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ROS

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with ROS across World Wide.
114 curated items60 Seminars40 ePosters8 Positions6 Conferences
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114 items · ROS
114 results
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.

Position

Chris Reinke

Inria Grenoble, RobotLearn team
Inria Grenoble
Dec 5, 2025

The internship aims to develop a controller for a social mobile robot to have a conversation with people using large language models (LLMs) such as ChatGPT. The internship is part of the European SPRING project, which aims to develop mobile robots for healthcare environments. The intern will develop a controller (Python, ROS) for ARI, the social robot. The controller will navigate towards a human (or group), have a conversation with them, and leave the conversation. The intern will use existing components from the SPRING project such as mapping and localization of the robot and humans, human-aware navigation, speech recognition, and a simple dialogue system based on ChatGPT. The intern will also investigate how to optimally use LLMs such as ChatGPT for natural and comfortable conversation with the robot, for example, by using prompt engineering. The intern will have the chance to develop and implement their own ideas to improve the conversation with the robot, for example, by investigating gaze, gestures, or emotions.

PositionComputer Science

Justus Piater, Antonio Rodríguez-Sánchez, Samuele Tosatto

University of Innsbruck, Intelligent and Interactive Systems group
University of Innsbruck, Austria
Dec 5, 2025

This is a university doctoral position that involves minor teaching duties. The precise research topics are negotiable within the scope of active research at IIS, including machine learning and growing levels of AI for computer vision and robotics. Of particular interest are topics in representation learning and causality for out-of-distribution situations.

Position

Jun.-Prof. Dr.-Ing. Rania Rayyes

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Institut für Fördertechnik und Logistiksysteme (IFL), InnovationsCampus Mobilität der Zukunft (ICM)
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Gebäude 50.38, Gotthard-Franz-Straße 8, 76131 Karlsruhe
Dec 5, 2025

The main focus of this position is to develop novel AI systems and methods for robot applications: Dexterous robot grasping, Human-robot learning, Transfer learning – efficient online learning. The role offers close cooperation with other institutes, universities, and numerous industrial partners, a self-determined development environment for own research topics with active support for the doctorate research project, flexible working hours, and work in a young, interdisciplinary research team.

Position

Rania Rayyes

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Institute of Material Handling and Logistics (IFL), InnovationsCampus Mobilität der Zukunft (ICM)
Gebäude 50.38, Gotthard-Franz-Straße 8, 76131 Karlsruhe
Dec 5, 2025

The research in the AI & Robotics group focuses on developing novel AI systems for real robot applications for manipulation tasks, e.g., grasping, pin-picking. Areas of focus include Autonomous Robot Learning (active learning, lifelong learning, intrinsic motivation) and Human-Robot Learning (imitation learning, interactive learning).

PositionComputer Science

Prof. Peter Stone

The University of Texas at Austin
Austin, TX, USA
Dec 5, 2025

Applications are invited for a postdoctoral fellow of one year, possibly renewable for additional years, in the Department of Computer Science in the Learning Agents Research Group headed by Prof. Peter Stone. Primary responsibilities include performing cutting-edge research in collaboration with faculty, Ph.D. students, and other researchers. The research will focus on developing and testing novel algorithms for in connection with a range of projects related to robotics and multiagent reinforcement learning. Motivating use cases include long-term autonomous service robots, robot soccer, and social navigation.

SeminarNeuroscience

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

Yalin Sun
University of Toronto
Dec 3, 2025
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

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

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

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
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

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

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

Eugenia Chiappe
Champalimaud Foundation
Sep 11, 2025
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.

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

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

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.

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

“Brain theory, what is it or what should it be?”

Prof. Guenther Palm
University of Ulm
Jun 26, 2025

n the neurosciences the need for some 'overarching' theory is sometimes expressed, but it is not always obvious what is meant by this. One can perhaps agree that in modern science observation and experimentation is normally complemented by 'theory', i.e. the development of theoretical concepts that help guiding and evaluating experiments and measurements. A deeper discussion of 'brain theory' will require the clarification of some further distictions, in particular: theory vs. model and brain research (and its theory) vs. neuroscience. Other questions are: Does a theory require mathematics? Or even differential equations? Today it is often taken for granted that the whole universe including everything in it, for example humans, animals, and plants, can be adequately treated by physics and therefore theoretical physics is the overarching theory. Even if this is the case, it has turned out that in some particular parts of physics (the historical example is thermodynamics) it may be useful to simplify the theory by introducing additional theoretical concepts that can in principle be 'reduced' to more complex descriptions on the 'microscopic' level of basic physical particals and forces. In this sense, brain theory may be regarded as part of theoretical neuroscience, which is inside biophysics and therefore inside physics, or theoretical physics. Still, in neuroscience and brain research, additional concepts are typically used to describe results and help guiding experimentation that are 'outside' physics, beginning with neurons and synapses, names of brain parts and areas, up to concepts like 'learning', 'motivation', 'attention'. Certainly, we do not yet have one theory that includes all these concepts. So 'brain theory' is still in a 'pre-newtonian' state. However, it may still be useful to understand in general the relations between a larger theory and its 'parts', or between microscopic and macroscopic theories, or between theories at different 'levels' of description. This is what I plan to do.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Seeing a changing world through the eyes of coral fishes

Fabio Cortesi
Queensland University
Jun 25, 2025
SeminarOpen Source

Open SPM: A Modular Framework for Scanning Probe Microscopy

Marcos Penedo Garcia
Senior scientist, LBNI-IBI, EPFL Lausanne, Switzerland
Jun 23, 2025

OpenSPM aims to democratize innovation in the field of scanning probe microscopy (SPM), which is currently dominated by a few proprietary, closed systems that limit user-driven development. Our platform includes a high-speed OpenAFM head and base optimized for small cantilevers, an OpenAFM controller, a high-voltage amplifier, and interfaces compatible with several commercial AFM systems such as the Bruker Multimode, Nanosurf DriveAFM, Witec Alpha SNOM, Zeiss FIB-SEM XB550, and Nenovision Litescope. We have created a fully documented and community-driven OpenSPM platform, with training resources and sourcing information, which has already enabled the construction of more than 15 systems outside our lab. The controller is integrated with open-source tools like Gwyddion, HDF5, and Pycroscopy. We have also engaged external companies, two of which are integrating our controller into their products or interfaces. We see growing interest in applying parts of the OpenSPM platform to related techniques such as correlated microscopy, nanoindentation, and scanning electron/confocal microscopy. To support this, we are developing more generic and modular software, alongside a structured development workflow. A key feature of the OpenSPM system is its Python-based API, which makes the platform fully scriptable and ideal for AI and machine learning applications. This enables, for instance, automatic control and optimization of PID parameters, setpoints, and experiment workflows. With a growing contributor base and industry involvement, OpenSPM is well positioned to become a global, open platform for next-generation SPM innovation.

SeminarNeuroscience

Neural control of internal affective states”

David J. Anderson
California Institute of Technology, Tianqiao and Chrissy Chen Institute for Neuroscience, California, USA
Jun 18, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

Neural circuits underlying sleep structure and functions

Antoine Adamantidis
University of Bern
Jun 12, 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

Developmental and evolutionary perspectives on thalamic function

Dr. Bruno Averbeck
National Institute of Mental Health, Maryland, USA
Jun 10, 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 10, 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

Investigating the Neurobiology and Neurophysiology of Psilocybin Using Drosophila melanogaster as a Model System

Dotun Adeyinka
Acadia University
Jun 4, 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 4, 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 4, 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.

SeminarOpen Source

“A Focus on 3D Printed Lenses: Rapid prototyping, low-cost microscopy and enhanced imaging for the life sciences”

Liam Rooney
University of Glasgow
May 21, 2025

High-quality glass lenses are commonplace in the design of optical instrumentation used across the biosciences. However, research-grade glass lenses are often costly, delicate and, depending on the prescription, can involve intricate and lengthy manufacturing - even more so in bioimaging applications. This seminar will outline 3D printing as a viable low-cost alternative for the manufacture of high-performance optical elements, where I will also discuss the creation of the world’s first fully 3D printed microscope and other implementations of 3D printed lenses. Our 3D printed lenses were generated using consumer-grade 3D printers and pose a 225x materials cost-saving compared to glass optics. Moreover, they can be produced in any lab or home environment and offer great potential for education and outreach. Following performance validation, our 3D printed optics were implemented in the production of a fully 3D printed microscope and demonstrated in histological imaging applications. We also applied low-cost fabrication methods to exotic lens geometries to enhance resolution and contrast across spatial scales and reveal new biological structures. Across these applications, our findings showed that 3D printed lenses are a viable substitute for commercial glass lenses, with the advantage of being relatively low-cost, accessible, and suitable for use in optical instruments. Combining 3D printed lenses with open-source 3D printed microscope chassis designs opens the doors for low-cost applications for rapid prototyping, low-resource field diagnostics, and the creation of cheap educational tools.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

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

Noelle Stiles
Rutgers University
May 21, 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.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

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

Gesa Hartwigsen
University of Leipzig, Germany
May 19, 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.

SeminarNeuroscience

Neural mechanisms of rhythmic motor control in Drosophila

John Tuthill
University of Washington, Seattle, USA
May 15, 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

Understanding reward-guided learning using large-scale datasets

Kim Stachenfeld
DeepMind, Columbia U
May 13, 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.

SeminarPsychology

Using Fast Periodic Visual Stimulation to measure cognitive function in dementia

George Stothart
University of Bath & Cumulus Neuroscience Ltd
May 13, 2025

Fast periodic visual stimulation (FPVS) has emerged as a promising tool for assessing cognitive function in individuals with dementia. This technique leverages electroencephalography (EEG) to measure brain responses to rapidly presented visual stimuli, offering a non-invasive and objective method for evaluating a range of cognitive functions. Unlike traditional cognitive assessments, FPVS does not rely on behavioural responses, making it particularly suitable for individuals with cognitive impairment. In this talk I will highlight a series of studies that have demonstrated its ability to detect subtle deficits in recognition memory, visual processing and attention in dementia patients using EEG in the lab, at home and in clinic. The method is quick, cost-effective, and scalable, utilizing widely available EEG technology. FPVS holds significant potential as a functional biomarker for early diagnosis and monitoring of dementia, paving the way for timely interventions and improved patient outcomes.

SeminarNeuroscience

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

Franco Pestilli
University of Texas, Austin, USA
May 12, 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..

SeminarNeuroscience

Rejuvenating the Alzheimer’s brain: Challenges & Opportunities

Salta Evgenia
Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience, Royal Dutch Academy of Science
May 8, 2025
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

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

Ariel Zeleznikow-Johnston
Monash University
May 5, 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 1, 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.

SeminarNeuroscience

Simulating Thought Disorder: Fine-Tuning Llama-2 for Synthetic Speech in Schizophrenia

Alban Elias Voppel
McGill University
Apr 30, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

Relating circuit dynamics to computation: robustness and dimension-specific computation in cortical dynamics

Shaul Druckmann
Stanford department of Neurobiology and department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Apr 22, 2025

Neural dynamics represent the hard-to-interpret substrate of circuit computations. Advances in large-scale recordings have highlighted the sheer spatiotemporal complexity of circuit dynamics within and across circuits, portraying in detail the difficulty of interpreting such dynamics and relating it to computation. Indeed, even in extremely simplified experimental conditions, one observes high-dimensional temporal dynamics in the relevant circuits. This complexity can be potentially addressed by the notion that not all changes in population activity have equal meaning, i.e., a small change in the evolution of activity along a particular dimension may have a bigger effect on a given computation than a large change in another. We term such conditions dimension-specific computation. Considering motor preparatory activity in a delayed response task we utilized neural recordings performed simultaneously with optogenetic perturbations to probe circuit dynamics. First, we revealed a remarkable robustness in the detailed evolution of certain dimensions of the population activity, beyond what was thought to be the case experimentally and theoretically. Second, the robust dimension in activity space carries nearly all of the decodable behavioral information whereas other non-robust dimensions contained nearly no decodable information, as if the circuit was setup to make informative dimensions stiff, i.e., resistive to perturbations, leaving uninformative dimensions sloppy, i.e., sensitive to perturbations. Third, we show that this robustness can be achieved by a modular organization of circuitry, whereby modules whose dynamics normally evolve independently can correct each other’s dynamics when an individual module is perturbed, a common design feature in robust systems engineering. Finally, we will recent work extending this framework to understanding the neural dynamics underlying preparation of speech.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Fear learning induces synaptic potentiation between engram neurons in the rat lateral amygdala

Kenneth Hayworth
Carboncopies Foundation & BPF Aspirational Neuroscience
Apr 21, 2025

Fear learning induces synaptic potentiation between engram neurons in the rat lateral amygdala. This study by Marios Abatis et al. demonstrates how fear conditioning strengthens synaptic connections between engram cells in the lateral amygdala, revealed through optogenetic identification of neuronal ensembles and electrophysiological measurements. The work provides crucial insights into memory formation mechanisms at the synaptic level, with implications for understanding anxiety disorders and developing targeted interventions. Presented by Dr. Kenneth Hayworth, this journal club will explore the paper's methodology linking engram cell reactivation with synaptic plasticity measurements, and discuss implications for memory decoding research.

SeminarNeuroscience

Neurosurgery & Consciousness: Bridging Science and Philosophy in the Age of AI

Isaakidis Dimitrios
Mediterranean Hospital of Cyprus
Apr 10, 2025

Overview of neurosurgery specialty interplay between neurology, psychiatry and neurosurgery. Discussion on benefits and disadvantages of classifications. Presentation of sub-specialties: trauma, oncology, functional, pediatric, vascular and spine. How does an ordinary day of a neurosurgeon look like; outpatient clinic, emergencies, pre/intra/post operative patient care. An ordinary operation. Myth-busting and practical insights of every day practice. An ordinary operation. Hint for research on clinical problems to be solved. The coming ethical frontiers of neuroprosthetics. In part two we will explore the explanatory gap and its significance. We will review the more than 200 theories of the hard problem of consciousness, from the prevailing to the unconventional. Finally, we are going to reflect on the AI advancements and the claims of LLMs becoming conscious

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Memory Decoding Journal Club: Reconstructing a new hippocampal engram for systems reconsolidation and remote memory updating

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

Join us for the Memory Decoding Journal Club, a collaboration between the Carboncopies Foundation and BPF Aspirational Neuroscience. This month, we're diving into a groundbreaking paper: 'Reconstructing a new hippocampal engram for systems reconsolidation and remote memory updating' by Bo Lei, Bilin Kang, Yuejun Hao, Haoyu Yang, Zihan Zhong, Zihan Zhai, and Yi Zhong from Tsinghua University, Beijing Academy of Artificial Intelligence, IDG/McGovern Institute of Brain Research, and Peking Union Medical College. Dr. Randal Koene will guide us through an engaging discussion on these exciting findings and their implications for neuroscience and memory research.

SeminarNeuroscience

Decoding ketamine: Neurobiological mechanisms underlying its rapid antidepressant efficacy

Zanos Panos
Translational Neuropharmacology Lab, University of Cyprus, Center for Applied Neurosience & Department of Psychology, Nicosia, Cyprus
Apr 3, 2025

Unlike traditional monoamine-based antidepressants that require weeks to exert effects, ketamine alleviates depression within hours, though its clinical use is limited by side effects. While ketamine was initially thought to work primarily through NMDA receptor (NMDAR) inhibition, our research reveals a more complex mechanism. We demonstrate that NMDAR inhibition alone cannot explain ketamine's sustained antidepressant effects, as other NMDAR antagonists like MK-801 lack similar efficacy. Instead, the (2R,6R)-hydroxynorketamine (HNK) metabolite appears critical, exhibiting antidepressant effects without ketamine's side effects. Paradoxically, our findings suggest an inverted U-shaped dose-response relationship where excessive NMDAR inhibition may actually impede antidepressant efficacy, while some level of NMDAR activation is necessary. The antidepressant actions of ketamine and (2R,6R)-HNK require AMPA receptor activation, leading to synaptic potentiation and upregulation of AMPA receptor subunits GluA1 and GluA2. Furthermore, NMDAR subunit GluN2A appears necessary and possibly sufficient for these effects. This research establishes NMDAR-GluN2A activation as a common downstream effector for rapid-acting antidepressants, regardless of their initial targets, offering promising directions for developing next-generation antidepressants with improved efficacy and reduced side effects.

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}.

SeminarNeuroscience

Pain in the Brain: A Drink a Day Could Bring More Than You Bargain

Michael Burton
Department of Neuroscience, The University of Texas at Dallas
Mar 17, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

Cognitive maps as expectations learned across episodes – a model of the two dentate gyrus blades

Andrej Bicanski
Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences
Mar 11, 2025

How can the hippocampal system transition from episodic one-shot learning to a multi-shot learning regime and what is the utility of the resultant neural representations? This talk will explore the role of the dentate gyrus (DG) anatomy in this context. The canonical DG model suggests it performs pattern separation. More recent experimental results challenge this standard model, suggesting DG function is more complex and also supports the precise binding of objects and events to space and the integration of information across episodes. Very recent studies attribute pattern separation and pattern integration to anatomically distinct parts of the DG (the suprapyramidal blade vs the infrapyramidal blade). We propose a computational model that investigates this distinction. In the model the two processing streams (potentially localized in separate blades) contribute to the storage of distinct episodic memories, and the integration of information across episodes, respectively. The latter forms generalized expectations across episodes, eventually forming a cognitive map. We train the model with two data sets, MNIST and plausible entorhinal cortex inputs. The comparison between the two streams allows for the calculation of a prediction error, which can drive the storage of poorly predicted memories and the forgetting of well-predicted memories. We suggest that differential processing across the DG aids in the iterative construction of spatial cognitive maps to serve the generation of location-dependent expectations, while at the same time preserving episodic memory traces of idiosyncratic events.

SeminarNeuroscience

What it’s like is all there is: The value of Consciousness

Axel Cleeremans
Université Libre de Bruxelles
Mar 6, 2025

Over the past thirty years or so, cognitive neuroscience has made spectacular progress understanding the biological mechanisms of consciousness. Consciousness science, as this field is now sometimes called, was not only inexistent thirty years ago, but its very name seemed like an oxymoron: how can there be a science of consciousness? And yet, despite this scepticism, we are now equipped with a rich set of sophisticated behavioural paradigms, with an impressive array of techniques making it possible to see the brain in action, and with an ever-growing collection of theories and speculations about the putative biological mechanisms through which information processing becomes conscious. This is all good and fine, even promising, but we also seem to have thrown the baby out with the bathwater, or at least to have forgotten it in the crib: consciousness is not just mechanisms, it’s what it feels like. In other words, while we know thousands of informative studies about access-consciousness, we have little in the way of phenomenal consciousness. But that — what it feels like — is truly what “consciousness” is about. Understanding why it feels like something to be me and nothing (panpsychists notwithstanding) for a stone to be a stone is what the field has always been after. However, while it is relatively easy to study access-consciousness through the contrastive approach applied to reports, it is much less clear how to study phenomenology, its structure and its function. Here, I first overview work on what consciousness does (the "how"). Next, I ask what difference feeling things makes and what function phenomenology might play. I argue that subjective experience has intrinsic value and plays a functional role in everything that we do.

SeminarPsychology

A Novel Neurophysiological Approach to Assessing Distractibility within the General Population

Shadee Thiam
University of Geneva
Mar 4, 2025

Vulnerability to distraction varies across the general population and significantly affects one’s capacity to stay focused on and successfully complete the task at hand, whether at school, on the road, or at work. In this talk, I will begin by discussing how distractibility is typically assessed in the literature and introduce our innovative ERP approach to measuring it. Since distractibility is a cardinal symptom of ADHD, I will introduce its most widely used paper-and-pencil screening tool for the general population as external validation. Following that, I will present the Load Theory of Attention and explain how we used perceptual load to test the reliability of our neural marker of distractibility. Finally, I will highlight potential future applications of this marker in clinical and educational settings.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Brain Emulation Challenge Workshop

Randal A. Koene
Co-Founder and Chief Science Officer, Carboncopies
Feb 21, 2025

Brain Emulation Challenge workshop will tackle cutting-edge topics such as ground-truthing for validation, leveraging artificial datasets generated from virtual brain tissue, and the transformative potential of virtual brain platforms, such as applied to the forthcoming Brain Emulation Challenge.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Brain Emulation Challenge Workshop

Konrad Kording
Professor,University of Pennsylvania, Department of Neuroscience and Department of Bioengineering
Feb 21, 2025

Brain Emulation Challenge workshop will tackle cutting-edge topics such as ground-truthing for validation, leveraging artificial datasets generated from virtual brain tissue, and the transformative potential of virtual brain platforms, such as applied to the forthcoming Brain Emulation Challenge.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Brain Emulation Challenge Workshop

Philip Shiu
Neuroscientist at A.I., Cognitive Science and Neurobiology Company, EON Systems
Feb 21, 2025

Brain Emulation Challenge workshop will tackle cutting-edge topics such as ground-truthing for validation, leveraging artificial datasets generated from virtual brain tissue, and the transformative potential of virtual brain platforms, such as applied to the forthcoming Brain Emulation Challenge.

SeminarNeuroscience

Vision for perception versus vision for action: dissociable contributions of visual sensory drives from primary visual cortex and superior colliculus neurons to orienting behaviors

Prof. Dr. Ziad M. Hafed
Werner Reichardt Center for Integrative Neuroscience, and Hertie Institute for Clinical Brain Research University of Tübingen
Feb 11, 2025

The primary visual cortex (V1) directly projects to the superior colliculus (SC) and is believed to provide sensory drive for eye movements. Consistent with this, a majority of saccade-related SC neurons also exhibit short-latency, stimulus-driven visual responses, which are additionally feature-tuned. However, direct neurophysiological comparisons of the visual response properties of the two anatomically-connected brain areas are surprisingly lacking, especially with respect to active looking behaviors. I will describe a series of experiments characterizing visual response properties in primate V1 and SC neurons, exploring feature dimensions like visual field location, spatial frequency, orientation, contrast, and luminance polarity. The results suggest a substantial, qualitative reformatting of SC visual responses when compared to V1. For example, SC visual response latencies are actively delayed, independent of individual neuron tuning preferences, as a function of increasing spatial frequency, and this phenomenon is directly correlated with saccadic reaction times. Such “coarse-to-fine” rank ordering of SC visual response latencies as a function of spatial frequency is much weaker in V1, suggesting a dissociation of V1 responses from saccade timing. Consistent with this, when we next explored trial-by-trial correlations of individual neurons’ visual response strengths and visual response latencies with saccadic reaction times, we found that most SC neurons exhibited, on a trial-by-trial basis, stronger and earlier visual responses for faster saccadic reaction times. Moreover, these correlations were substantially higher for visual-motor neurons in the intermediate and deep layers than for more superficial visual-only neurons. No such correlations existed systematically in V1. Thus, visual responses in SC and V1 serve fundamentally different roles in active vision: V1 jumpstarts sensing and image analysis, but SC jumpstarts moving. I will finish by demonstrating, using V1 reversible inactivation, that, despite reformatting of signals from V1 to the brainstem, V1 is still a necessary gateway for visually-driven oculomotor responses to occur, even for the most reflexive of eye movement phenomena. This is a fundamental difference from rodent studies demonstrating clear V1-independent processing in afferent visual pathways bypassing the geniculostriate one, and it demonstrates the importance of multi-species comparisons in the study of oculomotor control.

SeminarPsychology

Neural makers of lapses in attention during sustained ‘real-world’ task performance

Emily Cunningham
University of Stirling
Feb 11, 2025

Lapses in attention are ubiquitous and, unfortunately, the cause of many tragic accidents. One potential solution may be to develop assistance systems which can use objective, physiological signals to monitor attention levels and predict a lapse in attention before it occurs. As it stands, it is unclear which physiological signals are the most reliable markers of inattention, and even less is known about how reliably they will work in a more naturalistic setting. My project aims to address these questions across two experiments: a lab-based experiment and a more ‘real-world’ experiment. In this talk I will present the findings from my lab experiment, in which we combined EEG and pupillometry to detect markers of inattention during two computerised sustained attention tasks. I will then present the methods for my second, more ‘naturalistic’ experiment in which we use the same methods (EEG and pupillometry) to examine whether these markers can still be extracted from noisier data.

SeminarNeuroscience

Circuit Mechanisms of Remote Memory

Lauren DeNardo, PhD
Department of Physiology, David Geffen School of Medicine, UCLA
Feb 10, 2025

Memories of emotionally-salient events are long-lasting, guiding behavior from minutes to years after learning. The prelimbic cortex (PL) is required for fear memory retrieval across time and is densely interconnected with many subcortical and cortical areas involved in recent and remote memory recall, including the temporal association area (TeA). While the behavioral expression of a memory may remain constant over time, the neural activity mediating memory-guided behavior is dynamic. In PL, different neurons underlie recent and remote memory retrieval and remote memory-encoding neurons have preferential functional connectivity with cortical association areas, including TeA. TeA plays a preferential role in remote compared to recent memory retrieval, yet how TeA circuits drive remote memory retrieval remains poorly understood. Here we used a combination of activity-dependent neuronal tagging, viral circuit mapping and miniscope imaging to investigate the role of the PL-TeA circuit in fear memory retrieval across time in mice. We show that PL memory ensembles recruit PL-TeA neurons across time, and that PL-TeA neurons have enhanced encoding of salient cues and behaviors at remote timepoints. This recruitment depends upon ongoing synaptic activity in the learning-activated PL ensemble. Our results reveal a novel circuit encoding remote memory and provide insight into the principles of memory circuit reorganization across time.

SeminarNeuroscience

Predicting traveling waves: a new mathematical technique to link the structure of a network to the specific patterns of neural activity

Roberto Budzinski
Western University
Feb 5, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

Analyzing Network-Level Brain Processing and Plasticity Using Molecular Neuroimaging

Alan Jasanoff
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Jan 27, 2025

Behavior and cognition depend on the integrated action of neural structures and populations distributed throughout the brain. We recently developed a set of molecular imaging tools that enable multiregional processing and plasticity in neural networks to be studied at a brain-wide scale in rodents and nonhuman primates. Here we will describe how a novel genetically encoded activity reporter enables information flow in virally labeled neural circuitry to be monitored by fMRI. Using the reporter to perform functional imaging of synaptically defined neural populations in the rat somatosensory system, we show how activity is transformed within brain regions to yield characteristics specific to distinct output projections. We also show how this approach enables regional activity to be modeled in terms of inputs, in a paradigm that we are extending to address circuit-level origins of functional specialization in marmoset brains. In the second part of the talk, we will discuss how another genetic tool for MRI enables systematic studies of the relationship between anatomical and functional connectivity in the mouse brain. We show that variations in physical and functional connectivity can be dissociated both across individual subjects and over experience. We also use the tool to examine brain-wide relationships between plasticity and activity during an opioid treatment. This work demonstrates the possibility of studying diverse brain-wide processing phenomena using molecular neuroimaging.

SeminarNeuroscience

Mapping the neural dynamics of dominance and defeat

Annegret Falkner
Princeton Neuroscience Institute, USA
Dec 11, 2024

Social experiences can have lasting changes on behavior and affective state. In particular, repeated wins and losses during fighting can facilitate and suppress future aggressive behavior, leading to persistent high aggression or low aggression states. We use a combination of techniques for multi-region neural recording, perturbation, behavioral analysis, and modeling to understand how nodes in the brain’s subcortical “social decision-making network” encode and transform aggressive motivation into action, and how these circuits change following social experience.

SeminarOpen SourceRecording

Towards open meta-research in neuroimaging

Kendra Oudyk
ORIGAMI - Neural data science - https://neurodatascience.github.io/
Dec 8, 2024

When meta-research (research on research) makes an observation or points out a problem (such as a flaw in methodology), the project should be repeated later to determine whether the problem remains. For this we need meta-research that is reproducible and updatable, or living meta-research. In this talk, we introduce the concept of living meta-research, examine prequels to this idea, and point towards standards and technologies that could assist researchers in doing living meta-research. We introduce technologies like natural language processing, which can help with automation of meta-research, which in turn will make the research easier to reproduce/update. Further, we showcase our open-source litmining ecosystem, which includes pubget (for downloading full-text journal articles), labelbuddy (for manually extracting information), and pubextract (for automatically extracting information). With these tools, you can simplify the tedious data collection and information extraction steps in meta-research, and then focus on analyzing the text. We will then describe some living meta-research projects to illustrate the use of these tools. For example, we’ll show how we used GPT along with our tools to extract information about study participants. Essentially, this talk will introduce you to the concept of meta-research, some tools for doing meta-research, and some examples. Particularly, we want you to take away the fact that there are many interesting open questions in meta-research, and you can easily learn the tools to answer them. Check out our tools at https://litmining.github.io/

SeminarNeuroscience

The circuitry behind innate visual behavior

Alexander Heimel
Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience
Dec 1, 2024
SeminarNeuroscience

The Brain Prize winners' webinar

Larry Abbott, Haim Sompolinsky, Terry Sejnowski
Columbia University; Harvard University / Hebrew University; Salk Institute
Nov 29, 2024

This webinar brings together three leaders in theoretical and computational neuroscience—Larry Abbott, Haim Sompolinsky, and Terry Sejnowski—to discuss how neural circuits generate fundamental aspects of the mind. Abbott illustrates mechanisms in electric fish that differentiate self-generated electric signals from external sensory cues, showing how predictive plasticity and two-stage signal cancellation mediate a sense of self. Sompolinsky explores attractor networks, revealing how discrete and continuous attractors can stabilize activity patterns, enable working memory, and incorporate chaotic dynamics underlying spontaneous behaviors. He further highlights the concept of object manifolds in high-level sensory representations and raises open questions on integrating connectomics with theoretical frameworks. Sejnowski bridges these motifs with modern artificial intelligence, demonstrating how large-scale neural networks capture language structures through distributed representations that parallel biological coding. Together, their presentations emphasize the synergy between empirical data, computational modeling, and connectomics in explaining the neural basis of cognition—offering insights into perception, memory, language, and the emergence of mind-like processes.

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

Connectome and task predict neural activity across the fly visual system

Janne Lappalainen, Fabian Tschopp, Sridhama Prakhya, Mason McGill, Aljoscha Nern, Kazunori Shinomiya, Shin-ya Takemura, Eyal Gruntman, Jakob Macke, Srinivas Turaga

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Cross-correlation--response relation for spike-driven neurons

Jakob Stubenrauch, Benjamin Lindner

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Efficient nonlinear receptive field estimation across processing stages of sensory systems

Marc Büttner, Matej Znidaric, Roland Diggelmann, Federica Rosselli, Annalisa Bucci, Andreas Hierlemann, Felix Franke

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Estimating flexible across-area communication with neurally-constrained RNNs

Joao Barbosa, Adrian Valente, Scot Brincat, Earl Miller, Srdjan Ostojic

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Homeostatic regulation of synaptic connectivity across connectomes

Andre Ferreira Castro, Ingo Fritz, Feiyu Wang, Ricardo Chirif Molina, Mikołaj Maurycy Miękus, Julijana Gjorgjieva

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Identifying patterns across brains from 10 years of human single-neuron recordings

Alana Darcher, Gert Dehnen, Valeri Borger, Rainer Surges, Florian Mormann

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Increase in dimensionality and sparsification of neural activity over development across diverse cortical areas

Lorenzo Butti, Nathaniel Powel, Bettina Hein, Deyue Kong, Jonas Elpelt, Haleigh Mulholland, Gordon Smith, Matthias Kaschube

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Intracortical microstimulation in a spiking neural network model of the primary visual cortex

Tanguy Damart, Ján Antolík

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Flygenvectors: The spatial and temporal structure of neural activity across the fly brain

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Open-source solutions for research data management in neuroscience collaborations

Reema Gupta, Thomas Wachtler

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Optimising local diameters across entire dendritic trees

Alexander Bird, Peter Jedlicka, Hermann Cuntz

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Population Dynamics and Network Behaviour of ON- and OFF-cells in the Rostral Ventral Medulla

Carl Ashworth, Caitlynn De Preter, Melissa Martenson, Zhigang Shi, Mary Heinricher, Flavia Mancini

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Quantitative modeling of the emergence of macroscopic grid-like representations

Ikhwan Bin Khalid, Eric Reifenstein, Naomi Auer, Lukas Kunz, Richard Kempter

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Role of local Kenyon cell – Kenyon Cell interactions in the γ lobe of Drosophila melanogaster for specificity in olfactory learning

Ibrahim Tunc, Martin Nawrot, Moshe Parnas

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Set-based Fitness Comparisons - Could Neuroscientists Benefit from Engineering Studies on Conceptual Design?

Amiram Moshaiov

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Stable cortical coding for a dexterous reach-to-grasp task across motor cortical laminae

Elizabeth de Laittre, Jason MacLean

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Unstructured representations in a structured brain: a cross-region analysis of the neural code

Shuqi Wang, Lorenzo Posani, Liam Paninski, Stefano Fusi

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Utilizing Random Forest for Multivariate Analysis: Exploring the Influence of Dopaminergic Neurons on Drosophila Larvae Locomotion

Arman Behrad, Juliane Thoener, Michael Schleyer, Bertram Gerber

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Accurate Engagement of the Drosophila Central-Complex Compass During Head-Fixed Path-Constrained Navigation

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Chromatic contrast and angle of polarization signals are integrated in the Drosophila central complex

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

A circuit library for exploring the functional logic of massive feedback loops in Drosophila brain

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Conjunctive theta- and ripple-frequency oscillations across hippocampal strata of foraging rats

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Coordinated cortico-cerebellar neural dynamics underlying neuroprosthetic learning

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Cross-Frequency Coupling Increases Memory Capacity in Oscillatory Neural Networks

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Dendritic integration of thalamic HD signals and retrosplenial input in presubicular neurons

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Differential encoding of temporal context and expectation across the visual hierarchy

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Environment-dependent firing in rigidly organized head-direction cells is stable across weeks

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Evaluating Noise Tolerance in Drosophila Vision

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Experience early in auditory conditioning impacts across-animal variability in neural tuning

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Exploiting color space geometry for visual stimulus design across animals

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Flygenvectors: The spatial and temporal structure of neural activity across the fly brain

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Hierarchical modularity in Drosophila brain reveals novel organizational principles

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Hierarchical modularity in Drosophila brain reveals novel organizational principles

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Inter-areal patterned microstimulation selectively drives PFC activity and behavior in a memory task

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Inter-areal patterned microstimulation selectively drives PFC activity and behavior in a memory task

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Interpretable behavioral features have conserved neural representations across mice

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Interpretable behavioral features have conserved neural representations across mice

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Investigation of a multilevel multisensory circuit underlying female decision making in Drosophila

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Investigation of a multilevel multisensory circuit underlying female decision making in Drosophila

COSYNE 2022

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