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107 curated items60 Seminars40 ePosters6 Conferences1 Position
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107 items · C
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SeminarNeuroscience

Decoding stress vulnerability

Stamatina Tzanoulinou
University of Lausanne, Faculty of Biology and Medicine, Department of Biomedical Sciences
Feb 19, 2026

Although stress can be considered as an ongoing process that helps an organism to cope with present and future challenges, when it is too intense or uncontrollable, it can lead to adverse consequences for physical and mental health. Social stress specifically, is a highly prevalent traumatic experience, present in multiple contexts, such as war, bullying and interpersonal violence, and it has been linked with increased risk for major depression and anxiety disorders. Nevertheless, not all individuals exposed to strong stressful events develop psychopathology, with the mechanisms of resilience and vulnerability being still under investigation. During this talk, I will identify key gaps in our knowledge about stress vulnerability and I will present our recent data from our contextual fear learning protocol based on social defeat stress in mice.

SeminarNeuroscience

sensorimotor control, mouvement, touch, EEG

Marieva Vlachou
Institut des Sciences du Mouvement Etienne Jules Marey, Aix-Marseille Université/CNRS, France
Dec 18, 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 11, 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 9, 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 9, 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

A human stem cell-derived organoid model of the trigeminal ganglion

Oliver Harschnitz
Human Technopole, Milan, Italy
Dec 7, 2025
Position

Prof. Gang Luo

University of Washington, Department of Biomedical Informatics and Medical Education
Seattle
Dec 5, 2025

The postdoctoral fellow will work on topics of mutual interest such as, but not limited to, automatic machine learning model selection and automatically explaining machine learning classification / prediction results. The initial appointment is for one year with the expectation of extension given satisfactory performance.

SeminarNeuroscience

Choice between methamphetamine and food is modulated by reinforcement interval and central drug metabolism

Marlaina Stocco
Western University
Dec 3, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

High Stakes in the Adolescent Brain: Glia Ignite Under THC’s Influence

Yalin Sun
University of Toronto
Dec 3, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

Prefrontal-thalamic goal-state coding segregates navigation episodes into spatially consistent parallel hippocampal maps

Hiroshi Ito
University of Lausanne
Nov 30, 2025
SeminarOpen Source

Computational bio-imaging via inverse scattering

Shwetadwip Chowdhury
Assistant Professor, University of Texas at Austin
Nov 24, 2025

Optical imaging is a major research tool in the basic sciences, and is the only imaging modality that routinely enables non-ionized imaging with subcellular spatial resolutions and high imaging speeds. In biological imaging applications, however, optical imaging is limited by tissue scattering to short imaging depths. This prevents large-scale bio-imaging by allowing visualization of only the outer superficial layers of an organism, or specific components isolated from within the organism and prepared in-vitro.

SeminarOpen Source

Introduction to protocols.io: Scientific collaboration through open protocols

Lenny Teytelman
Founder & President of protocols.io
Nov 17, 2025

Research articles and laboratory protocol organization often lack detailed instructions for replicating experiments. protocols.io is an open-access platform where researchers collaboratively create dynamic, interactive, step-by-step protocols that can be executed on mobile devices or the web. Researchers can easily and efficiently share protocols with colleagues, collaborators, the scientific community, or make them public. Real-time communication and interaction keep protocols up to date. Public protocols receive a DOI and enable open communication with authors and researchers to foster efficient experimentation and reproducibility.

SeminarNeuroscience

Microglia regulate remyelination via inflammatory phenotypic polarization in CNS demyelinating disorders

Athena Boutou
Hellenic Pasteur Institute
Nov 12, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

Top-down control of neocortical threat memory

Prof. Dr. Johannes Letzkus
Universität Freiburg, Germany
Nov 11, 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

MRI investigation of orientation-dependent changes in microstructure and function in a mouse model of mild traumatic brain injury

Amr Eed
Western University
Nov 5, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

Convergent large-scale network and local vulnerabilities underlie brain atrophy across Parkinson’s disease stages

Andrew Vo
Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University
Nov 5, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

Biomolecular condensates as drivers of neuroinflammation

Steven Boeynaems
Department of Molecular and Human Genetics, Baylor College of Medicine Duncan Neurological Research Institute, Texas Children's Hospital, USA
Nov 3, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

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

Vasileios Zikopoulos
Boston University
Nov 2, 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 28, 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.

SeminarNeuroscience

Generation and use of internal models of the world to guide flexible behavior

Antonio Fernandez-Ruiz
Cornell University, USA
Oct 26, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

NF1 exon 51 alternative splicing: functional implications in Central Nervous System (CNS) Cells

Charoula Peta
Biomedical research Foundation of the Academy of Athens
Oct 21, 2025
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

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

Ariel Zeleznikow-Johnston
Monash University
Oct 20, 2025

Functional connectomics reveals general wiring rule in mouse visual cortex

SeminarNeuroscience

The tubulin code in neuron health and disease : focus on detyrosination

Marie-Jo Moutin
Grenoble Institute Neurosciences, Univ Grenoble Alpes, Inserm U1216, CNRS
Oct 9, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

Competing Rhythms: Understanding and Modulating Auditory Neural Entrainment

Dr. Yuranny Cabral-Calderin
Freie Universität Berlin, Germany
Oct 7, 2025
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 6, 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 2, 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

Development of an Optical and Colorimetric Biosensor for the Quantification of Microrna 184 for Late Life Depression

Pedro Henrique Gonçalves Guedes
University of Saskatchewan
Oct 1, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

AutoMIND: Deep inverse models for revealing neural circuit invariances

Richard Gao
Goethe University
Oct 1, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

Cellular Crosstalk in Brain Development, Evolution and Disease

Silvia Cappello
Molecular Physiology of Neurogenesis at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
Oct 1, 2025

Cellular crosstalk is an essential process during brain development and is influenced by numerous factors, including cell morphology, adhesion, the local extracellular matrix and secreted vesicles. Inspired by mutations associated with neurodevelopmental disorders, we focus on understanding the role of extracellular mechanisms essential for the proper development of the human brain. Therefore, we combine 2D and 3D in vitro human models to better understand the molecular and cellular mechanisms involved in progenitor proliferation and fate, migration and maturation of excitatory and inhibitory neurons during human brain development and tackle the causes of neurodevelopmental disorders.

SeminarNeuroscience

Endocannabinoid System Dysregulations in Binge Eating Disorder and Obesity

Katia Befort
CNRS University of Strasbourg, Laboratoire de Neurosciences Cognitives et Adaptatives
Sep 30, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

The basal ganglia and addiction

Yonatan M Kupchik & Michel Engeln
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem resp Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS)
Sep 25, 2025
SeminarOpen Source

Introduction to protocols.io: Scientific collaboration through open protocols

Lenny Teytelman
Founder & President of protocols.io
Sep 24, 2025

Research articles and laboratory protocol organization often lack detailed instructions for replicating experiments. protocols.io is an open-access platform where researchers collaboratively create dynamic, interactive, step-by-step protocols that can be executed on mobile devices or the web. Researchers can easily and efficiently share protocols with colleagues, collaborators, the scientific community, or make them public. Real-time communication and interaction keep protocols up to date. Public protocols receive a DOI and enable open communication with authors and researchers to foster efficient experimentation and reproducibility.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Memory Decoding Journal Club: Distinct synaptic plasticity rules operate across dendritic compartments in vivo during learning

Ken Hayworth
Co-Founder and Chief Science Officer, Carboncopies
Sep 22, 2025

Distinct synaptic plasticity rules operate across dendritic compartments in vivo during learning

SeminarNeuroscience

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

Ann Lohof
Sorbonne Université, Institut de Biologie Paris Seine
Sep 18, 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.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Go with the visual flow: circuit mechanisms for gaze control during locomotion

Eugenia Chiappe
Champalimaud Foundation
Sep 11, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

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

Jennifer Robinson
McGill University
Sep 10, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

Neural Representations of Abstract Cognitive Maps in Prefrontal Cortex and Medial Temporal Lobe

Janahan Selvanayagam
University of Oxford
Sep 10, 2025
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Memory Decoding Journal Club: A combinatorial neural code for long-term motor memory

Ariel Zeleznikow-Johnston
Monash University
Sep 8, 2025

A combinatorial neural code for long-term motor memory

SeminarOpen Source

Scaling Up Bioimaging with Microfluidic Chips

Tobias Wenzel
Institute for Biological and Medical Engineering (IIBM), Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile.
Sep 4, 2025

Explore how microfluidic chips can enhance your imaging experiments by increasing control, throughput, or flexibility. In this remote, personalized workshop, participants will receive expert guidance, support and chips to run tests on their own microscopes.

SeminarNeuroscience

How the presynapse forms and functions”

Volker Haucke
Department of Molecular Pharmacology & Cell Biology, Leibniz Institute, Berlin, Germany
Aug 27, 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.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Memory Decoding Journal Club: Behavioral time scale synaptic plasticity underlies CA1 place fields

Kenneth Hayworth
Co-Founder and Chief Science Officer, Carboncopies
Aug 25, 2025

Behavioral time scale synaptic plasticity underlies CA1 place fields

SeminarOpen Source

The SIMple microscope: Development of a fibre-based platform for accessible SIM imaging in unconventional environments

Rebecca McClelland
PhD student at the University of Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Aug 25, 2025

Advancements in imaging speed, depth and resolution have made structured illumination microscopy (SIM) an increasingly powerful optical sectioning (OS) and super-resolution (SR) technique, but these developments remain inaccessible to many life science researchers due to the cost, optical complexity and delicacy of these instruments. We address these limitations by redesigning the optical path using in-line fibre components that are compact, lightweight and easily assembled in a “Plug & Play” modality, without compromising imaging performance. They can be integrated into an existing widefield microscope with a minimum of optical components and alignment, making OS-SIM more accessible to researchers with less optics experience. We also demonstrate a complete SR-SIM imaging system with dimensions 300 mm × 300 mm × 450 mm. We propose to enable accessible SIM imaging by utilising its compact, lightweight and robust design to transport it where it is needed, and image in “unconventional” environments where factors such as temperature and biosafety considerations currently limit imaging experiments.

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 17, 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 11, 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

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 10, 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

OpenNeuro FitLins GLM: An Accessible, Semi-Automated Pipeline for OpenNeuro Task fMRI Analysis

Michael Demidenko
Stanford University
Jul 31, 2025

In this talk, I will discuss the OpenNeuro Fitlins GLM package and provide an illustration of the analytic workflow. OpenNeuro FitLins GLM is a semi-automated pipeline that reduces barriers to analyzing task-based fMRI data from OpenNeuro's 600+ task datasets. Created for psychology, psychiatry and cognitive neuroscience researchers without extensive computational expertise, this tool automates what is largely a manual process and compilation of in-house scripts for data retrieval, validation, quality control, statistical modeling and reporting that, in some cases, may require weeks of effort. The workflow abides by open-science practices, enhancing reproducibility and incorporates community feedback for model improvement. The pipeline integrates BIDS-compliant datasets and fMRIPrep preprocessed derivatives, and dynamically creates BIDS Statistical Model specifications (with Fitlins) to perform common mass univariate [GLM] analyses. To enhance and standardize reporting, it generates comprehensive reports which includes design matrices, statistical maps and COBIDAS-aligned reporting that is fully reproducible from the model specifications and derivatives. OpenNeuro Fitlins GLM has been tested on over 30 datasets spanning 50+ unique fMRI tasks (e.g., working memory, social processing, emotion regulation, decision-making, motor paradigms), reducing analysis times from weeks to hours when using high-performance computers, thereby enabling researchers to conduct robust single-study, meta- and mega-analyses of task fMRI data with significantly improved accessibility, standardized reporting and reproducibility.

SeminarNeuroscience

Cause & Consequences of neuronal Tau protein ‘activation’

Susanne Wegmann
German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE), Berlin
Jul 16, 2025
SeminarPsychology

A personal journey on understanding intelligence

Li Yang Ku
Google DeepMind
Jul 15, 2025

The focus of this talk is not about my research in AI or Robotics but my own journey on trying to do research and understand intelligence in a rapidly evolving research landscape. I will trace my path from conducting early-stage research during graduate school, to working on practical solutions within a startup environment, and finally to my current role where I participate in more structured research at a major tech company. Through these varied experiences, I will provide different perspectives on research and talk about how my core beliefs on intelligence have changed and sometimes even been compromised. There are no lessons to be learned from my stories, but hopefully they will be entertaining.

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 8, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

Understanding reward-guided learning using large-scale datasets

Kim Stachenfeld
DeepMind, Columbia U
Jul 8, 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 7, 2025
SeminarPsychology

Digital Traces of Human Behaviour: From Political Mobilisation to Conspiracy Narratives

Lukasz Piwek
University of Bath & Cumulus Neuroscience Ltd
Jul 6, 2025

Digital platforms generate unprecedented traces of human behaviour, offering new methodological approaches to understanding collective action, polarisation, and social dynamics. Through analysis of millions of digital traces across multiple studies, we demonstrate how online behaviours predict offline action: Brexit-related tribal discourse responds to real-world events, machine learning models achieve 80% accuracy in predicting real-world protest attendance from digital signals, and social validation through "likes" emerges as a key driver of mobilization. Extending this approach to conspiracy narratives reveals how digital traces illuminate psychological mechanisms of belief and community formation. Longitudinal analysis of YouTube conspiracy content demonstrates how narratives systematically address existential, epistemic, and social needs, while examination of alt-tech platforms shows how emotions of anger, contempt, and disgust correlate with violence-legitimating discourse, with significant differences between narratives associated with offline violence versus peaceful communities. This work establishes digital traces as both methodological innovation and theoretical lens, demonstrating that computational social science can illuminate fundamental questions about polarisation, mobilisation, and collective behaviour across contexts from electoral politics to conspiracy communities.

SeminarNeuroscience

Is it Time for MS Patients to Receive Cognitive Rehabilitation?

John DeLuca
Kessler Foundation, West Orange, New Jersey
Jul 2, 2025
Conference

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:contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}:contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}.

Conference

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:contentReference[oaicite:8]{index=8}. 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:contentReference[oaicite:9]{index=9}:contentReference[oaicite:10]{index=10}.

Conference

FENS Forum 2024

Messe Wien Exhibition & Congress Center, Vienna, Austria
Jun 25, 2024

Organised by FENS in partnership with the Austrian Neuroscience Association and the Hungarian Neuroscience Society, the FENS Forum 2024 will take place on 25–29 June 2024 in Vienna, Austria:contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}. The FENS Forum is Europe’s largest neuroscience congress, covering all areas of neuroscience from basic to translational research:contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}.

Conference

COSYNE 2023

Montreal, Canada
Mar 9, 2023

The COSYNE 2023 conference provided an inclusive forum for exchanging experimental and theoretical approaches to problems in systems neuroscience, continuing the tradition of bringing together the computational neuroscience community:contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}. The main meeting was held in Montreal followed by post-conference workshops in Mont-Tremblant, fostering intensive discussions and collaboration.

Conference

Neuromatch 5

Virtual (online)
Sep 27, 2022

Neuromatch 5 (Neuromatch Conference 2022) was a fully virtual conference focused on computational neuroscience broadly construed, including machine learning work with explicit biological links:contentReference[oaicite:11]{index=11}. After four successful Neuromatch conferences, the fifth edition consolidated proven innovations from past events, featuring a series of talks hosted on Crowdcast and flash talk sessions (pre-recorded videos) with dedicated discussion times on Reddit:contentReference[oaicite:12]{index=12}.

Conference

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:contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}. 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:contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}. The workshops feature in-depth discussion of current topics of interest in a small group setting:contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}.

ePoster

Accelerating bio-plausible spiking simulations on the Graphcore IPU

Catherine Schöfmann, Jan Finkbeiner, Susanne Kunkel

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Adversarial-inspired autoencoder framework for salient sensory feature extraction

Greta Horvathova, Dan Goodman

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Adolescent maturation of cortical excitation-inhibition balance based on individualized biophysical network modeling

Amin Saberi, Kevin Wischnewski, Kyesam Jung, Leon Lotter, H. Schaare, Tobias Banaschweski, Gareth Barker, Arun Bokde, Sylvane Desrivières, Herta Flor, Antoine Grigis, Hugh Garavan, Penny Gowland, Andreas Heinz, Rüdiger Brühl, Jean-Luc Martinot, Marie-Laure Paillère Martinot, Eric Artiges, Frauke Nees, Dimitri Papadopoulos Orfanos, Herve Lemaitre, Luise Poustka, Sarah Hohmann, Nathalie Holz, Christian Baeuchl, Michael Smolka, Nilakshi Vaidya, Henrik Walter, Robert Whelan, Gunther Schumann, Tomas Paus, Juergen Dukart, Boris Bernhardt, Oleksandr Popovych, Simon Eickhoff, Sofie Valk

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Analysis of burst sequences in mouse prefrontal cortex during learning

Hamed Shabani, Hannah Muysers, Jonas-Frederic Sauer, Marlene Bartos, Christian Leibold

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

A connectome manipulation framework for the systematic and reproducible study of structure-function relationships through simulations

Christoph Pokorny, Omar Awile, James Isbister, Kerem Kurban, Matthias Wolf, Michael Reimann

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Anatomically-aligned neural processing of the IBL task

Shuqi Wang, Liam Paninski

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

An Attention-based Multimodal Decoder for Hybrid Brain-Computer Interface Control Systems

Marita Metzler, Christian Klaes

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Adaptive probabilistic regression for real-time motor excitability state prediction from human EEG

Lisa Haxel, Jaivardhan Kapoor, Ulf Ziemann, Jakob Macke

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Bayesian inference and arousal modulation in spatial perception to mitigate stochasticity and volatility

David Meijer, Fabian Dorok, Roberto Barumerli, Burcu Bayram, Michelle Spierings, Ulrich Pomper, Robert Baumgartner

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

How Do Bees See the World? A (Normative) Deep Reinforcement Learning Model for Insect Navigation

Stephan Lochner, Andrew Straw

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

cuBNM: GPU-Accelerated Biophysical Network Modeling

Amin Saberi, Kevin Wischnewski, Kyesam Jung, Leonard Sasse, Felix Hoffstaedter, Oleksandr Popovych, Boris Bernhardt, Simon Eickhoff, Sofie Valk

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Effective excitability: a determinant of the network bursting dynamics revealed by parameter invariance

Oleg Vinogradov, Emmanouil Giannakakis, Betül Uysal, Shlomo Ron, Eyal Weinreb, Holger Lerche, Elisha Moses, Anna Levina

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Behavioral and Neuronal Correlates of Exploration and Goal-Directed Navigation

Miao Wang, Fabian Stocek, Joseph González, Justin Graboski, Adrian Duszkiewicz, Adrien Peyrache, Anton Sirota

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Beyond Cognitive Maps: Gradually Eliminating Spatial Influence in Learned Graph Representations

Timon Kunze, Mona Garvert, Davide Crepaldi

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Bimodal multistability during perceptual detection in the ventral premotor cortex

Bernardo Andrade-Ortega, Sergio Parra, Antonio Zainos, Héctor Díaz, Ranulfo Romo, Lucas Bayones, Roman Rossi-Pool

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Biological evidence that the cortex does not implement backpropagation

Sander de Haan, Pau Vilimelis Aceituno, Reinhard Loidl, Benjamin Grewe

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Intrinsic dimension of neural activity: comparing artificial and biological neural networks

Jacopo Fadanni, Giacomo Gasparotto, Rosalba Pacelli, Marco Dal Maschio, Marco Salamanca, Marica Albanesi, Pietro Rotondo, Michele Allegra

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

A biological model of nonlinear dimensionality reduction

Kensuke Yoshida, Taro Toyoizumi

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Biological-plausible learning with a two compartment neuron model in recurrent neural networks

Timo Oess, Daniel Schmid, Heiko Neumann

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Bistability at the cellular level promotes robust and tunable criticality at the circuit level

Caroline Dejace, Pierre Sacré

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

A bottom-up approach to Activity Dependent and Activity Independent Synaptic Turnover

Mohammadreza Soltanipour, Aaron Nagel, Katrin Willig, Fred Wolf

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Brain-wide manifold-organized hierarchical encoding of behaviors in C. elegans

Charles Fieseler, Itamar Lev, Ulises Rey, Lukas Hille, Hannah Brenner, Manuel Zimmer

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Bootstrapping the auditory space map via an innate circuit

Yang Chu, Wayne Luk, Dan Goodman

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Building mechanistic models of neural computations with simulation-based machine learning

Jakob Macke

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Bridging biophysics and computation with differentiable simulation

Michael Deistler, Kyra Kadhim, Jonas Beck, Matthijs Pals, Janne Lappalainen, Manuel Gloeckler, Ziwei Huang, Cornelius Schroeder, Philipp Berens, Pedro Gonçalves, Jakob Macke

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Investigating hippocampal synaptic plasticity in Schizophrenia: a computational and experimental approach using MEA recordings

Sarah Hamdi Cherif, Candice Roux, Valentine Bouet, Jean-Marie Billard, Jérémie Gaidamour, Laure Buhry, Radu Ranta

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Causal role of human frontopolar cortex in information integration during complex decision making

Chun-Kit Law, Nicole Wong, Jing Jun Wong, Bolton Chau

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Cellular action potential generation: a key player in setting the network state

Susanne Schreiber

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

A census of neural timescales across the mouse brain

Roxana Zeraati, Yanliang Shi, The International Brain Laboratory, Anna Levina, Tatiana Engel

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Chronic optogenetic stimulation has the potential to shape the collective activity of neuronal cell cultures

Cyprian Adler, Friedrich Schwarz, Julian Vogel, Christine Stadelmann, Fred Wolf, Manuel Schottdorf, Andreas Neef

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Co-Design of Analog Neuromorphic Systems and Cortical Motifs with Local Dendritic Learning Rules

Maryada Maryada, Chiara De Luca, Arianna Rubino, Chenxi Wen, Melika Payvand, Giacomo Indiveri

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Knocking out co-active plasticity rules in neural networks reveals synapse type-specific contributions for learning and memory

Zoe Harrington, Basile Confavreux, Pedro Gonçalves, Jakob Macke, Tim Vogels

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Structure-function relationships and extended critical region in modular spiking model

Marianna Angiolelli, Silvia Scarpetta, Pierpaolo Sorrentino, Emahnuel Troisi Lopez, Mario Quarantelli, Carmine Granata, Giuseppe Sorrentino, Vincenzo Palmieri, Giovanni Messuti, Mattia Stefano, Simonetta Filippi, Christian Cherubini, Alessandro Loppini, Letizia Chiodo

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Co-development of accommodation and vergence and quantification of their interaction

Theresa Lundbeck, Francisco López, Bertram Shi, Jochen Triesch

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Circuit Mechanisms for Dynamic Social Interactions

Mala Murthy

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Calcium imaging-based brain-computer interface in freely behaving mice

Linor Balilti-Turgeman, Or Pinchasov, Nitzan Geva, Alon Rubin, Yaniv Ziv

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Code reversal between stimulus processing and fading memories in primate V1

Michael Wolff, Yang Yiling, Noa Krause, Wolf Singer, Rosanne Rademaker

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Co-evolved structural and temporal network heterogeneity

Stefan Iacob, Nishant Joshi, Joni Dambre, Fleur Zeldenrust

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Competition and integration of sensory signals in a deep reinforcement learning agent

Sandhiya Vijayabaskaran, Sen Cheng

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Adaptive brain-computer interfaces based on error-related potentials and reinforcement learning

Aline Xavier Fidencio, Christian Klaes, Ioannis Iossifidis

Bernstein Conference 2024