Sunday, May 4, 2014

[Comp-neuro] deadline extended for the Neurobiology of Cognition GRC/GRS!

Dear colleagues,
The deadline for application and abstract submission for the Gordon Research Seminar has been extended to the 15th of May. Please submit your application and abstract soon!.
We are very much looking forward to receiving your contributions and to a vibrant seminar.
We have also added a mentorship component which promises to provide us with important tips for a successful transition from postdoc to PI.
Looking forward to seeing you at the GRS/GRC!
Lucia Melloni.
Ayelet N. Landau


Gordon Research Conferences



Join us at the 2014 Gordon Conference and Seminar On

Circuits, Dynamics, Action and Perception

We are meeting July 20-25, 2014 -New GRC site: Sunday River Resort  Newry, Maine

Click here to see the GRC program.

There is also an associated GRS July 19-20 for students and postdocs

Click here to see the GRS website. 

GRS application & abstract deadline to be considered for oral presentation - May 15

Please use attached flyer to help spread the word! 

 

The Neurobiology of Cognition is a recently-inaugurated GRC designed to foster convergence of traditional neuroscience investigations with more recent developments in systems, cellular and molecular neurobiology, in engineering and imaging and in computational sciences. Cognition is construed broadly to embrace empirical findings in a range of species including humans, and there is a strong focus on integration of findings and principles across species and levels of analysis.

In the opening Keynote Session, two leading neuroscientists with provide an experimental and computational perspective on the recent initiative, termed Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN). This initiative, spearheaded by the President and NIH, is aimed at developing innovative methodologies to study how complex systems of neurons interact in time and in space during complex behaviors. Along with recent findings in a few traditional "core" areas, formal sessions will then explore several new themes, including: 1) the neuroanatomy and 2) coordination of cognitive circuits in the brain, 3) motor cognition and brain-computer interfaces, 4) music and language, and 5) learning and plasticity. The program juxtaposes human psychophysical, neuroimaging and electrophysiological studies with parallel investigations in rodents and non-human primates, and with computational approaches that explicate empirical findings and construct robust, detailed models to represent the developing picture and guide future experimentation. The program also underscores novel experimental and theoretical approaches that promise to define fundamental principles that guide and integrate the understanding of cognition at a fundamental level, and to extend these to improved treatment of brain dysfunction. The format of the meeting promotes intensive interactions among investigators and trainees from different perspectives and analytic levels, and in particular, between experimentalists and theorists. There is a linked Gordon Research Seminar for trainees, most of whom also attend the GRC.

 

All that is missing now is your application to attend.

Click here for the GRC.   Click here for the GRS. (You must apply to both to attend both.) 

Best regards,

    GRC Chair:  Charles E. Schroeder       GRC V. Chair:Tatiana Pasternak

    GRS Chair:  Lucia Melloni              GRS Assoc. Chair: Ayelet N. Landau

 

Apply now and see why our attendees consistently rate GRCs

"the best conference I've attended this year"!

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