Human Motor Circuits: Interdisciplinary Meeting of the Spanish EBRAINS Node. 28-29 november 2024

The meeting will examine human brain circuits related to motor function, dysfunction and rehabilitation, integrating computational tools with experimental data. 28-29 november 2024

Our aim is to foster constructive and fruitful discussions about motor circuits in health and disease, to explore how EBRAINS tools and services can assist neuroscientists in this field, and to connect researchers working in this area.

EBRAINS is the European open research infrastructure that gathers data, tools, and computing facilities for brain-related research. It provides access to a free and open database of neuroscience data, computational models, and software tools.

The sessions will take place on 28-29 November in the Aula Cajal of the Ilustre Colegio Oficial de Médicos de Madrid, an emblematic space where Nobel Prize winner Santiago Ramón y Cajal taught, preserving  important memories and vestiges of his teaching career.

Registration available here.

This is the programme

Organising committee
Guglielmo Foffani, HM CINAC
Eduardo López-Larraz, Bitbrain
Bryan Strange, UPM
Guillermo Velasco, UPM
Bárbara Gasset, UPM

Otras noticias

New project granted to the Spanish Node of EBRAINS

The Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities, through the Agencia Estatal de Investigación (State Research Agency) call “Research Networks 2024”, has granted €60,000 to the proposal “CONSOLIDATING THE TRAJECTORY OF THE SPANISH EBRAINS NODE TOWARDS A EUROPEAN INFRASTRUCTURE CONSORTIUM” presented by the Spanish Node of EBRAINS.

Leer más »

El profesor Bryan Strange charla sobre su trabajo en el podcast SomosUPM

El profesor Bryan Strange, coordinador de la Comunidad Neurotec y director del Laboratorio de Neurociencia Clínica, participa en el podcast SomosUPM y hace un repaso a algunos de sus proyectos de investigación como ‘RememberEx’, del European Research Council (ERC) y el ‘Proyecto Vallecas’, desarrollado en colaboración con la Fundación Reina Sofía y el Instituto de Salud Carlos III, proyecto clave para detectar factores de riesgo en alzhéimer, la demencia o el párkinson en personas sin síntomas.

Leer más »