====================================================
Computational and Systems Neuroscience 2024 (Cosyne)
MAIN MEETING
29 February - 03 March 2024
Lisbon, Portugal
WORKSHOPS
04 March - 05 March 2024
Cascais, Portugal
www.cosyne.org
====================================================
IMPORTANT DATES
Abstract submission is now open.
Workshop proposal submission deadline: 10 November 2023
Abstract submission deadline: 19 November 2023
----------------------------------------------------
COSYNE MEETING & WORKSHOPS
----------------------------------------------------
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.
The MAIN MEETING is single-track. A set of invited talks is selected by the
Executive Committee, and additional talks and posters are selected by the
Program Committee, based on submitted abstracts. The WORKSHOPS feature in-depth
discussion of current topics of interest, in a small group setting.
All abstract submissions will be reviewed double blind. The deadline for
Abstract submission will be 19 November 2023.
Cosyne topics include but are not limited to: neural basis of behavior, sensory
and motor systems, circuitry, learning, neural coding, natural scene
statistics, dendritic computation, neural basis of persistent activity,
nonlinear receptive field mapping, representations of time and sequence, reward
systems, decision-making, synaptic plasticity, map formation and plasticity,
population coding, attention, neuromodulation, and computation with spiking
networks.
We would like to foster increased participation from experimental groups as
well as computational ones. Please circulate widely and encourage your students
and postdocs to apply.
When preparing an abstract, authors should be aware that not all abstracts can
be accepted for the meeting. Abstracts will be selected based on the clarity
with which they convey the substance, significance, and originality of the work
to be presented.
-----------------------------------------------------
CALL FOR WORKSHOP PROPOSALS
-----------------------------------------------------
A series of workshops will be held after the main Cosyne meeting. The goal is
to provide an informal forum for the discussion of important research questions
and challenges. Controversial issues, open problems, comparisons of competing
approaches, and alternative viewpoints are encouraged.
The overarching goal of all workshops should be the integration of empirical
and theoretical approaches, in an environment that fosters collegial discussion
and debate.
- There will be 6-10 workshops/day, running in parallel.
- Each workshop is expected to draw between 15 and 80 people.
- The workshops will be split into morning and late afternoon sessions.
- Workshops will be held in Cascais, Portugal.
- Workshop speakers do NOT receive free registration, travel expenses, or
accommodation for either the main meeting or the workshop sessions. Organizers
should let invited speakers know that they are expected to pay for workshop
registration fees.
Workshop organizer responsibilities include coordinating workshop participation
and content, scheduling all speakers, submitting a final schedule for the
workshop program, and moderating the discussion. Organizers can, but need not,
be speakers. One complimentary (free) organizer registration is provided per
workshop. For workshops with two organizers, the free registration can be given
to one of the organizers or split evenly between them.
Any required multimedia resources beyond a projector, screen, and microphones
will be the responsibility of the workshop organizers to coordinate with Cosyne
and the workshop venue A/V staff.
EVALUATION CRITERIA
As stated above, the goal of Cosyne workshops is to provide an interactive,
informal forum for discussions. Relevant topics include, but are not limited
to: sensory processing; motor planning and control; functional neural circuits;
motivation, reward and decision making; learning and memory; adaptation and
plasticity; neural coding; neural circuitry and network models; and methods in
computational or systems neuroscience.
Workshop proposals will be evaluated by the Cosyne Workshop Chairs, and a
subset of the proposals will be selected. The proposals will be evaluated
according to the following six metrics (which will be weighted equally):
- Relevance to the Cosyne community
- Integration of experimental and theoretical issues
- Current interest in the topic in the scientific community
- Potential for new research directions and interactions to emerge
- Distinctive scope/approach compared to other workshops (including previous
years’)
- Diversity and equity in the proposed speaker (we are looking for
representation of women or nonbinary individuals, individuals from other
underrepresented groups, and a balance of established and early career
researchers)
WORKSHOP FULL PROPOSALS - Deadline 10 November 2023
To submit your Cosyne 2024 Workshop Proposal, please visit Cosyne.org -> Workshops
-> Call for Proposals
In order to foster discussion within Workshops and reduce overlap between
workshops, organizers should inform invited speakers that a speaker can take
part in no more than two Workshops.
The proposals will include:
- Name(s) and email address(es) of the organizers (2 organizers per session is
strongly recommended, but 3 will be allowed).
- A title.
- A brief description of 1) what the workshop will address and accomplish, 2)
why the topic is of interest, 3) who is the targeted group of participants.
- Names and email addresses of speakers, who should already have agreed to
participate should the proposal be accepted.
- Proposed workshop length (1 or 2 days). Most workshops will be limited to a
single day. If you think your workshop needs two days, please explain why.
- A brief resume of the workshop organizer(s) along with a short list of
workshop-relevant publications (about half a page total).
- A description of how you have addressed diversity and equity in your
workshop.
Experience has shown that the best discussions during a workshop are those that
arise spontaneously. A good way to foster these is to have short talks and long
question periods (e.g. 30+15 minutes), and to have plenty of breaks. We
recommend keeping the number of talks small (i.e., fewer than 10 talks per day).
WORKSHOP COSTS
Detailed registration costs, etc, will be at www.cosyne.org. Please note:
Cosyne does NOT provide travel funding for workshop speakers. Organizers should
let invited speakers know that they are expected to pay for workshop
registration fees. Participants are encouraged to register early, in order to
qualify for discounted registration rates. One complimentary (free) organizer
registration is provided per workshop. For workshops with two organizers, the
free registration can be given to one of the organizers or split evenly between
them.
COSYNE 2024 WORKSHOP CHAIRS
SueYeon Chung (NYU/Flatiron) and Andrew Saxe (Oxford)
COSYNE WORKSHOPS CONTACT
workshops [at] cosyne.org
-----------------------------------------------------
COSYNE 2024 COMMITTEES
-----------------------------------------------------
COSYNE ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
General Chairs: Jessica Cardin (Yale) and Blake Richards (McGill)
Program Chairs: Bing Brunton (U Washington) and Chandramouli Chandrasekaran
(Boston U)
Workshop Chairs: SueYeon Chung (NYU/Flatiron) and Andrew Saxe (Oxford)
Tutorial Chair: Il Memming Park (Champalimaud)
Undergraduate Travel Chairs: Kimberly Stachenfeld (DeepMind) and Marcelo
Mattar (NYU)
DEIA Committee: Hysell Oviedo (Washington U) and Luke Sjulson (Albert
Einstein)
Fundraising Chair: Michael Long (NYU)
Social Media Chair: Sabera Talukder (Caltech)
Audio-Video Media Chair: Carlos Stein Brito (Champalimaud)
Poster Design: Maja Bialon
COSYNE PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Bing Brunton (U Washington) Co-chair
Chandramouli Chandrasekaran (Boston U) Co-chair
Timothy Buschman (Princeton)
Alex Cayco Gajic (Ecole Normale Superieure)
Hannah Choi (Gatech)
Brian DePasquale (Boston U)
Sridhar Devarajan (Indian Inst Sci)
Laura Driscoll (Stanford)
Ann Duan (UCL)
Lea Duncker (Stanford)
Annegret Falkner (Princeton)
Juan Gallego (Imperial)
Matthew Golub (U Washington)
Bilal Haider (Georgia Tech)
Kiah Hardcastle (Harvard)
Kameron Harris (W Washington U)
Santiago Jaramillo (U Oregon)
Jonathan Kao (UCLA)
Kohitij Kar (York U)
Ann Kennedy (Northwestern)
Guillaume Lajoie (MILA)
Laura Lewis (MIT)
Camilo Libedinsky (National U Singapore)
Scott Linderman (Stanford)
Ashok Litwin-Kumar (Columbia)
Emily Mackevicius (Basis)
Leenoy Meshulam (U Washington)
Jonathan Michaels (York U)
James Murray (U Oregon)
Hendrikje Nienborg (NIH)
Gouki Okazawa (Chinese Acad Sci)
Chethan Pandarinath (Emory)
Il Memming Park (Champalimaud)
Hannah Payne (Columbia)
Talmo Pereira (Salk)
Supratim Ray (Indian Inst Sci)
Erin Rich (Mount Sinai)
Ben Scott (Boston U)
Alireza Soltani (Dartmouth)
Nicholas Steinmetz (U Washington)
Marie Suver (Vanderbilt)
Aparna Suvrathan (McGill)
John Tuthill (U Washington)
Ali Weber (Bryn Mawr)
Brady Weissbourd (MIT)
Alex Williams (NYU)
Klaus Wimmer (CRM)
Brad Wyble (Penn State)
COSYNE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Stephanie Palmer (U Chicago)
Anne-Marie Oswald (U Pittsburgh)
Zachary Mainen (Champalimaud)
Alexandre Pouget (U Geneva)
Anthony Zador (CSHL)
COSYNE CONTACT
meeting [at] cosyne.org
-----------------------------------------------------
COSYNE MAILING LISTS
-----------------------------------------------------
Please consider adding yourself to Cosyne mailing lists (groups) to receive email
updates with various Cosyne-related information and join in helpful discussions. See
Cosyne.org -> About-> Mailing lists for details.