
UW LOCI (Eliceiri lab)
@uwmadisonloci
Laboratory for Optical and Computational Instrumentation (Eliceiri group) at UW-Madison
ID: 810863765474394112
http://loci.wisc.edu 19-12-2016 15:06:01
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1,1K Following



I'm so excited to finally share the news that I was selected as a 2023 Simons Collab on Plasticity and the Aging Brain Transition to Independence fellow! This award is truly life changing for me as it will provide funds for my future lab, and support to secure a faculty position. I'm so grateful!

This was a fun paper to work on, we screened random human serum samples from DaneCounty, Wisconsin Badgers for COVID-19 antibodies using our #biosensors and identified population immune profiles, lo and behold, our findings matched WI health department data! pubs.rsc.org/en/content/art…




Led by Morgridge investigator Kevin Eliceiri, BioImaging North America is dedicated to helping biomedical imaging scientists better understand one another and the #bioimaging technologies they develop and utilize. 🔬 morgridge.org/story/morgridg…

We're thankful to Morgridge Institute for being the institutional home for #BINA! Their support has been essential for our growth and success since 2020 🤝🔬 We're also extremely grateful to CZI Science for their continued support of #BINA with our grant renewal in 2023! 🎉


Thank you to organisers Beth Cimini Beth Cimini Lab 🔬💻 📊 and Kevin Eliceiri UW LOCI (Eliceiri lab) and everyone who joined us at our 'Effectively Communicating Bioimage Analysis' Workshop. biologists.com/workshops/febr… #BiologistsWorkshops




Zebrafish are an ideal model organism for biomedical research in areas like #Alzheimers disease. Postdoc Liz Haynes, PhD 🐟🔬 shared this image of a #zebrafish brain, used to observe changes in microglia to better understand their role in aging and disease. 🧠 #MicroscopyMonday



Thrilled that Dr. Liz Haynes Liz Haynes, PhD 🐟🔬 will join the Cell and Regenerative Biology UW-Madison CRB (beginning July, 2025). Dr. Haynes will continue her independent work on microglial behavior in development, aging and neurodegenerative disease. Very excited to have Liz join us!



