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Marie-soleil beaudoin

Professor
Department of Physiology and Biophysics
Dalhousie University
Canada

Biography

Dr. MARIE-SOLEIL BEAUDOIN is affiliated to Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Dalhousie University. Dr. MARIE-SOLEIL BEAUDOIN is currently providing services as Professor, . Dr. MARIE-SOLEIL BEAUDOIN has authored I145and co-authored multiple peer-reviewed scientific papers and presented works at many national and International conferences. Dr. MARIE-SOLEIL BEAUDOIN contributions have acclaimed recognition from honourable subject experts around the world. Dr. MARIE-SOLEIL BEAUDOIN is actively associated with different societies and academies. Dr. MARIE-SOLEIL BEAUDOIN academic career is decorated with several reputed awards and funding. Dr. MARIE-SOLEIL BEAUDOIN research interests include specialized in the bidirectional neural signaling between photoreceptors and horizontal cells, showing that many critical features of these synaptic interactions, which underlie the formation of center-surround antagonistic receptive fields, involve ion channel modulation by neural messengers. Dr. MARIE-SOLEIL BEAUDOIN is affiliated to Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Dalhousie University. Dr. MARIE-SOLEIL BEAUDOIN is currently providing services as Professor, . Dr. MARIE-SOLEIL BEAUDOIN has authored I145and co-authored multiple peer-reviewed scientific papers and presented works at many national and International conferences. Dr. MARIE-SOLEIL BEAUDOIN contributions have acclaimed recognition from honourable subject experts around the world. Dr. MARIE-SOLEIL BEAUDOIN is actively associated with different societies and academies. Dr. MARIE-SOLEIL BEAUDOIN academic career is decorated with several reputed awards and funding. Dr. MARIE-SOLEIL BEAUDOIN research interests include specialized in the bidirectional neural signaling between photoreceptors and horizontal cells, showing that many critical features of these synaptic interactions, which underlie the formation of center-surround antagonistic receptive fields, involve ion channel modulation by neural messengers.

Research Interest

specialized in the bidirectional neural signaling between photoreceptors and horizontal cells, showing that many critical features of these synaptic interactions, which underlie the formation of center-surround antagonistic receptive fields, involve ion channel modulation by neural messengers

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