, China
Shanghai ICPB'04
FINAL PROGRAM
Sponsored by
School of Life Sciences and Center for Brain Science Research, Fudan
University
Co-sponsored by
Shanghai Association for Science and Technology
Shanghai Association for Life Sciences
Organized by
Shanghai Society of Biophysics
Supported by
National Natural Science Foundation of China
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I. ORGANIZING COMMITTEE OF SHANGHAI ICPB'04 ------
II. WELCOME MESSAGE ------
III PROGRAM OUTLINE
Time Table of Technical Sessions ------
IV. TECHNICAL PROGRAM
An Outline of the Sessions ------
Detailed Schedule of Technical Sessions------
Ceremony, Plenary lectures and Panel Discussion ------Mini-symposium ------
Special Sessions------
Poster Session ------
Information on Technical Sessions ------
V. CONFERENCE INFORMATION
Registration ------
Social Program ------
Meals ------
Accommodation ------
Venue ------
Transportation ------
General Information ------
Contact Us ------
I. ORGANIZATION OF SHANGHAI ICPB'04
Honorary Chairs:
Chang, Hsiang-Tung Institute of Neuroscience, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Ito, Masao Brain Science Institute, RIKEN, Japan
General Chairs:
Chair:
Shou, Tiande Fudan University, China
Co-Chairs:
Low, Philip S. Purdue University, U.S.A.
Niimi, Hideyuki National Cardiovascular Center Research Institute, Japan
Salzberg,Brian M. Univ. Pennsylvania, USA
Vaudry, Hubert University Rouen, France
International Advisory Committee Chairs:
Chair:
Zhang, Zhihong Fudan University, China
Co-Chairs:
Artmann, Gerhard M. Aachen University of Applied Science, Germany
Hotani, Hirokazu Nagoya University, Japan
Tanaka, Keiji Brain Science Institute, RIKEN, Japan
Zhang, Shaowu Australian National University, Australia
Members:
Antonova, Nadia (Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria)
Artmann, Gerhard M (Aachen University of Applied Sciences, Germany)
Berk, Bradford C. (University of Rochester, USA)
Chen, Lin (Institute of Biophysics, CAS, China)
Cheng, Kan (Brain Research Institute, RIKEN, Japan)
Cokelet, Giles (Montana State University, USA)
Dreher, Bogdan (University of Sydney, Australia)
Findlay, John (Leeds University, UK)
Forconi, Sandro (Siena University, Italy)
Gao, Pinjin (Shanghai Institute of Hypertension, China)
Gilbert, Charles D. (Rockefeller University, USA)
Gu, Fanji (Fudan University, China)
Hardeman, Max (University of Amsterdam, Netherlands)
He, Shigang (Institute of Neuroscience, China)
Hotani, Hirokazu ( Nagoya University, Japan)
Ishiwata, Shin'ichi (Waseda University, Japan)
Ji, Yonghua (Shanghai Institute of Physiology, China)
Lee, Soo-Young (Advanced Institute of Sci. & Tech., Korea)
Li Chaoyi (Institute of Neuroscience, CAS, China)
Lelkes, Peter I. (Drexel University, USA)
Lu, Changlin (The Second Military Medical School, China)
Mang, Thomas (Aachen University of Applied Sciences, Germany)
Matsumoto, Nobuyoshi (Kyushu Institute of Technology, Japan)
Mei, Yanai (Fudan University, China)
Meiselman, Herbert J (University of southern California, USA)
Niimi, Hideyuki (National Cardiovascular Center, Japan)
Okatani, Yuji (Kochi Medical School, Japan)
Poole-Warren, Laura (University of New South Wales, Australia)
Reiter, Russel J. (University of Texas Health Science Center, USA)
Roa, Anna W. (Vanderbilt Universty, USA)
Ruan, Kangcheng (Shanghai Institute of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, China)
Ruggiero, Carmelina (University of Genova, Italy)
Rutten, Wim L. C. (University of Twente, Netherlands)
Sato, Masaaki (Tohoku University, Japan)
Sabolovic, Domagoj (ISERM, France)
Schoening, Michael J. (Aachen University of Applied Sciences, Germany)
Seki, Junji (National Cardiovascular Center, Japan)
Shi, Yongde (Fudan University, China)
Shiga, Takeshi (Osaka University, Japan)
Shou, Tiande (Fudan University, China)
Sokabe, Masahiro (Nagoya University, Japan)
Suh, Hwal (Yongsei University, Korea)
Sun, Xinde (East China Normal University, China)
Sur, Mriganka (MIT, USA)
Tanaka, Keiji (Brain Research Institute, RIKEN, Japan)
Thrinivasan, M. (Australian National University, Australia)
Tokin, Ivan B. (State University, Russia)
Tsujiok, Katshiko (Kawasaki Medical School, Japan)
Usui, Shiro (BSI, RIKEN, Japan)
Vyskocil, Frantisek (Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech)
Wang, Shurong (Institute of Biophysics, CAC, China)
Wolf, Eckhard (Muechen University, Germany)
Wu, Yunpeng (Chongqing University, China)
Xu, Sengen (National Institutes of Health, USA)
Yanagida, Toshio (Osaka University, Japan)
Yang, Guitong (Tai Yuan University of Technology, China)
Yang, Xiongli (Fudan University, China)
Yao, Tai (Fudan University, China)
Yu, Leepo C. (NIH/NIAMS, USA)
Zhang, Shaowu (Australian National University, Australia)
Zhang, Zhihong (Fudan University, China)
Zhou, Zhao-nian (Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, China)
Zhu, Dingliang (Shanghai Institute of Hypertension, China)
Administrative Organizers:
Secretary General: Yongde Shi, Fudan University, China, E-mail:
Financial and General Affairs Secretary: Yongde Shi, Fudan University, China, E-mail:
Program Secretary: Fanji Gu, Fudan University, China, E-mail:
II. WELCOME MESSAGE
Ladies and gentlemen,
Welcome to Shanghai!
It’s Shanghai,
It’s your Shanghai,
It’s China’s Shanghai,
It’s international Shanghai!
On behalf of the Shanghai International Conference on Physiological Biophysics 2004, I would like to express our warmest welcome to you all of about 200scientists from 20 countries and areas in the world. We sincere hope that the conference will provide a stage (or platform) for exchanging new ideas, techniques and progress in physiological biophysics for all attendance in Shanghai, one of the fastest developing cities in the world.
The history of scientific progress has demonstrated a clear tendency that big advances in science are more and more dependent on multiple interdisciplinary studies, especially in biology and medicine. The rapid progress in physiological biophysics is a typical sample in speeding the development of life science and medical science. The purpose of the Shanghai International Conference on Physiological Biophysics is concentrated in the most important areas of studies, such as brain, cardiovascular,_cellular and medical_problems. We sincerely wish the conference in Shanghai would reach the goal perfectly.
The world became much smaller than before. Peace, development and cooperation are the principle matters of general benefit (interest) for human being. We are gathering here to provide our best contributions to the people in the world with our intuitive knowledge.
Let’s wish a great success of the Shanghai International Conference on Physiological Biophysics 2004 and wish all of you wonderful days in Shanghai!
Thank you all!
General Chairperson of Shanghai ICPB’04
III. PROGRAM OUTLINE
TIME TABLE
Time / Nov. 9 / Nov 10 / Nov 11 / Nov 12 / Nov 13Morning / 8:30 – 12:00 Registration / 9:00-9:20 Opening Ceremony / 8:30-10:10
Plenary
Talk V, VI / 8:30-10:10
Plenary
Talk VII, VIII / 8:30-11:30
Panel
Discussion
9:20-10:35
Plenary
Talk I, II / 10:10-10:30
Coffee
Break / 10:10-10:30
Coffee
Break
10:35-10:50
Coffee
Break / 10:30-12:30
Sessions
TM1 / 10:30-12:30
Session
FM1 / 11:30-12:00
Closing Ceremony
10:50-12:30
Plenary
Talk III, IV
Noon / 12:30-13:30
Lunch / 12:30-1:30
Lunch / 12:30-1:30
Lunch / 12:00-1:30
Lunch
Afternoon / 12:00 – 19:00
Registration / 13:30-15:30Sessions
WA1 / 13:30 – 18:00
City Sightseeing / 13:30-15:30
Sessions
FA1
15:30-15:50
Coffee
Break / 15:30-15:40
Coffee
Break
15:50-17:50
Sessions
WA2 / 15:40-17:40
Sessions
FA2
Evening / 19:00 – 21:00
Reception / 19:00-21:00
Poster
Session
WE1 / 18:00-20:30
Banquet / 19:00-21:00
Show
IV. TECHNICAL PROGRAM
AN OUTLINE OF THE SESSIONS
Abbreviations
MS - Mini-symposium; SS - Special Session;
PS - Poster Session; PD - Panel Discussion; CC - Closing Ceremony
Nov. 10 (Wednesday)
9:00 - 9:20 Opening Ceremony
9:20 - 12:30 Plenary Talks
13:30 - 15:30 Mini-symposiums & Special Sessions
fMRI of Human Brain Function (I)
MS1 Cognitive control of behavior: Neural mechanisms
MS12 Biophysics of cardiovascular pathophysiology (I)
MS11 Angiogenesis: In vivo model and microvasculature
SS Plasticity and repair of nervous system
SS New concepts in circulation, angiology and vascular biology
15:50 - 17:50 Mini-symposiums & Special Sessions
MS4 fMRI of Human Brain Function (II)
MS6 Applicationsin Bioinformatics
MS12 Biophysics of cardiovascular pathophysiology (II)
MS14 Micro- and nano-sensors in biology and medicine
SS Behavior and cognition
19:00 - 21:00 Poster Session
Nov. 11 Thursday)
8:30 - 10:10 Plenary Talks
10:30 - 12:30 Mini-symposiums & Special Sessions (TM1)
MS7 Membrane and Cellular Biophysics
MS8 Physiological Basis of Melatonin Function
SS Computational neuroscience and neural models
SS Cellular biophysics
SS Oxidative stress and aging
SS Cell engineering and cell mechanics
Nov. 12 Friday)
8:30 - 10:10 Plenary Talks
10:30 - 12:30 Mini-symposiums & Special Sessions
MS2 Sensory Information Processing (I)
MS16 Plasticity and Dynamics in Cerebral Cortex
MS9 Cellular and Molecular Biophysics
MS13 Cell engineering & cell mechanics
SS Medical biophysics and engineering
13:30 - 15:30 Mini-symposiums & Special Sessions
MS2 Sensory Information Processing (II)
MS3 Optical Approaches to the Nervous System
MS10 Mechanisms of Fatigue and Recovery/Prevention from Fatigue (I)
Neural information processing (I)
Membrane biophysics
Innovative imaging technology in physiology and medicine
15:40 - 17:40 Mini-symposiums & Special Sessions
MS2 Sensory Information Processing (III)
MS10 Mechanisms of Fatigue and Recovery/Prevention from Fatigue (II)
SS Neural information processing (II)
New methods in molecular biology and nanotechnology in biology and medicine
Nov. 13 (Saturday)
8:30 - 11:30 Panel Discussion
11:30 - 12:00 Closing Ceremony
DETAILED SCHEDULE OF TECHNICAL SESSIONS
CEREMONY, PLENARY LECTURES AND PANEL DISCUSSION
Reception: NOV 9 (Tue PM 19:00)
Chairman: Tian-de Shou
Welcome address: Leader from Shanghai Government
Opening Ceremony
Nov. 10 (Wed) 9:00 - 9:20
Chairmen: Zhihong Zhang, Keiji Tanaka
9:00 - 9:10
Opening Speech: Tiande Shou
9:10 - 9:20
Welcoming Speech: Shenghong Wang
Plenary Talks I , II
Nov. 10 (Wed) 9:20 - 10:35
Chairmen: Shaowu Zhang, Brian M. Salzberg
9:20 - 10:10
Seeing functions of visual cortex in global and microscopic view using optical imaging combined withother methods
Tiande Shou, Fudan University, China.
10:10 - 10:40
Dissecting non-elemental learning in a honeybee brain
Martin Giurfa, CNRS - Université Paul Sabatier, FRANCE
Plenary Talks III, IV
Nov. 10 (Wed) 10:55 - 12:30
Chairmen: Gerhard Artmann, Russel J. Reiter
10:55 - 11:45
Morphological and Topological Transformation of Membrane Vesicles
Hotani, Hirokazu,Nagoya University, Japan
11:45 - 12:30
Brain Information Theory and Unsupervised Applications
Harold Szu, George Washington Univ, USA
Plenary Talks V and VI
Nov. 11 (Thu) 8:30 - 10:10
Chairmen: Masao Ito, Hideyuki Niimi
8:30 - 9:20
Structure and Regulation of the Human Erythrocyte Membrane
Philip S. Low, Purdue University, USA
9:20 - 10:10
How the brain wires itself: Plasticity and specificity of cortical pathways and networks
Mriganka Sur, MIT, USA
Plenary Talks VII and VIII
Nov. 12 (Fri) 8:30 .-10:10
Chairman: Hubert Vaudry, Yanai Mei
8:30 - 9:20
Contemporary bioengineering and cell mechanics A major challenge for engineers
Gerhard Artmann, University of Applied Sciences Aachen,Germany
9:20 - 10:10
Oxidative Stress and Dementias of the Aged: Protective Actions of Melatonin
Russel J. Reiter,University of Texas Health Science Center,USA
Panel Discussion
The 21 century Forum: Physiological Biophysics and Human Health
Nov. 13 (Sat) 8:30 -11:30
Chairman: Zhihong Zhang, Gerhard Artmann
Asian traditional medicine and microcirculatory science
Hideyuki Niimi
National Cardiovascular Center Research Institute, Japan
Magnetic Nano- and Microcarriers: From Basic Research to Health Care - a Review !
Wolfgang Schuett, IMC University of Applied Sciences, Krems, Austria
Biophysics - the appropriate basis for interdisciplinary facets of modern life sciences and bioengineering
Peter Lelkes, Drexel University, USA
Other talks haven't been decided finally. It will be announced a little later.
Closing Ceremony
Nov. 13 (Sat) 11:30.-12:00
Chairman: Tiande Shou
Closing Speech: Zhihong Zhang
Farewell Speech: Yanai Mei
MINI-SYMPOSIUM
Mini-symposium 1
Cognitive control of behavior: Neural mechanisms
Organizer: Keiji Tanaka (Brain Sci. Inst., RIKEN, Japan)
Chairperson: Keiji Tanaka, Barry Richmond
Time: Nov. 10, 13:30 - 15:30
13:30 - 14:10
Dopamine dependent behavioral learning and neuronal plasticity related to reward schedules in monkey temporal cortex.
Barry Richmond (Lab. Neuropsychology, NIMH, USA
14:10 - 14:50
Cognitive and motivational control of behavior: roles of the prefrontal cortex
Masataka Watanabe, Tokyo Metropolitan Institute for Neuroscience, Japan
14:50 - 15:30
Roles of medial prefrontal cortex in goal-directed behavior
Keiji Tanaka, RIKEN Brain Science Institute, Japan
Mini-symposium 2
Sensory Information Processing
Organizer: Shigang He (Institute of Neuroscience, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China)
Time: Nov. 12, 10:30 - 12:30; 13:30 - 15:30; 15:40 - 17:40
The program of Mini-symposium 2 has not been decided, it will be announced a little later.
Neurobiology of Attention and Executive Control
Robert Desimone, McGovern Institute, MIT
Imaging circuit assembly in the developing zebrafish retina
Rachel Wong1, Leanne Godinho, Jeff Mumm and Eric Schroeter
Washington University School of Medicine, USA.
Retinal oscillatory synchronized discharges carry information essential for escape behaviour
Masao Tachibana, Hiroshi Ishikane, Mie Gangi, and Shoko Honda
Tokyo University, Japan
Application of current source density (CSD) analysis to isthmo-tectal projection of the frog
MATSUMOTO Nobuyoshi and HOSHINO Noriaki
Kyushu Institute of Technology, Japan.
Horace Barlow (Cambridge University, UK)
Bogdan Dreher (Sydney University, Australia), not confirmed yet
William Levick (Australia National University, Australia)
Richard Masland (Harvard University, USA)
Jack Pettigrew (University of Queensland, Australia), not confirmed yet
Yves Fregnac (CNRS, France), not confirmed yet
Hiromichi Sato (Osaka University, Japan)
Mini-symposium 3
Optical Approaches to the Nervous System
Organizers: Brian M. Salzberg (Univ. Pennsylvania, USA)
Time: Nov. 12, 13:30 - 15:30
Chairperson: Brian M. Salzberg, Tiande Shou
13:30 - 13:50
Activity-Dependent Depression of Excitability and Calcium Transients in the Neurohypophysis: “Stuttering Conduction” in a Neuronal Arbor
B. M. Salzberg1,2, P. Kosterin1, and M. Muschol1
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
13:50 - 14:10
ODORS ELICIT THREE DIFFERENT OSCILLATIONS IN THE TURTLE OLFACTORY BULB; ATTEMPTS TO USE PROTEIN VOLTAGE SENSORS IN MICE.
Lawrence B. Cohen, Dejan Vučinić, Efstratios K. Kosmidis, Bradley Baker, Matt Wachowiak, Christian von Hehn, Ying-Wan Lam, and Michal R. Zochowski, Yale University School of Medicine, and Marine Biological Laboratory, USA
14:10 - 14:30
Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptors in the Enteric Nervous System: An Optical Approach
Ana Lía Obaid1 and B. M. Salzberg1,2
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
14:30 - 14:50
Developmental organization of synaptic networks revealed by optical recording
Katsushige Sato, Yoko Momose-Sato and Kohtaro Kamino
Tokyo Medical and Dental University Graduate School and Faculty of Medicine, Japan
14:50 - 15:10
Neural representation of object images in the monkey inferotemporal cortex