Seminar

Untitled Seminar

Izzy Wisher· Aarhus University

Psychology
AFC Lab & CARLA Talk Series

Past

Apr 24, 2026

Arterial spin labeling (ASL) MRI has become a vital tool in clinical neuroimaging, enabling noninvasive assessment of cerebral perfusion across a range of conditions including stroke, vascular malformations, and brain tumors. With broader clinical adoption, its practical strengths — as well as important limitations — have become increasingly clear.

UMichigan Neuro

Past

Apr 24, 2026

Seminar

Striatal activity in natural behavior

Henry Yin & Eric Yttri· Duke University Resp. Carnegie Mellon University

Neuro
Swedish Basal Ganglia Society

Past

Mar 20, 2026

Seminar

Honorary Lecture 2026

Glenda Halliday & Maria Grazia Spillantini· University of Sydney Resp. University of Cambridge

Neuro
Swedish Basal Ganglia Society

Past

Feb 27, 2026

Seminar

Decoding stress vulnerability

Stamatina Tzanoulinou· University of Lausanne, Faculty of Biology and Medicine, Department of Biomedical Sciences

Neuro

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.

Athens Neuroscience

Past

Feb 20, 2026

Seminar

Predictive Coding Light

Prof. Dr. Jochen Triesch· FIAS Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies

Neuro

Current machine learning systems consume vastly more energy than biological brains. Neuromorphic systems aim to overcome this difference by mimicking the brain’s information coding via discrete voltage spikes. However, it remains unclear how both artificial and natural networks of spiking neurons can learn energy-efficient information processing strategies. Here we propose Predictive Coding Light (PCL), a recurrent hierarchical spiking neural network for unsupervised representation learning. In contrast to previous predictive coding approaches, PCL does not transmit prediction errors to higher processing stages. Instead, it suppresses the most predictable spikes and transmits a compressed representation of the input. Using only biologically plausible spike-timing based learning rules, PCL reproduces a wealth of findings on information processing in visual cortex and permits strong performance in downstream classification tasks. Overall, PCL offers a new approach to predictive coding and its implementation in natural and artificial spiking neural networks

LOOPS de Hoz - Hechavarria

Past

Feb 11, 2026

Seminar

Untitled Seminar

Prof. Hiryu Shizuko· Doshisha University, Kyoto, Japan

Neuro
LOOPS de Hoz - Hechavarria

Past

Jan 21, 2026

Seminar

sensorimotor control, mouvement, touch, EEG

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

Neuro

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.

Athens Neuroscience

Past

Dec 19, 2025

Seminar

Consciousness at the edge of chaos

Martin Monti· University of California Los Angeles

Neuro

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.

Consciousness Club Tokyo

Past

Dec 13, 2025

Seminar

Computational Mechanisms of Predictive Processing in Brains and Machines

Dr. Antonino Greco· Hertie Institute for Clinical Brain Research, Germany

Neuro

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.

LOOPS de Hoz - Hechavarria

Past

Dec 10, 2025

Seminar

Developmental emergence of personality

Bassem Hassan· Paris Brain Institute, ICM, France

Neuro

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.

NeuroLeman Network

Past

Dec 10, 2025

Seminar

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

Oliver Harschnitz· Human Technopole, Milan, Italy

Neuro
NeuroLeman Network

Past

Dec 8, 2025

Canadian Neuroscience Seminars - Postdoctoral Series

Past

Dec 4, 2025

Canadian Neuroscience Seminars - Postdoctoral Series

Past

Dec 4, 2025

Seminar

Untitled Seminar

Dr. Ana Gonzales Rueda

Neuroscience
LOOPS de Hoz - Hechavarria

Upcoming

Oct 14, 2026

Seminar

Untitled Seminar

Dr. Matthew Self

Neuroscience
LOOPS de Hoz - Hechavarria

Upcoming

Sep 9, 2026

Seminar

Untitled Seminar

Assoc. Prof. Dr. Sarah Ruediger

Neuroscience
LOOPS de Hoz - Hechavarria

Upcoming

Jun 10, 2026

Seminar

Untitled Seminar

Dr. Jasper Poort

Neuroscience
LOOPS de Hoz - Hechavarria

Upcoming

May 13, 2026

University of Bristol and Macquarie University

Upcoming

Jun 6, 2026

Sussex Centre for Consciousness Science, University of Sussex, Falmer campus

Upcoming

Apr 26, 2026

Centre for Brain and Cognitive Development, Birkbeck University of London

Upcoming

Jul 24, 2026

University of Vienna, Kolingasse 14-16, A-1090 Wien, Austria

Upcoming

Aug 16, 2026

General
Technische Universität Berlin

Upcoming

Jun 16, 2026

Max Planck UCL Centre for Computational Psychiatry and Ageing Research and the Wellcome Centre for Human Neuroimaging, London

Upcoming

Jun 18, 2026

General
TU Berlin

Upcoming

Jul 17, 2026

Roma, Italy

Upcoming

Jun 26, 2026

Job

N/A

General
Chicago

Upcoming

May 1, 2026

London WC1B 5EH

Upcoming

Jun 18, 2026

Konstanz, Germany

Upcoming

Jun 15, 2026

University of Plymouth, UK

Upcoming

May 9, 2026

Job

N/A

General
University of Bristol

Upcoming

Jun 25, 2026

Leiden University, Netherlands

Upcoming

Jul 15, 2026

Belgium

Upcoming

Jul 14, 2026

University of Edinburgh, Scotland

Upcoming

Jul 31, 2026

Belgium

Upcoming

Aug 7, 2026

General
N/A

Upcoming

Aug 11, 2026

General
Washington, DC, USA

Upcoming

Jun 30, 2026

Bordeaux, France

Upcoming

May 5, 2026

Montreal, Canada

Upcoming

Apr 30, 2026

TU Dresden, Germany

Upcoming

Apr 30, 2026

Bordeaux, France

Upcoming

Jun 1, 2026

General
University of Bern, Switzerland

Upcoming

Apr 28, 2026

Utrecht University, Netherlands

Upcoming

May 19, 2026

Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Upcoming

May 31, 2026

Job

N/A

General
Cardiff, UK

Upcoming

Jun 4, 2026

Karlsruhe, Germany

Upcoming

May 15, 2026

General
Gatsby Computational Neuroscience Unit, UCL

Upcoming

May 27, 2026

Tübingen, Germany

Upcoming

May 31, 2026

Washington University in St Louis, St. Louis, MO 63110

Upcoming

Jul 1, 2026

Prague, Czech Republic

Upcoming

Aug 5, 2026

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