The Association for Cephalopod Research ‘CephRes’ is a non-profit organization established in 2011 guided by the belief that promoting cephalopods has values for science, knowledge, culture, art and society.
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Fascinating cephalopods! Thanks @CephRes for a brilliant meeting. Hope I can visit Naples in real life some time in the not too distant future! #staysafe
This is the end of our virtual event CephRes2020. Thank you for following us during this week. Please keep following us for more updates in the following days.
#CephRes#CephRes2020
B. Hochner presented a talk entitled "Embodied organization of motor control in a soft-bodied animal – Octopus vulgaris"
Now, weare having the last talk for today "A journey around Cephalopod Research and possible future" by G. Fiorito
#CephRes2020#CephRes
We had an interesting talk "Get The F(ish) Out: octopuses punch during collaborative interspecific events" by E. Sampaio
Followed by "Experiments exploring the limits of cognition and observational learning in Octopus vulgaris using mechatronics and video enrichment" by W. Slany
We had a talk "Mapping location, projections, spatial arrangement & response properties of peripheral nociceptors" by R. Crook
Followed by "The evolution of intelligence in cephalopods" by J. Mather
Now we are having a talk entitled "Squid camouflage to substrate" by R. Nakajima
Our first session "From neural networks to behavior and viceversa" moderated by Lindy Holden-Dye.
The first talk was "Visual attack on the moving prey by cuttlefish" by J. Juin-Shain Wu.
Followed by "Mapping and understanding the function of RNA in Octopus brain" by G. Zolotarov.
P. Katz presented an outstanding lecture entitled "From giant brains with tiny neuros to tiny brains with giant neurons; the brains of nudibranchs"
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