PREVIOUS MEETINGS
Keynote speakers from previous meetings
- Suliann Ben Hamed - The spatial and temporal dynamics of attention: insights from the real-time decoding of the attentional spotlight
- ISC (Institut des Sciences Cognitives) Marc Jeannerod
- Lee E. Miller - Development of a wireless, long-term stable BMI to restore natural voluntary movement following spinal cord injury
- Northwestern University Institute of Neuroscience (NUIN)
- Steve Kennerley - Dynamic computations supporting information search and choice in prefrontal cortex
- Inst. of Neurology, University College London
11th Meeting - 2018
- Gregory Horwitz - Cortical color processing and optogenetics
- University of Washington & Washington National Primate Center
- J. Douglas Crawford - Spatiotemporal evolution of target coding in the primate gaze control system
- Centre for Vision Research, York University, Toronto
- Wu Li - Parsing visual images through inter-areal interactions
- IDG/McGovern Inst. Brain Research, Beijing Normal University
10th Meeting - 2017
- Pieter Roelfsema - Seeing, thinking and memorizing with the visual brain
- Vision & Cognition research group, Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience
- Eberhard Fetz - Applications of closed-loop brain-computer interfaces in non- human primates
- Physiology and Biophysics, University of Washington
- Mark Buckley - Complementary and dissociable contributions of different primate prefrontal cortical regions to rule-guided decision-making
- Brain & Behaviour, University of Oxford
9th Meeting - 2016
- Asif Ghazanfar - The evolution and developmental neuromechanics of vocal communication
- Princeton Neuroscience Institute, Princeton University
- Xiaoqin Wang - Marmoset as a model system for studying neural basis of audition and social communication
- Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore
8th Meeting - 2015
- Reza Shadmehr - Keynote lecture
- Laboratory for Computational Motor Control, Johns Hopkins University
- Nicole Rust - Keynote lecture
- Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania
- Robert Wurtz - Keynote lecture
- Laboratory of Sensorimotor Research, NIH Neuroscience
7th Meeting - 2014
- Stefan Everling - Resting-state fMRI in macaques
- Brain & Mind Institute, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario
- Anja Horn-Bochtler - Extraocular muscles are controlled by at least three neuronal populations in and around the oculomotor nuclei
- Institute of Anatomy & Cell Biology I, LMU, Munich
6th Meeting - 2013
- Pascal Fries - From brain-wide to cell-class-specific investigation of selective synchronization for selective attention
- Ernst Strüngmann Institute, Frankfurt
- Wim Vanduffel - Reward processing in visual cortex of the monkey assessed with fMRI
- Laboratory for Neuro- and Psychophysiology, KU Leuven
- Rich Krauzlis - Subcortical control of spatial attention
- Eye Movements & Visual Selection Section, NIH National Eye Institute
5th Meeting - 2012
- Silke Haverkamp - Functional architecture of the primate retina
- Max Plank Institute for Brain Research, Frankfurt
- Rüdiger Behr - Transgenic non-human primates as models of human diseases: an overview and perspectives
- German Primate Center, Goettingen
- Leonardo Fogassi - Action organization and mirror neurons in the parieto-premotor cortical system
- Dept. Neurosciences, University of Parma
- Nikos Logothetis - fMRI of the monkey brain
- MPI for Biological Cybernetics, Tuebingen
4th Meeting - 2011
- John Maunsell - What microstimulation effects tell us about cortical functions
- Department of Neurobiology, University of Chicago
3rd Meeting - 2010
- Michael E. Goldberg - The neurobiology of spatial perception
- Department of Neuroscience, Columbia University, New York; President of the Society for Neuroscience
2nd Meeting - 2009
- Prof. Guy Orban - Tracing the network processing 3D shape from disparity: Monkey fMRI as a tool for the neuroscientist
- Medicine and Surgery, Università di Parma
1st Meeting - 2008
- No keynotes