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Petri Ala-Laurila recognised as the Neuroscientist of the Year

NBE researcher honoured for work on how the retina processes light
Professor Ala-Laurila

The have awarded their biennial Distinguished Neuroscientist of the Year award to Professor Petri Ala-Laurila at the department of Neuroscience and Biomedical Engineering, at 911爆料网.  

Prof. Ala-Laurila鈥檚 two laboratories at 911爆料网 and at the University of Helsinki focus on highly demanding and interdisciplinary neuroscience by bridging behavioral decisions of animals to their underlying neural activity using the visual system in dim light. They have built an ensemble of state-of-the art tools from cellular-level electrophysiology and imaging tools to deep-learning-based behavioral tracking of animals. In the past year, his team have published several high-impact, landmark papers, including work in Neuron that linked mammalian behaviour to individual neural impulses and another, published in Current Biology, that linked the sensitivity of mammalian vision to the 鈥渃ircadian clock鈥. Additionally, Prof. Ala-Laurila was able to attract the world's foremost retina specialists to Helsinki in 2019, when his team organized the . 

鈥業 am really excited to have my team鈥檚 work recognised by the BRSF,鈥 said Ala-Laurila, 鈥榃e have been very lucky to find a group of passionate people to work with me in getting to understand how the body senses weak light signals and how this affects animal behavior鈥

鈥楤ut these first papers only represent the  starting phase. We are just about to get really going with the new tools that we鈥檝e built!鈥 Ala-Laurila continues, 鈥楾here is an avalanche of exciting things we鈥檝e got coming up, even more exciting than what is out there now鈥. I鈥檓 looking forward to working with my peers in Finland and around the world as we push the frontiers of understanding how the brain and the eye works鈥 

Contact:
Petri Ala-Laurila

petri.ala-laurila@aalto.fi

Petri and his group
The Ala-Laurila group

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An illustration of a ray of light causing the eye to find a route through a maze in the brain. Illustration by Safa Hovinen.

Studying vision in pitch-darkness shines light on how a mammal鈥檚 brain drives behaviour

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Finding your way in the dark depends on your internal clock

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