- published: 18 Mar 2013
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Eric Richard Kandel (German: [ˈkandəl]; born November 7, 1929) is an American neuropsychiatrist. He was a recipient of the 2000 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his research on the physiological basis of memory storage in neurons. He shared the prize with Arvid Carlsson and Paul Greengard.
Kandel, who had studied psychoanalysis, wanted to understand how memory works. His mentor, Harry Grundfest, said, “If you want to understand the brain you’re going to have to take a reductionist approach, one cell at a time.” So Kandel studied the neural system of the sea slug Aplysia californica, which has large nerve cells amenable to experimental manipulation and is a member of the simplest group of animals known to be capable of learning.
Kandel is a professor of biochemistry and biophysics at the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University. He is a Senior Investigator in the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. He was also the founding director of the Center for Neurobiology and Behavior, which is now the Department of Neuroscience at Columbia University. Kandel's popularized account chronicling his life and research, In Search of Memory: The Emergence of a New Science of Mind, was awarded the 2006 Los Angeles Times Book Award for Science and Technology.
I Am may refer to:
Kandel is a town in the district of Germersheim, in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It is situated near the border with France, approx. 18 km north-west of Karlsruhe, and 15 km south-east of Landau.
Kandel is twinned with the small Lancashire town of Whitworth
Kandel is the seat of the Verbandsgemeinde ("collective municipality") Kandel.
St Georg
St Georg
The Dampfnudeltor
The Dampfnudeltor
House in Kandel
House in Kandel
Station
Station
Star: Celestial goodness, noble person, leadership, excellence.
Sword: Justice and military honour.
Sky-Blue (Azure): Truth and loyalty.
The given name Eric, Erik, or Erick is derived from the Old Norse name Eiríkr (or Eríkr in Eastern Scandinavia due to monophthongization). The first element, ei- is derived either from the older Proto-Norse *aina(z) meaning "one" or "alone" or from Proto-Norse *aiwa(z) meaning "ever" or "eternal". The second element -ríkr derives either from *rík(a)z meaning "ruler" or "prince" (cf. Gothic reiks) or from an even older Proto-Germanic *ríkiaz which meant "powerful" and "rich". The name is thus usually taken to mean "one ruler", "autocrat", "eternal ruler" or "ever powerful", "warrior", and "government".
The most common spelling in Scandinavia is Erik. In Norway, another form of the name (which has kept the Old Norse diphthong) Eirik is also commonly used. In Finland, the form Erkki is also used. The modern Icelandic version is Eiríkur, while the modern Faroese version is Eirikur. Éric [eʁik] is used in French, and in Germany Eric, Erik and Erich are used.
Although the name was in use in Anglo-Saxon England, its use was reinforced by Scandinavian settlers arriving before the Norman Invasion. It was an uncommon name in England until the Middle Ages, when it gained popularity, and finally became a common name in the 19th century. This was partly because of the publishing of the novel Eric, or, Little by Little by Frederick William Farrar in 1858.
Alan Alda (born Alphonso Joseph D'Abruzzo; January 28, 1936) is an American actor, director, screenwriter, and author. A six-time Emmy Award and Golden Globe Award winner, he is best known for his starring roles as Captain Hawkeye Pierce in the TV series M*A*S*H and Arnold Vinick in The West Wing, and his supporting role in the 2004 film The Aviator as U.S. Senator Owen Brewster, for which he was nominated for an Academy Award. For 14 years, he served as the host of Scientific American Frontiers, a television show that explored cutting-edge advances in science and technology. He is currently a Visiting Professor at Stony Brook University and a founder and member of the advisory board of the university's Alan Alda Center for Communicating Science and the Future of Life Institute. He serves on the board of the World Science Festival and is a judge for Math-O-Vision.
Alda was born Alphonso Joseph D'Abruzzo on January 28, 1936, in New York City, and had a peripatetic childhood, as his parents traveled around the United States in support of his father's job as a performer in burlesque theatres. His father, Robert Alda (born Alphonso Giuseppe Giovanni Roberto D'Abruzzo), was an actor and singer, and his mother, Joan Browne, was a homemaker and former beauty pageant winner. His father was of Italian descent and his mother was of Irish ancestry. His adopted surname, "Alda," is a portmanteau of ALphonso and D'Abruzzo.
Dr. Eric Kandel describes the "aha phenomenon" and speculates on ways that humans and groups can think more creatively. Transcript-- Leonardo, for one, spent a fair amount of time dissecting human cadavers because he wanted to know how the various bones related to one each other and how the muscles related to the bones. So he wanted to have a realistic understanding of the human anatomy because he was depicting real live people sitting, gesturing, walking, and he wanted to get this as absolutely correct as possible. In order to understand how the body functions, we need to know something about the anatomy of the body, it's sort of obvious.The more we want to depict the mind, the more it helps to understand the mind, and one way to understand the mind is to understanding the brain. So it ...
Stony Brook University celebrates 20 Years of Swartz Mind Brain programs with a special event featuring Alan Alda, Eric Kandel and Jim Simons.
Kandel's latest book is "Reductionism in Art and Brain Science: Bridging the Two Cultures" (https://goo.gl/z9xUXK). Read more at BigThink.com: http://bigthink.com/videos/eric-kandel-on-memory-loss-lifelong-learning-and-brain-health Follow Big Think here: YouTube: http://goo.gl/CPTsV5 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BigThinkdotcom Twitter: https://twitter.com/bigthink Transcript - There are two major forms of learning: implicit or explicit or declarative and non-declarative. The simple form of learning, which I studied in Aplysia, which holds true for all invertebrate animals, is learning of perceptual and motor skills. More complex learning involves the hippocampus requires conches participation and it involves learning about people, places and objects. So two different systems, imp...
Nobel Prize-winning neurobiologist Eric Kandel shares the emotional and intellectual trajectory that shaped his interest in researching the biology of memory. More: Society for Neuroscience archival interview with American neuroscientist and Nobel Prize winner Eric R. Nobel Prize-winning neurobiologist Eric Kandel shares the emotional and intellectual trajectory that shaped his interest in researching the biology of memory.
On this week's episode of Think Again - a Big Think podcast, Nobel Laureate neuroscientist Eric Kandel and host Jason Gots discuss abstract art, memory, identity, and the nature of evil. Each week on Think Again, we surprise smart people you may have heard of with short clips from Big Think's interview archives on every imaginable subject. These conversations could, and do, go anywhere. http://bigthink.com/think-again-podca... Come talk to us on Twitter: @bigthinkagain Follow Big Think here: YouTube: http://goo.gl/CPTsV5 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BigThinkdotcom Twitter: https://twitter.com/bigthink
A Conversation With Nobel Laureate Eric Kandel, Who Continues to Look Forward at 80. More at http://news.columbia.edu/oncampus/1787 0:04 - From Clinician to Researcher 3:26 - Hitting a Triple at NIH 6:53 - CREB - The Biology of Memory 9:10 - This is a Fantastic Place 11:58 - Bringing Science and Humanities Together 16:57 - Columbia's Contribution to Science 19:02 - Still Looking Forward at 80
Exklusives Interview mit Eric Kandel zum Film "Auf die suche nach dem Gedächtnis"
Eric R. Kandel, Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator, examines whether the brain's two major memory systems, implicit and explicit, have any common features. Implicit and explicit memory both have a short-term component lasting minutes, such as remembering the telephone number you just looked up, and a long-term component that lasts days, weeks, or a lifetime, such as remembering your mother's birthday. Short-term memory is mediated by modifications of existing proteins, leading to temporary changes in the strength of communication between nerve cells. In contrast, long-term memory involves alterations of gene expression, synthesis of new proteins and growth of new synaptic connections. Source: ResearchChannel Uploaded for educational purposes only.
"Fast alles, was wir über das Gedächtnis wissen, hängt mit Ihrem Namen zusammen" - so begrüßt Arvid Leyh seinen Interviewpartner Eric Kandel, US-Nobelpreisträger österreichischer Herkunft und Holocaust-Überlebender. Kandel berichtet über seinen Weg vom Studium der Geschichte in Harvard über die Arbeit als Psychiater bis hin zu seinen Entdeckungen in der Hirnforschung. Er spricht über das Gedächtnis in der Petrischale, seine Kritik am Gründervater der Psychoanalyse und über die Aussichten, ob "kleine rote Pillen" eines Tages unser Gedächtnis verbessern können. Ein faszinierendes Gesprächüber Geist und Gehirn, Gedächtnis und Identität und über den Lebensweg eines großen Wissenschaftlers. Das 34-minütige Gespräch führte Arvid Leyh 2009 anlässlich der Verleihung des ersten Eric Kandel Young ...
TEDx Met: Icons -- Eric Kandel October 19, 2013 Eric R. Kandel, MD, is a professor at Columbia University, the Fred Kavli Professor and Director, Kavli Institute for Brain Science, and a senior investigator at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. A graduate of Harvard College and the NYU School of Medicine, Kandel trained in neurobiology at the National Institutes of Health and in psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. In 2000, he won the Nobel Prize for Physiology/Medicine. Kandel's research has been concerned with the molecular mechanisms of memory storage in Aplysia (sea slugs) and mice. More recently, he has studied animal models in mice of memory disorders and mental illness. In 2012, Kandel wrote The Age of Insight: The Quest to Understand the Unconscious in Art, Mind, and Brain, fr...
Host: Joseph LeDoux Director: Alexis Gambis Producer: Rose Meacham Camera: Alejandro Meija Editor: Léo Ghysels Administrative Support: Will Chang Production Assistants: Danabelle Ignes, Janna Kyllastinen, Rodolfo Fermin "Map of Your Mind" is from the 2013 EP All in Our Minds by The Amygdaloids. Musicians on the recording: Joseph LeDoux, Amanda Thorpe, Daniela Schiller, Jeff Peretz Music video produced, directed, and edited by Noah Hutton http://www.noahhutton.com/ Supported by Imagine Science Films and The Emotional Brain Institute http://www.imaginesciencefilms.org http://www.nyu.edu/ebi/
Eric Kandel, winner of the 2000 Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine for his work on signal transduction in the nervous system, chats about the ever-changing field of neuroscience, funding, his students, and what he hopes science will accomplish.
The third investigation into 'What is Art for?' at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, 12 May 2016. Presenting his case as part of the investigation, Eric Kandel was awarded a Nobel Prize in 2000 for his research on the physiological basis of memory storage in neurons. His book Reductionism in Art and Brain Sciences: Bridging the Two Cultures, on the processes of the brain and Abstract Expressionism, is about to be published.
Center on the Developing Child at Harvard University Distinguished Scholars Lecture Series Eric R. Kandel, M.D. Winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, 2000 “The Molecular Biology of Memory Storage and the Biological Basis of Individuality” February 8, 2010 Co-Sponsors: Faculty of Arts and Sciences and Harvard Medical School For more information about the Center on the Developing Child, please visit http://developingchild.harvard.edu
The 2014 APA Annual Meeting opened with a lively discussion about Science, Psychiatry and the Media featuring APA President Jeffrey Lieberman, M.D., Nobel Laureate and psychiatrist Eric Kandel, M.D., and Emmy Award-winning actor Alan Alda.
www.YHWHproject.org See more videos: See more videos: https://www.danstevers.com Spanish Version: https://vimeo.com/146515196 Portuguese Version: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_8IBkRoUVCM Words by Sh’maya / www.shmaya.co.uk ANIMATORS Josh Studebaker / www.joshstudebaker.com Anthony Madlangbayan / www.madantdesign.com Jay Kee / www.jaykeeart.com Blake Fawley / www.blakefawley.com Wes Kandel / www.weskandel.com Eric Demeusy / www.ericdemeusy.com Dan Stevers / www.danstevers.com Paul Slemmer / www.veracitycolab.com Handel Eugene / www.handeleugene.com David Stanfield / www.davidstanfieldis.me Ronald Rabideau / www.ronaldrabideau.com Matthew Borrett / www.matthewborrett.com MUSIC / SOUND Music / Ryan Taubert / www.ryantaubert.com Sound Design & Mix / Jon Wang / www.musicfarm.co WEB D...
Der Nobelpreisträger Eric Kandel über Erinnerungen in der Petrischale, den hirnbasierten Geist, das Dritte Reich, die Gedächtnispille und sein Leben nach dem Nobelpreis. In Zürich sprach er mit Arvid Leyh vor seiner Rede zur Vergabe des ersten Eric Kandel Young Neuroscientists Prize der Gemeinnützigen Hertie Stiftung. Der Link zu Braincast: brainlogs.de/blogs/blog/braincast
Professor Eric Kandel who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Medecine held a speech at the Graz Reunion in New York.
Hustled together in a quick weekend in early 2013, this animation test was our first character bit in C4D. Wicked Wes Kandel modeled the crazy robo, Extreme Eric Demuessey built the world and animated the camera, and I rigged and animated the robo plus the particle effects. The Monster Miguel Lee directed the whole thing. Who knew you could hand-draw VFX in Photoshop?!?
Dr. Eric Kandel describes the "aha phenomenon" and speculates on ways that humans and groups can think more creatively. Transcript-- Leonardo, for one, spent a fair amount of time dissecting human cadavers because he wanted to know how the various bones related to one each other and how the muscles related to the bones. So he wanted to have a realistic understanding of the human anatomy because he was depicting real live people sitting, gesturing, walking, and he wanted to get this as absolutely correct as possible. In order to understand how the body functions, we need to know something about the anatomy of the body, it's sort of obvious.The more we want to depict the mind, the more it helps to understand the mind, and one way to understand the mind is to understanding the brain. So it ...
Stony Brook University celebrates 20 Years of Swartz Mind Brain programs with a special event featuring Alan Alda, Eric Kandel and Jim Simons.
Kandel's latest book is "Reductionism in Art and Brain Science: Bridging the Two Cultures" (https://goo.gl/z9xUXK). Read more at BigThink.com: http://bigthink.com/videos/eric-kandel-on-memory-loss-lifelong-learning-and-brain-health Follow Big Think here: YouTube: http://goo.gl/CPTsV5 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BigThinkdotcom Twitter: https://twitter.com/bigthink Transcript - There are two major forms of learning: implicit or explicit or declarative and non-declarative. The simple form of learning, which I studied in Aplysia, which holds true for all invertebrate animals, is learning of perceptual and motor skills. More complex learning involves the hippocampus requires conches participation and it involves learning about people, places and objects. So two different systems, imp...
Nobel Prize-winning neurobiologist Eric Kandel shares the emotional and intellectual trajectory that shaped his interest in researching the biology of memory. More: Society for Neuroscience archival interview with American neuroscientist and Nobel Prize winner Eric R. Nobel Prize-winning neurobiologist Eric Kandel shares the emotional and intellectual trajectory that shaped his interest in researching the biology of memory.
On this week's episode of Think Again - a Big Think podcast, Nobel Laureate neuroscientist Eric Kandel and host Jason Gots discuss abstract art, memory, identity, and the nature of evil. Each week on Think Again, we surprise smart people you may have heard of with short clips from Big Think's interview archives on every imaginable subject. These conversations could, and do, go anywhere. http://bigthink.com/think-again-podca... Come talk to us on Twitter: @bigthinkagain Follow Big Think here: YouTube: http://goo.gl/CPTsV5 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BigThinkdotcom Twitter: https://twitter.com/bigthink
A Conversation With Nobel Laureate Eric Kandel, Who Continues to Look Forward at 80. More at http://news.columbia.edu/oncampus/1787 0:04 - From Clinician to Researcher 3:26 - Hitting a Triple at NIH 6:53 - CREB - The Biology of Memory 9:10 - This is a Fantastic Place 11:58 - Bringing Science and Humanities Together 16:57 - Columbia's Contribution to Science 19:02 - Still Looking Forward at 80
Exklusives Interview mit Eric Kandel zum Film "Auf die suche nach dem Gedächtnis"
Eric R. Kandel, Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator, examines whether the brain's two major memory systems, implicit and explicit, have any common features. Implicit and explicit memory both have a short-term component lasting minutes, such as remembering the telephone number you just looked up, and a long-term component that lasts days, weeks, or a lifetime, such as remembering your mother's birthday. Short-term memory is mediated by modifications of existing proteins, leading to temporary changes in the strength of communication between nerve cells. In contrast, long-term memory involves alterations of gene expression, synthesis of new proteins and growth of new synaptic connections. Source: ResearchChannel Uploaded for educational purposes only.
"Fast alles, was wir über das Gedächtnis wissen, hängt mit Ihrem Namen zusammen" - so begrüßt Arvid Leyh seinen Interviewpartner Eric Kandel, US-Nobelpreisträger österreichischer Herkunft und Holocaust-Überlebender. Kandel berichtet über seinen Weg vom Studium der Geschichte in Harvard über die Arbeit als Psychiater bis hin zu seinen Entdeckungen in der Hirnforschung. Er spricht über das Gedächtnis in der Petrischale, seine Kritik am Gründervater der Psychoanalyse und über die Aussichten, ob "kleine rote Pillen" eines Tages unser Gedächtnis verbessern können. Ein faszinierendes Gesprächüber Geist und Gehirn, Gedächtnis und Identität und über den Lebensweg eines großen Wissenschaftlers. Das 34-minütige Gespräch führte Arvid Leyh 2009 anlässlich der Verleihung des ersten Eric Kandel Young ...
TEDx Met: Icons -- Eric Kandel October 19, 2013 Eric R. Kandel, MD, is a professor at Columbia University, the Fred Kavli Professor and Director, Kavli Institute for Brain Science, and a senior investigator at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. A graduate of Harvard College and the NYU School of Medicine, Kandel trained in neurobiology at the National Institutes of Health and in psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. In 2000, he won the Nobel Prize for Physiology/Medicine. Kandel's research has been concerned with the molecular mechanisms of memory storage in Aplysia (sea slugs) and mice. More recently, he has studied animal models in mice of memory disorders and mental illness. In 2012, Kandel wrote The Age of Insight: The Quest to Understand the Unconscious in Art, Mind, and Brain, fr...
Host: Joseph LeDoux Director: Alexis Gambis Producer: Rose Meacham Camera: Alejandro Meija Editor: Léo Ghysels Administrative Support: Will Chang Production Assistants: Danabelle Ignes, Janna Kyllastinen, Rodolfo Fermin "Map of Your Mind" is from the 2013 EP All in Our Minds by The Amygdaloids. Musicians on the recording: Joseph LeDoux, Amanda Thorpe, Daniela Schiller, Jeff Peretz Music video produced, directed, and edited by Noah Hutton http://www.noahhutton.com/ Supported by Imagine Science Films and The Emotional Brain Institute http://www.imaginesciencefilms.org http://www.nyu.edu/ebi/
Eric Kandel, winner of the 2000 Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine for his work on signal transduction in the nervous system, chats about the ever-changing field of neuroscience, funding, his students, and what he hopes science will accomplish.
The third investigation into 'What is Art for?' at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, 12 May 2016. Presenting his case as part of the investigation, Eric Kandel was awarded a Nobel Prize in 2000 for his research on the physiological basis of memory storage in neurons. His book Reductionism in Art and Brain Sciences: Bridging the Two Cultures, on the processes of the brain and Abstract Expressionism, is about to be published.
Center on the Developing Child at Harvard University Distinguished Scholars Lecture Series Eric R. Kandel, M.D. Winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, 2000 “The Molecular Biology of Memory Storage and the Biological Basis of Individuality” February 8, 2010 Co-Sponsors: Faculty of Arts and Sciences and Harvard Medical School For more information about the Center on the Developing Child, please visit http://developingchild.harvard.edu
The 2014 APA Annual Meeting opened with a lively discussion about Science, Psychiatry and the Media featuring APA President Jeffrey Lieberman, M.D., Nobel Laureate and psychiatrist Eric Kandel, M.D., and Emmy Award-winning actor Alan Alda.
www.YHWHproject.org See more videos: See more videos: https://www.danstevers.com Spanish Version: https://vimeo.com/146515196 Portuguese Version: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_8IBkRoUVCM Words by Sh’maya / www.shmaya.co.uk ANIMATORS Josh Studebaker / www.joshstudebaker.com Anthony Madlangbayan / www.madantdesign.com Jay Kee / www.jaykeeart.com Blake Fawley / www.blakefawley.com Wes Kandel / www.weskandel.com Eric Demeusy / www.ericdemeusy.com Dan Stevers / www.danstevers.com Paul Slemmer / www.veracitycolab.com Handel Eugene / www.handeleugene.com David Stanfield / www.davidstanfieldis.me Ronald Rabideau / www.ronaldrabideau.com Matthew Borrett / www.matthewborrett.com MUSIC / SOUND Music / Ryan Taubert / www.ryantaubert.com Sound Design & Mix / Jon Wang / www.musicfarm.co WEB D...
Der Nobelpreisträger Eric Kandel über Erinnerungen in der Petrischale, den hirnbasierten Geist, das Dritte Reich, die Gedächtnispille und sein Leben nach dem Nobelpreis. In Zürich sprach er mit Arvid Leyh vor seiner Rede zur Vergabe des ersten Eric Kandel Young Neuroscientists Prize der Gemeinnützigen Hertie Stiftung. Der Link zu Braincast: brainlogs.de/blogs/blog/braincast
Professor Eric Kandel who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Medecine held a speech at the Graz Reunion in New York.
Hustled together in a quick weekend in early 2013, this animation test was our first character bit in C4D. Wicked Wes Kandel modeled the crazy robo, Extreme Eric Demuessey built the world and animated the camera, and I rigged and animated the robo plus the particle effects. The Monster Miguel Lee directed the whole thing. Who knew you could hand-draw VFX in Photoshop?!?
Eric Kandel, MD presenting "We Are What We Remember: Memory and Age Related Memory Disorders" at Nobel Conference 51
Denise Kandel, PhD and Eric Kandel, MD presenting "Molecular Basis for the Gateway Hypothesis" at Nobel Conference 51
Nobel Prize-winning neurobiologist Eric Kandel shares the emotional and intellectual trajectory that shaped his interest in researching the biology of memory.
Auftritt der Big Band des Eric-Kandel-Gymnasiums auf dem Ahrensburger Stadtfest.
First of the yearly "Harnack Lectures" in Berlin-Dahlem: Nobel laureate Eric Kandel talks about "Art and Science in Vienna 1900".