The fourth edition of the Canadian Computational Neuroscience Spotlight (CCNSv4) will take place on Oct 5-6

The fourth edition of the Canadian Computational Neuroscience Spotlight (CCNS) will take place this fall, October 5 and 6. The meeting will once again take place entirely virtually using the Crowdcast platform, and parlay the savings from this virtual setting into no registration fees for attendees.

What's new in CCNSv4?  This year, CCNS will be a “sibling meeting” to the Krembil Computational Neuroscience Symposium taking place (in person in Toronto) on October 2-3.  Further details can be found HERE.  Taking place the same week (October 5-6), CCNS will capitalize on this momentum in the Canadian computational neuroscience community with an even stronger emphasis on trainee engagement, including workshop-style sessions and more opportunity for spotlighted trainee talks.

CCNS was created in the immediate aftermath of the initial COVID-19 lockdowns, which caused the cancellation of multiple conferences within the Canadian neuroscience community. As one of the first brand-new meetings created with the virtual space in mind, CCNS distinguished itself by exploiting the online setting to engage an international audience, increase content accessibility through no registration fees and permanently available replays, and place an added spotlight on trainee contributions. Two successful follow-up editions of the meeting took place in 2021 and 2022.

CCNSv4 will highlight three fantastic keynote speakers: Dr. Rick Adams, Dr. Jeremie Lefebvre, and Dr. Sarah Muldoon. The keynote talks will be complemented by interactive workshop sessions led by our organizing committee. The remainder of the program will highlight trainee contributions, both through spotlighted talks and parallel sessions. The preliminary program can be seen after registration through the Crowdcast platform, and further details will be added to our homepage (ccnsmeeting.ca) in the coming weeks.

Trainees interested in presenting are encouraged to first register for the conference via Crowdcast (crowdcast.io/c/ccnsv4) and then complete this Google Form. Submissions received by 5 p.m. EDT on September 1 will be considered for longer “spotlight” presentations. We anticipate all submissions that reasonably fall under the broad banner of “computational neuroscience” will be accepted unless demand far exceeds our expectations. A final schedule for the meeting, including the schedule of trainee talks, will be made available no later than September 18.

Please feel free to reach out to the organizing committee if you have any questions about this meeting.

The CCNS Organizing Committee:

Scott Rich, Ph.D. Research Fellow, SickKids Research Institute.

Andreea Diaconescu, Ph.D. Independent Scientist, Krembil Center for Neuroinformatics at CAMH.

John Griffiths, Ph.D. Independent Scientist, Krembil Center for Neuroinformatics at CAMH.

Milad Lankarany, Ph.D. Scientist, Krembil Research Institute.