Residence France Name Daniel Choquet | Institutions CNRS and others Nationality French | |
Born 23 April 1962 (age 62) Paris, France ( 1962-04-23 ) Institution Centre national de la recherche scientifique |
Our brain this black box daniel choquet tedxuniversit debordeaux
Daniel Choquet (born 1962) is a French neuroscientist.
Contents
- Our brain this black box daniel choquet tedxuniversit debordeaux
- Daniel choquet des r cepteurs qui bougent norm ment bordeaux neurocampus
- Personal life and career
- Research
- Awards
- References
Daniel choquet des r cepteurs qui bougent norm ment bordeaux neurocampus
Personal life and career
Daniel Choquet is the son of the physicist Yvonne Choquet-Bruhat and the mathematician Gustave Choquet. He is the grandson of the physicist Georges Bruhat. He obtained his bachelor's degree in 1979, followed by a degree in bioengineering from École centrale Paris in 1984. He obtained his P.hD. in 1988 from Pierre and Marie Curie University and studied pharmacology at the Pasteur Institute. That year, he started working for the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS). From 1994 to 1996, he was a post-doctoral fellow at Duke University. The following year, in 1997, he was promoted to research director at the CNRS. He is the director of the Bordeaux Imaging Center and the Interdisciplinary Institute for Neuroscience. He was elected as a member of the French Academy of Sciences on November 30, 2010.
Research
Choquet is a biologist, focusing on nanoscopic imaging and the organization of receptors in neurons. His early research included work on the properties of ion channels of B lymphocytes. This research work earned him the CNRS Bronze medal in 1990. During his post-doc at Duke, he discovered that cells can respond and adapt to the mechanical properties of their environment.
Since 1996, he has researched the fundamental properties of the transmission of nerve impulses in the brain and developed new nanoscale imaging techniques. He discovered that receptors move in living neurons and that these movements in and out synapses participate to synaptic plasticity, a phenomenon thought to underlie learning and memory. Choquet's current work involves attempting to understand the role of receptor movements in neurodegenerative diseases. His recent research work has earned him the 2004 CEA Prize and the 2009 CNRS Silver medal.