Events
Past Events
Mechanisms that Underlie Flexible Neural Coding
This conference will focus on how brains adjust information processing and optimize behaviors in response to ever-changing environmental demands. This astonishing flexibility relies on the modulation of brain functions in multifarious ways that can change neural excitability, synaptic communication and neural circuit output. The modulation of brain functions regulates basic biological states such as feeding, sleep or sex, and is of key importance for cognitive brain functions such as attention and learning. Mechanistic insights into neuromodulation are not only critical to understand the neural basis of intelligence and behavior but also to understand brain dysfunctions underlying disease. The 2023 GRC conference on “Modulation of Neural Circuits and Behavior” will bring together scientists with diverse backgrounds to discuss current concepts and exciting new results in this broad field. Applications for this meeting must be submitted by April 23, 2023.
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The aim of this seminar is to bring together outstanding young scientists with a keen interest in neural underpinnings of behavior. The focus of the seminar is to present a wide range of approaches to understanding brain function in behavior, spanning from molecular mechanisms to complex circuit level computations. We will also highlight avenues for combining various methodologies with a goal of converging on common ideas. Application deadline: April 22, 2023.
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This workshop aims to provide a community-building forum for researchers at all career stages interested in the interface between zebrafish neuroscience and computation to come together, share tools, explore ideas, and chart a collaborative path forward. This hands-on workshop will focus equal parts on theory and computational tools. Application Deadline: Jan 6, 2022 (11:59 p.m. EST)
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The IBRO-Simons Computational Neuroscience Imbizo, or isiCNI is an opportunity for African and international students to learn about cutting edge research techniques in computational neuroscience. The format of the school will be a combination of intensive lectures on advanced topics in computational and theoretical neuroscience as well as practical exercises in simulation and data analysis. In addition, students will perform a mini-research project under the supervision of one of the school tutors, to be presented at the end of the school. Application deadline: Thursday 20 Oct 2022
- SCGB
Representational drift poses the question of how sensory perception, memory, motor behavior, and task performance are maintained over time, and provides a window into the adaptive properties of neural circuits on long timescales. Elucidating the underlying causes and implications of this phenomenon may be crucial to our understanding of how neuronal function underlies basic sensory, motor, and cognitive processes. Proper characterization of drift across the nervous system, both in terms of its function and underlying mechanism, will require concerted effort and cooperation on both experimental and theoretical fronts. This conference will spur these efforts across species, brain regions, cell types and behaviors, and provide a forum for experimentalists and theorists to debate the causes and implications of drift as well as formulate promising directions to gain traction on this question. Application deadline: January 10, 2023
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Olfactory navigation is required for the survival of virtually all living creatures from unicellular organisms to mammals. This conference will focus on olfaction and spatial orientation as a unifying theme across organisms with different viewpoints: mechanistic, computational and evolutionary. We will examine how model organisms, with distinct sensory capabilities and constraints have evolved to solve this problem. Application deadline: Jan 10, 2023 (11:59 p.m. ET)
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Past Events
Neuromatch Academy teaches computational techniques crucial for success in academia and industry. It serves thousands of students each year with hundreds of teaching assistants. Students learn by solving problems in small groups and by running group projects; they learn in many languages in an incredibly supportive environment. We run a Computational Neuroscience and a Deep Learning course, which will happen in parallel for 3 weeks. Student and TA applications accepted March 28th to April 20th.
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This event aims to bring together spike sorting developers and experts to tackle open and unsolved spike sorting issues and to move the spike sorting field forward in an open and highly collaborative fashion. Come join the developers of popular spike sorting tools including YASS, SpikeInterface, SpyKING CIRCUS, Mountainsort, and many more.
The event will take place both at the Flatiron Institute and virtually.
- SCGB
The Simons Collaboration on the Global Brain hosts a Global group meeting to bring together postdocs and PhD students interested in neural coding and dynamics to discuss ideas and data. This quarter's speaker is:
James Roach
Postdoctoral Researcher, Churchland Laboratory
University of California, Los Angeles
Two roles for choice selective inhibition in decision-making circuits
- SCGB
The Simons Collaboration on the Global Brain hosts a Boston-area group meeting to bring together postdocs and PhD students interested in neural coding and dynamics. This month's speaker is:
Rishi Rajalingham
Postdoctoral Fellow, Jazayeri Laboratory
McGovern Institute for Brain Research
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
The role of mental simulation in primate physical inference abilities
- SCGB
The Simons Collaboration on the Global Brain hosts an NY-area group meeting to bring together postdocs and PhD students interested in neural coding and dynamics to discuss ideas and data. This month's speaker is:
Justin D Yao
Postdoctoral Associate, Sanes Laboratory
New York University
Transformation of sound encoding to auditory decisions
- SCGB
The Simons Collaboration on the Global Brain hosts a West Coast group meeting to bring together postdocs and PhD students interested in neural coding and dynamics.
This month's speaker is:
Will Liberti
Postdoctoral Fellow, UC Berkeley
A stable hippocampal code for stable spatial behaviors
- SCGB
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