TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
93Total items
50Seminars
40ePosters
3Conferences

Latest

SeminarNeuroscience

Untitled Seminar

Dr. Jasper Poort
University of Cambridge, UK
May 13, 2026
SeminarNeuroscience

Honorary Lecture 2026

Glenda Halliday & Maria Grazia Spillantini
University of Sydney Resp. University of Cambridge
Feb 27, 2026
SeminarNeuroscience

sensorimotor control, mouvement, touch, EEG

Marieva Vlachou
Institut des Sciences du Mouvement Etienne Jules Marey, Aix-Marseille Université/CNRS, France
Dec 19, 2025

Traditionally, touch is associated with exteroception and is rarely considered a relevant sensory cue for controlling movements in space, unlike vision. We developed a technique to isolate and measure tactile involvement in controlling sliding finger movements over a surface. Young adults traced a 2D shape with their index finger under direct or mirror-reversed visual feedback to create a conflict between visual and somatosensory inputs. In this context, increased reliance on somatosensory input compromises movement accuracy. Based on the hypothesis that tactile cues contribute to guiding hand movements when in contact with a surface, we predicted poorer performance when the participants traced with their bare finger compared to when their tactile sensation was dampened by a smooth, rigid finger splint. The results supported this prediction. EEG source analyses revealed smaller current in the source-localized somatosensory cortex during sensory conflict when the finger directly touched the surface. This finding supports the hypothesis that, in response to mirror-reversed visual feedback, the central nervous system selectively gated task-irrelevant somatosensory inputs, thereby mitigating, though not entirely resolving, the visuo-somatosensory conflict. Together, our results emphasize touch’s involvement in movement control over a surface, challenging the notion that vision predominantly governs goal-directed hand or finger movements.

SeminarNeuroscience

Consciousness at the edge of chaos

Martin Monti
University of California Los Angeles
Dec 13, 2025

Over the last 20 years, neuroimaging and electrophysiology techniques have become central to understanding the mechanisms that accompany loss and recovery of consciousness. Much of this research is performed in the context of healthy individuals with neurotypical brain dynamics. Yet, a true understanding of how consciousness emerges from the joint action of neurons has to account for how severely pathological brains, often showing phenotypes typical of unconsciousness, can nonetheless generate a subjective viewpoint. In this presentation, I will start from the context of Disorders of Consciousness and will discuss recent work aimed at finding generalizable signatures of consciousness that are reliable across a spectrum of brain electrophysiological phenotypes focusing in particular on the notion of edge-of-chaos criticality.

SeminarNeuroscience

Computational Mechanisms of Predictive Processing in Brains and Machines

Dr. Antonino Greco
Hertie Institute for Clinical Brain Research, Germany
Dec 10, 2025

Predictive processing offers a unifying view of neural computation, proposing that brains continuously anticipate sensory input and update internal models based on prediction errors. In this talk, I will present converging evidence for the computational mechanisms underlying this framework across human neuroscience and deep neural networks. I will begin with recent work showing that large-scale distributed prediction-error encoding in the human brain directly predicts how sensory representations reorganize through predictive learning. I will then turn to PredNet, a popular predictive coding inspired deep network that has been widely used to model real-world biological vision systems. Using dynamic stimuli generated with our Spatiotemporal Style Transfer algorithm, we demonstrate that PredNet relies primarily on low-level spatiotemporal structure and remains insensitive to high-level content, revealing limits in its generalization capacity. Finally, I will discuss new recurrent vision models that integrate top-down feedback connections with intrinsic neural variability, uncovering a dual mechanism for robust sensory coding in which neural variability decorrelates unit responses, while top-down feedback stabilizes network dynamics. Together, these results outline how prediction error signaling and top-down feedback pathways shape adaptive sensory processing in biological and artificial systems.

SeminarNeuroscience

Developmental emergence of personality

Bassem Hassan
Paris Brain Institute, ICM, France
Dec 10, 2025

The Nature versus Nurture debate has generally been considered from the lens of genome versus experience dichotomy and has dominated our thinking about behavioral individuality and personality traits. In contrast, the role of nonheritable noise during brain development in behavioral variation is understudied. Using the Drosophila melanogaster visual system, I will discuss our efforts to dissect how individuality in circuit wiring emerges during development, and how that helps generate individual behavioral variation.

SeminarNeuroscience

Top-down control of neocortical threat memory

Prof. Dr. Johannes Letzkus
Universität Freiburg, Germany
Nov 12, 2025

Accurate perception of the environment is a constructive process that requires integration of external bottom-up sensory signals with internally-generated top-down information reflecting past experiences and current aims. Decades of work have elucidated how sensory neocortex processes physical stimulus features. In contrast, examining how memory-related-top-down information is encoded and integrated with bottom-up signals has long been challenging. Here, I will discuss our recent work pinpointing the outermost layer 1 of neocortex as a central hotspot for processing of experience-dependent top-down information threat during perception, one of the most fundamentally important forms of sensation.

SeminarNeuroscience

Organization of thalamic networks and mechanisms of dysfunction in schizophrenia and autism

Vasileios Zikopoulos
Boston University
Nov 3, 2025

Thalamic networks, at the core of thalamocortical and thalamosubcortical communications, underlie processes of perception, attention, memory, emotions, and the sleep-wake cycle, and are disrupted in mental disorders, including schizophrenia and autism. However, the underlying mechanisms of pathology are unknown. I will present novel evidence on key organizational principles, structural, and molecular features of thalamocortical networks, as well as critical thalamic pathway interactions that are likely affected in disorders. This data can facilitate modeling typical and abnormal brain function and can provide the foundation to understand heterogeneous disruption of these networks in sleep disorders, attention deficits, and cognitive and affective impairments in schizophrenia and autism, with important implications for the design of targeted therapeutic interventions

SeminarNeuroscience

Spike train structure of cortical transcriptomic populations in vivo

Kenneth Harris
UCL, UK
Oct 29, 2025

The cortex comprises many neuronal types, which can be distinguished by their transcriptomes: the sets of genes they express. Little is known about the in vivo activity of these cell types, particularly as regards the structure of their spike trains, which might provide clues to cortical circuit function. To address this question, we used Neuropixels electrodes to record layer 5 excitatory populations in mouse V1, then transcriptomically identified the recorded cell types. To do so, we performed a subsequent recording of the same cells using 2-photon (2p) calcium imaging, identifying neurons between the two recording modalities by fingerprinting their responses to a “zebra noise” stimulus and estimating the path of the electrode through the 2p stack with a probabilistic method. We then cut brain slices and performed in situ transcriptomics to localize ~300 genes using coppaFISH3d, a new open source method, and aligned the transcriptomic data to the 2p stack. Analysis of the data is ongoing, and suggests substantial differences in spike time coordination between ET and IT neurons, as well as between transcriptomic subtypes of both these excitatory types.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Memory Decoding Journal Club: Functional connectomics reveals general wiring rule in mouse visual cortex

Ariel Zeleznikow-Johnston
Monash University
Oct 21, 2025

Functional connectomics reveals general wiring rule in mouse visual cortex

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Memory Decoding Journal Club: "Connectomic traces of Hebbian plasticity in the entorhinalhippocampal system

Randal A. Koene
Co-Founder and Chief Science Officer, Carboncopies
Oct 7, 2025

Connectomic traces of Hebbian plasticity in the entorhinalhippocampal system

SeminarNeuroscience

Astrocytes: From Metabolism to Cognition

Juan P. Bolanos
Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Salamanca
Oct 3, 2025

Different brain cell types exhibit distinct metabolic signatures that link energy economy to cellular function. Astrocytes and neurons, for instance, diverge dramatically in their reliance on glycolysis versus oxidative phosphorylation, underscoring that metabolic fuel efficiency is not uniform across cell types. A key factor shaping this divergence is the structural organization of the mitochondrial respiratory chain into supercomplexes. Specifically, complexes I (CI) and III (CIII) form a CI–CIII supercomplex, but the degree of this assembly varies by cell type. In neurons, CI is predominantly integrated into supercomplexes, resulting in highly efficient mitochondrial respiration and minimal reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation. Conversely, in astrocytes, a larger fraction of CI remains unassembled, freely existing apart from CIII, leading to reduced respiratory efficiency and elevated mitochondrial ROS production. Despite this apparent inefficiency, astrocytes boast a highly adaptable metabolism capable of responding to diverse stressors. Their looser CI–CIII organization allows for flexible ROS signaling, which activates antioxidant programs via transcription factors like Nrf2. This modular architecture enables astrocytes not only to balance energy production but also to support neuronal health and influence complex organismal behaviors.

SeminarNeuroscience

Low intensity rTMS: age dependent effects, and mechanisms underlying neural plasticity

Ann Lohof
Sorbonne Université, Institut de Biologie Paris Seine
Sep 19, 2025

Neuroplasticity is essential for the establishment and strengthening of neural circuits. Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) is commonly used to modulate cortical excitability and shows promise in the treatment of some neurological disorders. Low intensity magnetic stimulation (LI-rTMS), which does not directly elicit action potentials in the stimulated neurons, have also shown some therapeutic effects, and it is important to determine the biological mechanisms underlying the effects of these low intensity magnetic fields, such as would occur in the regions surrounding the central high-intensity focus of rTMS. Our team has used a focal low-intensity (10mT) magnetic stimulation approach to address some of these questions and to identify cellular mechanisms. I will present several studies from our laboratory, addressing (1) effects of LIrTMS on neuronal activity and excitability ; and (2) neuronal morphology and post-lesion repair. The ensemble of our results indicate that the effects of LI-rTMS depend upon the stimulation pattern, the age of the animal, and the presence of cellular magnetoreceptors.

SeminarNeuroscience

Unpacking the role of the medial septum in spatial coding in the medial entorhinal cortex

Jennifer Robinson
McGill University
Sep 11, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

How the presynapse forms and functions”

Volker Haucke
Department of Molecular Pharmacology & Cell Biology, Leibniz Institute, Berlin, Germany
Aug 28, 2025

Nervous system function relies on the polarized architecture of neurons, established by directional transport of pre- and postsynaptic cargoes. While delivery of postsynaptic components depends on the secretory pathway, the identity of the membrane compartment(s) that supply presynaptic active zone (AZ) and synaptic vesicle (SV) proteins is largely unknown. I will discuss our recent advances in our understanding of how key components of the presynaptic machinery for neurotransmitter release are transported and assembled focussing on our studies in genome-engineered human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons. Specifically, I will focus on the composition and cell biological identity of the axonal transport vesicles that shuttle key components of neurotransmission to nascent synapses and on machinery for axonal transport and its control by signaling lipids. Our studies identify a crucial mechanism mediating the delivery of SV and active zone proteins to developing synapses and reveal connections to neurological disorders. In the second part of my talk, I will discuss how exocytosis and endocytosis are coupled to maintain presynaptic membrane homeostasis. I will present unpublished data regarding the role of membrane tension in the coupling of exocytosis and endocytosis at synapses. We have identified an endocytic BAR domain protein that is capable of sensing alterations in membrane tension caused by the exocytotic fusion of SVs to initiate compensatory endocytosis to restore plasma membrane area. Interference with this mechanism results in defects in the coupling of presynaptic exocytosis and SV recycling at human synapses.

SeminarNeuroscience

The Systems Vision Science Summer School & Symposium, August 11 – 22, 2025, Tuebingen, Germany

Marco Bertamini, David Brainard, Peter Dayan, Andrea van Doorn, Roland Fleming, Pascal Fries, Wilson S Geisler, Robbe Goris, Sheng He, Tadashi Isa, Tomas Knapen, Jan Koenderink, Larry Maloney, Keith May, Marcello Rosa, Jonathan Victor
Aug 22, 2025

Applications are invited for our third edition of Systems Vision Science (SVS) summer school since 2023, designed for everyone interested in gaining a systems level understanding of biological vision. We plan a coherent, graduate-level, syllabus on the integration of experimental data with theory and models, featuring lectures, guided exercises and discussion sessions. The summer school will end with a Systems Vision Science symposium on frontier topics on August 20-22, with additional invited and contributed presentations and posters. Call for contributions and participations to the symposium will be sent out spring of 2025. All summer school participants are invited to attend, and welcome to submit contributions to the symposium.

SeminarNeuroscience

The Systems Vision Science Summer School & Symposium, August 11 – 22, 2025, Tuebingen, Germany

Marco Bertamini, David Brainard, Peter Dayan, Andrea van Doorn, Roland Fleming, Pascal Fries, Wilson S Geisler, Robbe Goris, Sheng He, Tadashi Isa, Tomas Knapen, Jan Koenderink, Larry Maloney, Keith May, Marcello Rosa, Jonathan Victor
Aug 21, 2025

Applications are invited for our third edition of Systems Vision Science (SVS) summer school since 2023, designed for everyone interested in gaining a systems level understanding of biological vision. We plan a coherent, graduate-level, syllabus on the integration of experimental data with theory and models, featuring lectures, guided exercises and discussion sessions. The summer school will end with a Systems Vision Science symposium on frontier topics on August 20-22, with additional invited and contributed presentations and posters. Call for contributions and participations to the symposium will be sent out spring of 2025. All summer school participants are invited to attend, and welcome to submit contributions to the symposium.

SeminarNeuroscience

The Systems Vision Science Summer School & Symposium, August 11 – 22, 2025, Tuebingen, Germany

Marco Bertamini, David Brainard, Peter Dayan, Andrea van Doorn, Roland Fleming, Pascal Fries, Wilson S Geisler, Robbe Goris, Sheng He, Tadashi Isa, Tomas Knapen, Jan Koenderink, Larry Maloney, Keith May, Marcello Rosa, Jonathan Victor
Aug 20, 2025

Applications are invited for our third edition of Systems Vision Science (SVS) summer school since 2023, designed for everyone interested in gaining a systems level understanding of biological vision. We plan a coherent, graduate-level, syllabus on the integration of experimental data with theory and models, featuring lectures, guided exercises and discussion sessions. The summer school will end with a Systems Vision Science symposium on frontier topics on August 20-22, with additional invited and contributed presentations and posters. Call for contributions and participations to the symposium will be sent out spring of 2025. All summer school participants are invited to attend, and welcome to submit contributions to the symposium.

SeminarNeuroscience

The Systems Vision Science Summer School & Symposium, August 11 – 22, 2025, Tuebingen, Germany

Marco Bertamini, David Brainard, Peter Dayan, Andrea van Doorn, Roland Fleming, Pascal Fries, Wilson S Geisler, Robbe Goris, Sheng He, Tadashi Isa, Tomas Knapen, Jan Koenderink, Larry Maloney, Keith May, Marcello Rosa, Jonathan Victor
Aug 19, 2025

Applications are invited for our third edition of Systems Vision Science (SVS) summer school since 2023, designed for everyone interested in gaining a systems level understanding of biological vision. We plan a coherent, graduate-level, syllabus on the integration of experimental data with theory and models, featuring lectures, guided exercises and discussion sessions. The summer school will end with a Systems Vision Science symposium on frontier topics on August 20-22, with additional invited and contributed presentations and posters. Call for contributions and participations to the symposium will be sent out spring of 2025. All summer school participants are invited to attend, and welcome to submit contributions to the symposium.

SeminarNeuroscience

The Systems Vision Science Summer School & Symposium, August 11 – 22, 2025, Tuebingen, Germany

Marco Bertamini, David Brainard, Peter Dayan, Andrea van Doorn, Roland Fleming, Pascal Fries, Wilson S Geisler, Robbe Goris, Sheng He, Tadashi Isa, Tomas Knapen, Jan Koenderink, Larry Maloney, Keith May, Marcello Rosa, Jonathan Victor
Aug 18, 2025

Applications are invited for our third edition of Systems Vision Science (SVS) summer school since 2023, designed for everyone interested in gaining a systems level understanding of biological vision. We plan a coherent, graduate-level, syllabus on the integration of experimental data with theory and models, featuring lectures, guided exercises and discussion sessions. The summer school will end with a Systems Vision Science symposium on frontier topics on August 20-22, with additional invited and contributed presentations and posters. Call for contributions and participations to the symposium will be sent out spring of 2025. All summer school participants are invited to attend, and welcome to submit contributions to the symposium.

SeminarNeuroscience

The Systems Vision Science Summer School & Symposium, August 11 – 22, 2025, Tuebingen, Germany

Marco Bertamini, David Brainard, Peter Dayan, Andrea van Doorn, Roland Fleming, Pascal Fries, Wilson S Geisler, Robbe Goris, Sheng He, Tadashi Isa, Tomas Knapen, Jan Koenderink, Larry Maloney, Keith May, Marcello Rosa, Jonathan Victor
Aug 15, 2025

Applications are invited for our third edition of Systems Vision Science (SVS) summer school since 2023, designed for everyone interested in gaining a systems level understanding of biological vision. We plan a coherent, graduate-level, syllabus on the integration of experimental data with theory and models, featuring lectures, guided exercises and discussion sessions. The summer school will end with a Systems Vision Science symposium on frontier topics on August 20-22, with additional invited and contributed presentations and posters. Call for contributions and participations to the symposium will be sent out spring of 2025. All summer school participants are invited to attend, and welcome to submit contributions to the symposium.

SeminarNeuroscience

The Systems Vision Science Summer School & Symposium, August 11 – 22, 2025, Tuebingen, Germany

Marco Bertamini, David Brainard, Peter Dayan, Andrea van Doorn, Roland Fleming, Pascal Fries, Wilson S Geisler, Robbe Goris, Sheng He, Tadashi Isa, Tomas Knapen, Jan Koenderink, Larry Maloney, Keith May, Marcello Rosa, Jonathan Victor
Aug 14, 2025

Applications are invited for our third edition of Systems Vision Science (SVS) summer school since 2023, designed for everyone interested in gaining a systems level understanding of biological vision. We plan a coherent, graduate-level, syllabus on the integration of experimental data with theory and models, featuring lectures, guided exercises and discussion sessions. The summer school will end with a Systems Vision Science symposium on frontier topics on August 20-22, with additional invited and contributed presentations and posters. Call for contributions and participations to the symposium will be sent out spring of 2025. All summer school participants are invited to attend, and welcome to submit contributions to the symposium.

SeminarNeuroscience

The Systems Vision Science Summer School & Symposium, August 11 – 22, 2025, Tuebingen, Germany

Marco Bertamini, David Brainard, Peter Dayan, Andrea van Doorn, Roland Fleming, Pascal Fries, Wilson S Geisler, Robbe Goris, Sheng He, Tadashi Isa, Tomas Knapen, Jan Koenderink, Larry Maloney, Keith May, Marcello Rosa, Jonathan Victor
Aug 13, 2025

Applications are invited for our third edition of Systems Vision Science (SVS) summer school since 2023, designed for everyone interested in gaining a systems level understanding of biological vision. We plan a coherent, graduate-level, syllabus on the integration of experimental data with theory and models, featuring lectures, guided exercises and discussion sessions. The summer school will end with a Systems Vision Science symposium on frontier topics on August 20-22, with additional invited and contributed presentations and posters. Call for contributions and participations to the symposium will be sent out spring of 2025. All summer school participants are invited to attend, and welcome to submit contributions to the symposium.

SeminarNeuroscience

The Systems Vision Science Summer School & Symposium, August 11 – 22, 2025, Tuebingen, Germany

Marco Bertamini, David Brainard, Peter Dayan, Andrea van Doorn, Roland Fleming, Pascal Fries, Wilson S Geisler, Robbe Goris, Sheng He, Tadashi Isa, Tomas Knapen, Jan Koenderink, Larry Maloney, Keith May, Marcello Rosa, Jonathan Victor
Aug 12, 2025

Applications are invited for our third edition of Systems Vision Science (SVS) summer school since 2023, designed for everyone interested in gaining a systems level understanding of biological vision. We plan a coherent, graduate-level, syllabus on the integration of experimental data with theory and models, featuring lectures, guided exercises and discussion sessions. The summer school will end with a Systems Vision Science symposium on frontier topics on August 20-22, with additional invited and contributed presentations and posters. Call for contributions and participations to the symposium will be sent out spring of 2025. All summer school participants are invited to attend, and welcome to submit contributions to the symposium.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Memory Decoding Journal Club: "Connectomic reconstruction of a cortical column" cortical column

Randal A. Koene
Co-Founder and Chief Science Officer, Carboncopies
Aug 12, 2025

Connectomic reconstruction of a cortical column

SeminarNeuroscience

The Systems Vision Science Summer School & Symposium, August 11 – 22, 2025, Tuebingen, Germany

Marco Bertamini, David Brainard, Peter Dayan, Andrea van Doorn, Roland Fleming, Pascal Fries, Wilson S Geisler, Robbe Goris, Sheng He, Tadashi Isa, Tomas Knapen, Jan Koenderink, Larry Maloney, Keith May, Marcello Rosa, Jonathan Victor
Aug 11, 2025

Applications are invited for our third edition of Systems Vision Science (SVS) summer school since 2023, designed for everyone interested in gaining a systems level understanding of biological vision. We plan a coherent, graduate-level, syllabus on the integration of experimental data with theory and models, featuring lectures, guided exercises and discussion sessions. The summer school will end with a Systems Vision Science symposium on frontier topics on August 20-22, with additional invited and contributed presentations and posters. Call for contributions and participations to the symposium will be sent out spring of 2025. All summer school participants are invited to attend, and welcome to submit contributions to the symposium.

SeminarNeuroscience

Non-invasive human neuroimaging studies of motor plasticity have predominantly focused on the cerebral cortex due to low signal-to-noise ration of blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) signals in subcortical structures and the small effect sizes typically observed in plasticity paradigms. Precision functional mapping can help overcome these challenges and has revealed significant and reversible functional alterations in the cortico-subcortical motor circuit during arm immobilization

Dr. Roselyne Chauvin
Washington University, St. Louis, USA
Jul 9, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

Understanding reward-guided learning using large-scale datasets

Kim Stachenfeld
DeepMind, Columbia U
Jul 9, 2025

Understanding the neural mechanisms of reward-guided learning is a long-standing goal of computational neuroscience. Recent methodological innovations enable us to collect ever larger neural and behavioral datasets. This presents opportunities to achieve greater understanding of learning in the brain at scale, as well as methodological challenges. In the first part of the talk, I will discuss our recent insights into the mechanisms by which zebra finch songbirds learn to sing. Dopamine has been long thought to guide reward-based trial-and-error learning by encoding reward prediction errors. However, it is unknown whether the learning of natural behaviours, such as developmental vocal learning, occurs through dopamine-based reinforcement. Longitudinal recordings of dopamine and bird songs reveal that dopamine activity is indeed consistent with encoding a reward prediction error during naturalistic learning. In the second part of the talk, I will talk about recent work we are doing at DeepMind to develop tools for automatically discovering interpretable models of behavior directly from animal choice data. Our method, dubbed CogFunSearch, uses LLMs within an evolutionary search process in order to "discover" novel models in the form of Python programs that excel at accurately predicting animal behavior during reward-guided learning. The discovered programs reveal novel patterns of learning and choice behavior that update our understanding of how the brain solves reinforcement learning problems.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Continuity and segmentation - two ends of a spectrum or independent processes?

Aya Ben Yakov
Hebrew University
Jul 8, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

Neural control of internal affective states”

David J. Anderson
California Institute of Technology, Tianqiao and Chrissy Chen Institute for Neuroscience, California, USA
Jun 19, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

Neural circuits underlying sleep structure and functions

Antoine Adamantidis
University of Bern
Jun 13, 2025

Sleep is an active state critical for processing emotional memories encoded during waking in both humans and animals. There is a remarkable overlap between the brain structures and circuits active during sleep, particularly rapid eye-movement (REM) sleep, and the those encoding emotions. Accordingly, disruptions in sleep quality or quantity, including REM sleep, are often associated with, and precede the onset of, nearly all affective psychiatric and mood disorders. In this context, a major biomedical challenge is to better understand the underlying mechanisms of the relationship between (REM) sleep and emotion encoding to improve treatments for mental health. This lecture will summarize our investigation of the cellular and circuit mechanisms underlying sleep architecture, sleep oscillations, and local brain dynamics across sleep-wake states using electrophysiological recordings combined with single-cell calcium imaging or optogenetics. The presentation will detail the discovery of a 'somato-dendritic decoupling'in prefrontal cortex pyramidal neurons underlying REM sleep-dependent stabilization of optimal emotional memory traces. This decoupling reflects a tonic inhibition at the somas of pyramidal cells, occurring simultaneously with a selective disinhibition of their dendritic arbors selectively during REM sleep. Recent findings on REM sleep-dependent subcortical inputs and neuromodulation of this decoupling will be discussed in the context of synaptic plasticity and the optimization of emotional responses in the maintenance of mental health.

SeminarNeuroscience

From Spiking Predictive Coding to Learning Abstract Object Representation

Prof. Jochen Triesch
Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies
Jun 12, 2025

In a first part of the talk, I will present Predictive Coding Light (PCL), a novel unsupervised learning architecture for spiking neural networks. In contrast to conventional predictive coding approaches, which only transmit prediction errors to higher processing stages, PCL learns inhibitory lateral and top-down connectivity to suppress the most predictable spikes and passes a compressed representation of the input to higher processing stages. We show that PCL reproduces a range of biological findings and exhibits a favorable tradeoff between energy consumption and downstream classification performance on challenging benchmarks. A second part of the talk will feature our lab’s efforts to explain how infants and toddlers might learn abstract object representations without supervision. I will present deep learning models that exploit the temporal and multimodal structure of their sensory inputs to learn representations of individual objects, object categories, or abstract super-categories such as „kitchen object“ in a fully unsupervised fashion. These models offer a parsimonious account of how abstract semantic knowledge may be rooted in children's embodied first-person experiences.

SeminarNeuroscience

“Development and application of gaze control models for active perception”

Prof. Bert Shi
Professor of Electronic and Computer Engineering at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST)
Jun 12, 2025

Gaze shifts in humans serve to direct high-resolution vision provided by the fovea towards areas in the environment. Gaze can be considered a proxy for attention or indicator of the relative importance of different parts of the environment. In this talk, we discuss the development of generative models of human gaze in response to visual input. We discuss how such models can be learned, both using supervised learning and using implicit feedback as an agent interacts with the environment, the latter being more plausible in biological agents. We also discuss two ways such models can be used. First, they can be used to improve the performance of artificial autonomous systems, in applications such as autonomous navigation. Second, because these models are contingent on the human’s task, goals, and/or state in the context of the environment, observations of gaze can be used to infer information about user intent. This information can be used to improve human-machine and human robot interaction, by making interfaces more anticipative. We discuss example applications in gaze-typing, robotic tele-operation and human-robot interaction.

SeminarNeuroscience

Developmental and evolutionary perspectives on thalamic function

Dr. Bruno Averbeck
National Institute of Mental Health, Maryland, USA
Jun 11, 2025

Brain organization and function is a complex topic. We are good at establishing correlates of perception and behavior across forebrain circuits, as well as manipulating activity in these circuits to affect behavior. However, we still lack good models for the large-scale organization and function of the forebrain. What are the contributions of the cortex, basal ganglia, and thalamus to behavior? In addressing these questions, we often ascribe function to each area as if it were an independent processing unit. However, we know from the anatomy that the cortex, basal ganglia, and thalamus, are massively interconnected in a large network. One way to generate insight into these questions is to consider the evolution and development of forebrain systems. In this talk, I will discuss the developmental and evolutionary (comparative anatomy) data on the thalamus, and how it fits within forebrain networks. I will address questions including, when did the thalamus appear in evolution, how is the thalamus organized across the vertebrate lineage, and how can the change in the organization of forebrain networks affect behavioral repertoires.

SeminarNeuroscience

Neurobiological constraints on learning: bug or feature?

Cian O’Donell
Ulster University
Jun 11, 2025

Understanding how brains learn requires bridging evidence across scales—from behaviour and neural circuits to cells, synapses, and molecules. In our work, we use computational modelling and data analysis to explore how the physical properties of neurons and neural circuits constrain learning. These include limits imposed by brain wiring, energy availability, molecular noise, and the 3D structure of dendritic spines. In this talk I will describe one such project testing if wiring motifs from fly brain connectomes can improve performance of reservoir computers, a type of recurrent neural network. The hope is that these insights into brain learning will lead to improved learning algorithms for artificial systems.

SeminarNeuroscience

HealthCore: A modular data collection ecosystem to connect the dots in Neurorehab

Chris Awai
Lake Lucerne Institute, Switzerland
Jun 5, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

Astrocytes release glutamate by regulated exocytosis in health and disease

Vladimir Parpura
Distinguished Professor Zhejiang Chinese Medical University and Director of the International Translational Neuroscience Research Institute, Hangzhou, P.R. China
Jun 5, 2025

Astrocytes release glutamate by regulated exocytosis in health and disease Vladimir Parpura, International Translational Neuroscience Research Institute, Zhejiang Chinese Medical University, Hangzhou, P.R. China Parpura will present you with the evidence that astrocytes, a subtype of glial cells in the brain, can exocytotically release the neurotransmitter glutamate and how this release is regulated. Spatiotemporal characteristic of vesicular fusion that underlie glutamate release in astrocytes will be discussed. He will also present data on a translational project in which this release pathway can be targeted for the treatment of glioblastoma, the deadliest brain cancer.

SeminarNeuroscience

Expanding mechanisms and therapeutic targets for neurodegenerative disease

Aaron D. Gitler
Department of Genetics, Stanford University
Jun 5, 2025

A hallmark pathological feature of the neurodegenerative diseases amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is the depletion of RNA-binding protein TDP-43 from the nucleus of neurons in the brain and spinal cord. A major function of TDP-43 is as a repressor of cryptic exon inclusion during RNA splicing. By re-analyzing RNA-sequencing datasets from human FTD/ALS brains, we discovered dozens of novel cryptic splicing events in important neuronal genes. Single nucleotide polymorphisms in UNC13A are among the strongest hits associated with FTD and ALS in human genome-wide association studies, but how those variants increase risk for disease is unknown. We discovered that TDP-43 represses a cryptic exon-splicing event in UNC13A. Loss of TDP-43 from the nucleus in human brain, neuronal cell lines and motor neurons derived from induced pluripotent stem cells resulted in the inclusion of a cryptic exon in UNC13A mRNA and reduced UNC13A protein expression. The top variants associated with FTD or ALS risk in humans are located in the intron harboring the cryptic exon, and we show that they increase UNC13A cryptic exon splicing in the face of TDP-43 dysfunction. Together, our data provide a direct functional link between one of the strongest genetic risk factors for FTD and ALS (UNC13A genetic variants), and loss of TDP-43 function. Recent analyses have revealed even further changes in TDP-43 target genes, including widespread changes in alternative polyadenylation, impacting expression of disease-relevant genes (e.g., ELP1, NEFL, and TMEM106B) and providing evidence that alternative polyadenylation is a new facet of TDP-43 pathology.

SeminarNeuroscience

The Direct Impact Of Amyloid-Beta Oligomers On Neuronal Activity And Neurotransmitter Releases On In Vivo Analysis

Vincent Hervé
Université de Montréal
Jun 5, 2025
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Restoring Sight to the Blind: Effects of Structural and Functional Plasticity

Noelle Stiles
Rutgers University
May 22, 2025

Visual restoration after decades of blindness is now becoming possible by means of retinal and cortical prostheses, as well as emerging stem cell and gene therapeutic approaches. After restoring visual perception, however, a key question remains. Are there optimal means and methods for retraining the visual cortex to process visual inputs, and for learning or relearning to “see”? Up to this point, it has been largely assumed that if the sensory loss is visual, then the rehabilitation focus should also be primarily visual. However, the other senses play a key role in visual rehabilitation due to the plastic repurposing of visual cortex during blindness by audition and somatosensation, and also to the reintegration of restored vision with the other senses. I will present multisensory neuroimaging results, cortical thickness changes, as well as behavioral outcomes for patients with Retinitis Pigmentosa (RP), which causes blindness by destroying photoreceptors in the retina. These patients have had their vision partially restored by the implantation of a retinal prosthesis, which electrically stimulates still viable retinal ganglion cells in the eye. Our multisensory and structural neuroimaging and behavioral results suggest a new, holistic concept of visual rehabilitation that leverages rather than neglects audition, somatosensation, and other sensory modalities.

SeminarNeuroscience

From heterogeneous wiring to degenerative function in motion-detection circuits

Marion Silies
Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz
May 21, 2025
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Functional Plasticity in the Language Network – evidence from Neuroimaging and Neurostimulation

Gesa Hartwigsen
University of Leipzig, Germany
May 20, 2025

Efficient cognition requires flexible interactions between distributed neural networks in the human brain. These networks adapt to challenges by flexibly recruiting different regions and connections. In this talk, I will discuss how we study functional network plasticity and reorganization with combined neurostimulation and neuroimaging across the adult life span. I will argue that short-term plasticity enables flexible adaptation to challenges, via functional reorganization. My key hypothesis is that disruption of higher-level cognitive functions such as language can be compensated for by the recruitment of domain-general networks in our brain. Examples from healthy young brains illustrate how neurostimulation can be used to temporarily interfere with efficient processing, probing short-term network plasticity at the systems level. Examples from people with dyslexia help to better understand network disorders in the language domain and outline the potential of facilitatory neurostimulation for treatment. I will also discuss examples from aging brains where plasticity helps to compensate for loss of function. Finally, examples from lesioned brains after stroke provide insight into the brain’s potential for long-term reorganization and recovery of function. Collectively, these results challenge the view of a modular organization of the human brain and argue for a flexible redistribution of function via systems plasticity.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Memory Decoding Journal Club: "Synaptic architecture of a memory engram in the mouse hippocampus

Randal A. Koene
Co-Founder and Chief Science Officer, Carboncopies
May 20, 2025

Synaptic architecture of a memory engram in the mouse hippocampus

SeminarNeuroscience

Neural Signal Propagation Atlas of C. elegans

Andrew Leifer
Princeton University, US
May 19, 2025

In the age of connectomics, it is increasingly important to understand how the nodes and edges of a brain's anatomical network, or "connectome," gives rise to neural signaling and neural function. I will present the first comprehensive brain-wide cell-resolved causal measurements of how neurons signal to one another in response to stimulation in the nematode C. elegans. I will compare this signal propagation atlas to the worm's known connectome to address fundamental questions of structure and function in the brain.

SeminarNeuroscience

Neural mechanisms of rhythmic motor control in Drosophila

John Tuthill
University of Washington, Seattle, USA
May 16, 2025

All animal locomotion is rhythmic,whether it is achieved through undulatory movement of the whole body or the coordination of articulated limbs. Neurobiologists have long studied locomotor circuits that produce rhythmic activity with non-rhythmic input, also called central pattern generators (CPGs). However, the cellular and microcircuit implementation of a walking CPG has not been described for any limbed animal. New comprehensive connectomes of the fruit fly ventral nerve cord (VNC) provide an opportunity to study rhythmogenic walking circuits at a synaptic scale.We use a data-driven network modeling approach to identify and characterize a putative walking CPG in the Drosophila leg motor system.

SeminarNeuroscience

Single-neuron correlates of perception and memory in the human medial temporal lobe

Prof. Dr. Dr. Florian Mormann
University of Bonn, Germany
May 14, 2025

The human medial temporal lobe contains neurons that respond selectively to the semantic contents of a presented stimulus. These "concept cells" may respond to very different pictures of a given person and even to their written or spoken name. Their response latency is far longer than necessary for object recognition, they follow subjective, conscious perception, and they are found in brain regions that are crucial for declarative memory formation. It has thus been hypothesized that they may represent the semantic "building blocks" of episodic memories. In this talk I will present data from single unit recordings in the hippocampus, entorhinal cortex, parahippocampal cortex, and amygdala during paradigms involving object recognition and conscious perception as well as encoding of episodic memories in order to characterize the role of concept cells in these cognitive functions.

SeminarNeuroscience

Understanding reward-guided learning using large-scale datasets

Kim Stachenfeld
DeepMind, Columbia U
May 14, 2025

Understanding the neural mechanisms of reward-guided learning is a long-standing goal of computational neuroscience. Recent methodological innovations enable us to collect ever larger neural and behavioral datasets. This presents opportunities to achieve greater understanding of learning in the brain at scale, as well as methodological challenges. In the first part of the talk, I will discuss our recent insights into the mechanisms by which zebra finch songbirds learn to sing. Dopamine has been long thought to guide reward-based trial-and-error learning by encoding reward prediction errors. However, it is unknown whether the learning of natural behaviours, such as developmental vocal learning, occurs through dopamine-based reinforcement. Longitudinal recordings of dopamine and bird songs reveal that dopamine activity is indeed consistent with encoding a reward prediction error during naturalistic learning. In the second part of the talk, I will talk about recent work we are doing at DeepMind to develop tools for automatically discovering interpretable models of behavior directly from animal choice data. Our method, dubbed CogFunSearch, uses LLMs within an evolutionary search process in order to "discover" novel models in the form of Python programs that excel at accurately predicting animal behavior during reward-guided learning. The discovered programs reveal novel patterns of learning and choice behavior that update our understanding of how the brain solves reinforcement learning problems.

SeminarNeuroscience

Harnessing Big Data in Neuroscience: From Mapping Brain Connectivity to Predicting Traumatic Brain Injury

Franco Pestilli
University of Texas, Austin, USA
May 13, 2025

Neuroscience is experiencing unprecedented growth in dataset size both within individual brains and across populations. Large-scale, multimodal datasets are transforming our understanding of brain structure and function, creating opportunities to address previously unexplored questions. However, managing this increasing data volume requires new training and technology approaches. Modern data technologies are reshaping neuroscience by enabling researchers to tackle complex questions within a Ph.D. or postdoctoral timeframe. I will discuss cloud-based platforms such as brainlife.io, that provide scalable, reproducible, and accessible computational infrastructure. Modern data technology can democratize neuroscience, accelerate discovery and foster scientific transparency and collaboration. Concrete examples will illustrate how these technologies can be applied to mapping brain connectivity, studying human learning and development, and developing predictive models for traumatic brain injury (TBI). By integrating cloud computing and scalable data-sharing frameworks, neuroscience can become more impactful, inclusive, and data-driven..

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Motor learning selectively strengthens cortical and striatal synapses of motor engram neurons

Ariel Zeleznikow-Johnston
Monash University
May 6, 2025

Join Us for the Memory Decoding Journal Club! A collaboration of the Carboncopies Foundation and BPF Aspirational Neuroscience. This time, we’re diving into a groundbreaking paper: "Motor learning selectively strengthens cortical and striatal synapses of motor engram neurons

SeminarNeuroscience

Recent views on pre-registration

Andy Jahn
University of Michigan
May 2, 2025

A discussion on some recent perspectives on pre-registration, which has become a growing trend in the past few years. This is not just limited to neuroimaging, and it applies to most scientific fields. We will start with this overview editorial by Simmons et al. (2021): https://faculty.wharton.upenn.edu/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/34-Simmons-Nelson-Simonsohn-2021a.pdf, and also talk about a more critical perspective by Pham & Oh (2021): https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Michel-Pham/publication/349545600_Preregistration_Is_Neither_Sufficient_nor_Necessary_for_Good_Science/links/60fb311e2bf3553b29096aa7/Preregistration-Is-Neither-Sufficient-nor-Necessary-for-Good-Science.pdf. I would like us to discuss the pros and cons of pre-registration, and if we have time, I may do a demonstration of how to perform a pre-registration through the Open Science Framework.

ConferenceNeuroscience

COSYNE 2025

Montreal, Canada
Mar 27, 2025

The COSYNE 2025 conference was held in Montreal with post-conference workshops in Mont-Tremblant, continuing to provide a premier forum for computational and systems neuroscience. Attendees exchanged cutting-edge research in a single-track main meeting and in-depth specialized workshops, reflecting Cosyne’s mission to understand how neural systems function.

ConferenceNeuroscience

Bernstein Conference 2024

Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany
Sep 29, 2024

Each year the Bernstein Network invites the international computational neuroscience community to the annual Bernstein Conference for intensive scientific exchange. Bernstein Conference 2024, held in Frankfurt am Main, featured discussions, keynote lectures, and poster sessions, and has established itself as one of the most renowned conferences worldwide in this field.

ConferenceNeuroscience

COSYNE 2022

Lisbon, Portugal
Mar 17, 2022

The annual Cosyne meeting provides an inclusive forum for the exchange of empirical and theoretical approaches to problems in systems neuroscience, in order to understand how neural systems function. The main meeting is single-track, with invited talks selected by the Executive Committee and additional talks and posters selected by the Program Committee based on submitted abstracts. The workshops feature in-depth discussion of current topics of interest in a small group setting.

ePosterNeuroscience

<B DATA-OLK-COPY-SOURCE="MESSAGEBODY">DISRUPTION OF PERINEURONAL NETS AND DIFFUSE EXTRACELLULAR MATRIX IN VENTRAL-INTERMEDIATE HIPPOCAMPUS DOES NOT AFFECT RAPID PLACE LEARNING, NOVEL OBJECT RECOGNITION MEMORY OR LOCOMOTOR ACTIVITY </B>

Jacob Juty, Rachel Grasmeder Allen, Patricia Radu, Ayesha Mohamed Sherief, Jennifer Fletcher, Charlotte Taylor, John Gigg, Michael Harte, Tobias Bast

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

A DIRECT AUDITORY SUBCORTICAL ROUTE TO THE AMYGDALA ASSOCIATED WITH FEAR IN HUMANS

Judith Domínguez-Borràs, Emmanouela Kosteletou-Kassotaki, Cinca-Tomás Martina Trisia, Federico Varriano, Guadalupe Soria, Prats-Galino Alberto

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

EFFECTS OF COMBINING COGNITIVE AND TREADMILL TRAINING ON COGNITIVE FUNCTION AND WALKING PERFORMANCE IN CHRONIC STROKE PATIENT WITH MILD COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT

Wei-Han Weng, Yun-Hsien Liu, Ray-Yau Wang

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

SEX-DEPENDENT EFFECTS OF ADOLESCENT CHRONIC STRESS ON COGNITIVE BIAS AND FUNCTIONAL CONNECTOME IN EMERGING ADULTHOOD

Twain Dai, Liz Jaeschke-Angi, Marissa Penrose-Menz, Tim Rosenow, Jennifer Rodger

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

ASTROCYTIC ACTIVATION CORRECTS MEMORY PERFORMANCE IN AN ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE MODEL

Tirzah Kreisel, Inbal Goshen

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

LOW-INTENSITY PULSED ULTRASOUND PROTECTS RETINAL GANGLION CELLS FROM GLUTAMATE-INDUCED MITOCHONDRIAL DYSFUNCTION AND NEURONAL INJURY

Zeyuan Wang

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

ACTIVE BODY, IMPROVED BRAIN: EFFECTS OF EXERCISE INTERVENTIONS ON BDNF LEVELS ACROSS THE LIFESPAN - SYSTEMATIC-REVIEW AND META-ANALYSIS OF RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIALS WITH MODERATOR ANALYSES

Javier Sanchez-Martinez, Ricardo Martinez-Flores, Juan Pablo Espinoza–Puelles, Hernández-Jaña Sam, Kirk I Erickson, Arthur F Kramer, Cindy K Barha, Jeremy J Walsh, Francisco B Ortega, Irene Esteban-Cornejo, Patricio Solis-Urra, Felipe B Schuch, Joao Bento-Torres, Natan Feter, Rafael dos Santos Henrique, Harris A Eyre, Agustin Ibanez, Kabir P Sadarangani, Gerson Ferrari, Fanny Petermann-Rocha, Hermann Zbinden-Foncea, Alejandra Lopez Moroni, Carlos Cristi-Montero

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

DIFFERENCES IN ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL PROPERTIES OF PURKINJE CELL SUBPOPULATIONS IN COMPENSATORY EYE MOVEMENT CONTROL

Zahra Hemmat, Stijn Voerman, Chris(CI) De Zeeuw, Martijn Schonewille

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

HYPOXIA DISRUPTS THE CIRCADIAN CLOCK IN ASTROCYTES AND INDUCES SYNAPSE PHAGOCYTOSIS DEFECTS

Anca M Pasca

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

FROM SUPPRESSION TO ENHANCEMENT: THE EFFECTS OF SELF-GENERATION ON SENSORY RESPONSES AND PERCEIVED LOUDNESS DEPEND ON SOUND INTENSITY

Carla Salgado, Stefanie Sturm, Luisa Valencia, Marc Via, Iria SanMiguel

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

SLEEP EEG DYNAMICS REFLECT DIVERGENT NEURODEVELOPMENTAL TRAJECTORIES IN INFANTS

Gaia Burlando, Sara Uccella, Sheng H. Wang, Valentina Marazzotta, Lino Nobili, Gabriele Arnulfo

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

A KINDLING-LIKE JUVENILE ZEBRAFISH MODEL TO EVALUATE THE EFFECTS OF CHRONIC-SEIZURE ON COGNITIVE FUNCTIONS

Ekin Döngel Dayanc, Emre Yaksi, Guldal Suyen

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

​​​​​EFFECTS OF PSILOCYBIN ON DAMPS-MEDIATED STERILE INFLAMMATION IN 3D NEURAL SPHEROIDS

Mi Kyoung Seo, Jung Goo Lee, Sung Woo Park

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

AUTONOMIC REGULATION VIA DERMAL VIBROTACTILE TRIGGERING OF PIEZOELECTRIC CHANNELS: AN EMERGING NONMEDICATION APPROACH TO SYMPTOM RELIEF

Peter Hurwitz, Jeffrey Gudin

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

EFFECT OF CHEMOGENETIC SUBTHALAMIC NUCLEUS INHIBITION ON MOTOR SYMPTOMS IN A 6-OHDA RAT MODEL OF PARKINSON’S DISEASE AND L-DOPA-INDUCED DYSKINESIA

Zeynep Us Göncü, Rezzan Gülhan

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

NR2F1 IS A CROSS-SPECIES MEDIATOR OF CEREBRAL CORTEX DEFECTS INDUCED BY FETAL ALCOHOL INTOXICATION

Manon Charlet, Laura Van Hees, Julie Stoufflet, Léa Oskera, Anaïs Boutsen, Antonela Bonafina, Coralie Reyskens, Arnaud Lavergne, Romann Close, Ekaterina Epifanova, Sergio Helgueta, Vincent Didone, Nathalie Krusy, Rosa Ndong Penda, Francesco Neri, Anne Firquet, Sophie Perrier d’Hauterive, Bernard Lakaye, Sylvia Tielens, Michèle Studer, Sophie Laguesse, Laurent Nguyen

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

HYPHI(Φ): A PIPELINE FOR DETECTING GEOMETRIC PHASE TRANSITIONS IN HYPERSCANNING NETWORKS

Nicolás Hinrichs, Noah Guzmán, Leonhard Schilbach, Guillaume Dumas, Melanie Weber

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

SEX-DEPENDENT BEHAVIORAL EFFECTS OF CHRONIC MORPHINE IN A MOUSE MODEL OF NEUROPATHIC PAIN

Beltrán Álvarez Pérez, Andrea Rodríguez-López, Alba Piñeiro-Justo, Tamara Pezzotta, Maria Ruíz-Suárez, Rafael Maldonado

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

A METHODOLOGICAL TOOLKIT FOR FREELY MOVING AVIAN ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY

Jesus Javier Ballesteros Carrasco, Mary Flaim, Jane Francescon, Corinna Haupt, Farina Lingstädt, Juan J. Medina Peschken, Yannik Neukirch, Tobias Otto, Sara Santos Silva, Winston Seah, Annika Verfers, Jonas Rose

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

EXPLORING ALLOSTERIC MODULATION OF MUSCARINIC M5 RECEPTOR VIA SITE-DIRECTED MUTAGENESIS

Sandra Fischer, Muhammad Ahsani, Markus Hermann, Kai Gerlach, Roland Pfau, Dietmar Weichert, Daniel Ursu

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

FUNCTIONAL CONNECTIVITY-DEPENDENT RESISTANCE TO REPRESENTATION DRIFT IN THE PRIMATE ANTERIOR CINGULATE CORTEX

Chuanyao Wei, Mingpo Yang, Chun Xu

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

PRENATAL STRESS REWIRES ADULT- AND DEVELOPMENTAL-BORN DENTATE GRANULE NEURONS CONNECTIVITY

Aroa Mañas-Ojeda, Mathieu Méquinion, Mohamed-Lyès Kaci, Fanny Farrugia, Djoher Nora Abrous, Muriel Koehl

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

NEUROPROTECTIVE EFFECTS OF DEXAMETHASONE IN ACUTE HIGH-ALTITUDE HYPOXIA-INDUCED NEURODEGENERATION OF RETINAL AND VISUAL CORTICAL NEURONS

Ruzanna Shushanyan, Anna Grigoryan, Tamara Abgaryan, Anna Karapetyan

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

CHARACTERIZATION OF NEUROPROTECTIVE EFFECTS MEDIATED BY PROLYL ENDOPEPTIDASE-INHIBITORY COMPOUNDS FOR THE TREATMENT OF PARKINSON’S DISEASE

Daniela Zalpanow, Malte Feja, Rebecca Kotzur, Inés Moreno, Roger Prades, Franziska Richter

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

HEART RATE VARIABILITY AS AN OBJECTIVE METHOD FOR ASSESSING STUDENTS' ACADEMIC EMOTIONS

Sirine Shogheryan, Narine Sahakyan, Ashkhen Sahakyan, Ani Harutyunyan, Lyudmila Avanesyan

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

A NOVEL PHENOTYPE BATTERY FOR ENHANCING GENETIC DIAGNOSIS OF AUTISM SPECTRUM DISORDER

Idan Menashe, Gal Meiri, Analya Michaelovski, Noam Levi

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

ULTRASELECTIVE GRAB SENSORS REVEAL DISTINCT ENDOCANNABINOIDS DYNAMICS IN VIVO<IMG SRC="" CLASS="FR-FIC FR-FIL FR-DIB FR-DRAGGABLE">

Ruyi Cai, Yueqi Yang, Shangxuan Cai, Weijian Teo, Shuaiyu Chen, Lei Wang, Ao Dong, Chen Song, Yulong Li

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

PREFRONTAL DISINHIBITION INDUCES SOCIAL AFFECTIVE DEFICITS IN A RAT MODEL OF SCHIZOPHRENIA

Reina Tachihara, Michimasa Toyoshima, Tingbi Xiong, Keita Igarashi, Miyo Hori, Kazuo Yamada

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

ASSESSING THE NEUROTOXIC EFFECTS OF FOSFOMYCIN ON COGNITION AND HIPPOCAMPAL NEUROGENESIS IN ADULT FEMALE RATS

Lama Hachem, Maram Chaaban, Rawan Khadra, Hashem Shehade, Alaa Al Mikkawi, Wassim Abou-Kheir

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

EFFECT OF ATORVASTATIN ON TELOMERE LENGTH, NEUROFILAMENT LIGHT CHAIN (NFL), AND GLIAL FIBRILLARY ACIDIC PROTEIN (GFAP)

Jun Kyu Song, Min Ju Kim, Jeong Min Baek, Sung Ho Park, Ho Jin Choi, Kyu Yong Lee, Young Joo Lee, Seong Ho Koh, Hyuk Sung Kwon

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

OPTOGENETIC DISSOCIATION OF CINGULATE AND PRELIMBIC CORTEX FUNCTION IN MORPHINE-INDUCED REWARD AND AVERSION: NEURAL SUBSTRATES UNDERLYING THE PARADOXICAL EFFECT HYPOTHESIS

Andrew Huang, Yi Chun Yu, Pei-Jui Hung, Jen-Shiuan Liu, Anna Kozłowska, Cai-N Cheng

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

5-HT7 RECEPTOR UPREGULATION AND LP-211 TREATMENT REVERSE ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL AND BEHAVIORAL DEFICITS IN A VALPROIC ACID–INDUCED RAT MODEL OF AUTISM

Mona Rahdar, Mahyar Janahmadi

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

INVESTIGATION OF THE PROTECTIVE AND THERAPEUTIC EFFECTS OF FILAMIN-A INHIBITORS IN A MOUSE MODEL OF MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS

Cansu Ertürk, Mehmet Fatih Yetkin, Kübra Aslan, Ahmet Eken

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

DIZOCILPINE (MK-801) DERIVATIVES AS NEUROPROTECTIVE NMDA RECEPTOR ANTAGONISTS WITHOUT PSYCHOMIMETIC SIDE EFFECTS

Jakub Netolicky, Anna Misiachna, Jan Konecny, Marharyta Kolcheva, Marketa Chvojkova, Lenka Kleteckova, Jan Korabecny, Ondrej Soukup, Martin Horak

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

BRAINWIDE BLOOD VOLUME REFLECTS OPPOSING NEURAL POPULATIONS

Agnes Landemard, Michael Krumin, Kenneth Harris, Matteo Carandini

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

INTRANASAL EFFECTS OF GALANIN 1-15 ON MOOD DISORDERS AND ALCOHOL SELF-ADMINISTRATION IN RATS

Noelia Cantero García, Antonio Flores-Burgess, Marta Flores-Gómez, Juan Pedro Pineda-Gómez, María C. Ramos, Caridad Díaz, Carmelo Millón, Zaida Díaz-Cabiale

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

INFLUENCE OF TEMPORAL ORIGIN ON DENTATE GRANULE NEURONS CONNECTIVITY

Estelle Cartier, Pierre Mortessagne, Vasika Venugopal, Fanny Farrugia, Monica Fernandez-Monreal, Djoher Nora Abrous, Emilie Pacary

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT OF VISUAL CORTICAL ACTIVITY IN MOUSE MODELS OF RETINAL DEGENERATION

Kashish Parnami, Dr Anwesha Bhattacharyya

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

A COMPARATIVE STUDY ON OBJECT INVARIANCE IN PIGEONS AND JACKDAWS

Annika Verfers, Lukas Hahn, Will Clark, Jesus Ballesteros Carrasco, Jonas Rose

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

EFFECTS OF TRANSCRANIAL STATIC MAGNETIC STIMULATION OVER THE PRIMARY MOTOR CORTEX ON MOVEMENT-RELATED SENSORIMOTOR OSCILLATORY ACTIVITY

Tatsunori Watanabe, Sumiya Shibata, Hikari Kirimoto, Takayuki Horinouchi, Tatsuya Mima

FENS Forum 2026

ECT coverage

93 items

Seminar50
ePoster40
Conference3

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