News and Events
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This page highlights recent news about the achievements of our students and faculty; some of these stories have been reported in local and national news media.
We have also included timely news and information of particular interest to the Vision Science community at UC Berkeley.
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Faculty News: Profiles of Vision Science Faculty and their research
Student News: Updates on Graduate Student Awards and other achievements
| Dates |
News and Events |
| June 6-7, 2009 |
The Third Annual Conference on Translational Research will commemorate the 50th anniversary of the landmark Orinda Study—the first study leading to effective vision screening for children. The program will feature discussions on the etiology, prevention, and treatment of refractive error, as well as a poster session. This will be a must-attend event for the eye care professional.
See Conference 2009.
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| Dec. 19, 2008 |
Martin S. Banks, professor of optometry and vision science, has been elected a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the world's largest general scientific society. Banks was recognized for his work in elucidating the operating characteristics of human vision and its development.
See Banks AAAS News Story.
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| Fall 2008 |
New Faculty Member: Susana Chung, MScOptom, PhD
Susana Chung, an Associate Professor in Vision Sciences at the College of Optometry, University of Houston, has accepted a position with Berkeley Optometry. Dr. Chung uses rigorous psychophysical and imaging methods to study the capabilities of normal human subjects and patients with low vision. Patients with low vision due to AMD are unable to use their central vision to read, recognize faces or do other tasks that are critical to daily life. Therefore they have to use peripheral vision for these tasks. Her work represents rigorous, innovative research that is at the intersection of basic and clinical science. It has the capacity to inform clinicians, and her research is in turn informed and inspired by clinical problems. Her work has been widely published and extensively cited, and her research has been well funded by the National Eye Institute.
See Announcement
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| March 5, 2008 |
Featured Article in Nature: "Mind Reading with a Brain Scan"
Jack Gallant led a team of researchers in developing a method to "decode" brain activity and determine what a person is looking at. Gallant measured the brain activity of two team members (Kendrick Kay and Thomas Naselaris) while they were shown 1,750 different pictures. The team then selected 120 novel images that the subjects hadn't seen before and used the previous results to predict their brain responses and then match the actual brain response to their predictions. They were correct 72% of the time for one subject and 92% of the time with the other. On chance alone, they would have been right only 0.8% of the time.
"We're not mind-reading," explained Gallant. "We're not reconstructing images of what people see or think. We can't do that yet, although it should be possible in principle."
The next step is to interpret what a person is seeing without having to select from a set of known images. "That is in principle a much harder problem," says Gallant. "You'd need a very good model of the brain, a better measure of brain activity than fMRI, and a better understanding of how the brain processes things like shapes and colours seen in complex everyday images."
"But already," he added, "this research makes clear that there's a huge amount of information — way more than we have expected — that we can dig out of fMRI signals to get a better understanding of brain function. And that is very important, both in terms of pure science and in terms of how this information might eventually lead to all kinds of applications in the future."
For more information, see Nature.
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| Sept. 16-19, 2007 |
Berkeley Hosts Annual Meeting, Optical Society of America: The OSA Fall Vision Meeting is a small, low-cost, high-quality annual scientific conference. It generally co-locates with the OSA Frontiers in Optics meeting.
The Fall Vision Meeting focuses on human vision. It is broadly divided into four categories: Vision, Color, Applications, and Clinical. This year, we are hosting an additional day dedicated to the relationship between vision science and computer graphics and games.
For more information, see OSA Meeting.
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| June 20, 2007 |
New Faculty Member: Lu Chen, MD, an instructor in the Department of Ophthalmology, Harvard Medical School, and an investigator at the Schepens Eye Institute, an affiliate of Harvard University, has accepted a position with our Vision Science and Optometry faculty, effective fall 2007.
See Dean's Announcement.
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| April 26, 2007 |
Sarlo Award: Professor Christine Wildsoet has received the Sarlo Distinguished Faculty Mentoring Award for 2007. This newly created award, given by the Graduate Council of the University of California, has been made possible by a generous gift from the Sarlo Foundation, which supports the promotion of excellence in teaching.
Recipients must embody attributes of high-quality mentoring, such as those described in the Best Practices for Faculty Mentoring of Graduate Students adopted by the Graduate Council. Nominations may come from department chairs, faculty colleagues, or former students of the nominee with whom they have received their doctorates.
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| April 26, 2007 |
New Faculty Member: Karsten Gronert, PhD, Associate Professor of Pharmacology at New York Medical College, Valhalla, has accepted a position with our Vision Science and Optometry faculty, effective Fall 2007.
See Dean's Announcement.
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| Oct. 31, 2006 |
Photoswitches Could Restore Sight to Blind Retinas: Vision Science faculty members Richard Kramer and John Flannery join others at UC Berkeley and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in research aimed at putting light-sensitive switches in the body's cells that can be flipped on and off as easily as a remote control operates a TV. One major goal of the UC Berkeley-LBNL Nanomedicine Development Center is to equip cells of the retina with photoswitches, essentially making blind nerve cells see, restoring light sensitivity in people with degenerative blindness such as macular degeneration.
See UC Berkeley News Press Release.
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| May 2006 |
Theodore E. Cohn, professor of vision science, optometry, and bioengineering, and a leading researcher in signal detection theory and its real-world applications, died on May 25 after a three-year battle with lymphoma. A Memorial Symposium is scheduled for January 26, 2006 (details to follow).
See UC Berkeley News Press Release.
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| April 2006 |
Featured article in Development: Professor Xiaohua Gong's most recent paper — describing a crucial role for the protein connexin in lens development and cataract formation — is the cover story in the journal Development, 2006, vol. 133(10). |
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