
Kaltschmidt-Lab
@kaltschmidt_lab
Kaltschmidt Lab, Dept. of Neurosurgery, Stanford University. Research in spinal cord and ENS circuitry. Maintained by lab members. Retweets =/= endorsements!
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http://med.stanford.edu/kaltschmidt-lab.html 08-09-2019 15:48:07
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We are looking for talented postdocs to join our team at Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Stanford Medicine Stanford Neurosurgery! Join us to develop single cell sequencing- and imaging-based genomic tools to understand the cell communication across space and time! Please share with anyone interested!!




Building on the growing success of the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory meeting on 3D models and human brain development, I’m thrilled to announce an exciting new conference this December 2025: Assembloids and Complex Cell-Cell Interactions across Tissues and Organs. It’s an honor to co-organize this






Exciting paper on sensory neurons in the gut: Synaptic cell adhesion molecule Cdh6 identifies a class of sensory neurons with novel functions in colonic motility Congratulations to all authors! Honor to collaborate with Nick Spencer Huguenard Lab. doi.org/10.7554/eLife.…

Congratulations to winners of The Brain Prize 2025! Professors Michelle Monje🎗️ 🟦, Stanford Medicine and HHMI Investigator, and Frank Winkler, Heidelberg University Hospital, have pioneered the field of Cancer Neuroscience. They have revealed a profound connection between cancer and


🎙️ From Our Neurons to Yours is back! In our season opener, Erin Gibson Erin Gibson discusses the connection between circadian rhythms and neurodegeneration. Do sleep disruptions contribute to Alzheimer's disease, or are they an early sign? Listen now: neuroscience.stanford.edu/news/does-good…


Stanford Med researchers describe the gut-brain relationship and how it affects conditions from anxiety to long COVID to Parkinson’s. Kaltschmidt-Lab have designed 3D-printed synthetic mouse fecal pellets to quantify the gut's ability to move matter. scopeblog.stanford.edu/2025/03/06/gut…







A great reminder that the more we learn, the more the brain continues to surprise us! Thanks to ZucheroLab (Stanford Neurosurgery) for a great conversation!

Tomorrow, we have Laura Gwilliams Laura Gwilliams on From Our Neurons to Yours! She is an assistant professor of psychology and a faculty scholar at Wu Tsai Neuro and Stanford Data Science. Her research focuses on understanding how the human brain processes speech and language.