CNS*1995
The Annual Computational Neuroscience Meeting
July 11 - 15, 1995, Monterey, California
CNS*1995 Call for Papers
This is the fourth annual meeting of an interdisciplinary conference intended to address the broad range of research approaches and issues involved in the field of computational neuroscience. The last three annual meetings, in San Francisco (CNS*92), Washington, DC (CNS*93), and Monterey, California (CNS*94) brought experimental and theoretical neurobiologists along with engineers, computer scientists, cognitive scientists, physicists, and mathematicians together to consider the functioning of biological nervous systems. Peer reviewed papers were presented on a range of subjects related to understanding how nervous systems compute.
As in previous years, the meeting will equally emphasize experimental, model-based, and more abstract theoretical approaches to understanding neurobiological computation. The meeting in 1995 will again take place at the Monterey Doubletree Hotel and include plenary, contributed and poster sessions. There will be no parallel sessions and the full text of presented papers will be published in a proceedings volume. The last day of the meeting will be devoted to a series of informal workshops focused on current issues in computational neuroscience.
With this announcement we solicit the submission of presented papers. All papers will be refereed. Authors should send original research contributions in the form of a 1000-word (or less) summary and a separate single page 50-100 word abstract clearly stating their results. Summaries are for program committee use only. Abstracts will be published in the conference program. At the bottom of each abstract page and on the first summary page, indicate preference for oral or poster presentation and specify at least one appropriate category and theme from the following list:
Presentation categories:
- Theory and Analysis
- Modeling and Simulation
- Experimental
- Tools and Techniques
Themes:
- Development
- Cell Biology
- Excitable Membranes and Synaptic Mechanisms
- Neurotransmitters, Modulators, Receptors
- Sensory Systems
- Somatosensory
- Visual
- Auditory
- Olfactory
- Other systems
- Motor Systems and Sensory Motor Integration
- Learning and Memory
- Behavior
- Cognitive
- Disease
SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS:
Include addresses of all authors on the front of the summary and the abstract including the E-mail address for EACH author. Indicate on the front of the summary to which author correspondence should be addressed. Program committee decisions will be sent to the correspondence author only. Submissions will not be considered if they lack category information, separate abstract sheets, author addresses, or are late.
Submissions can be made by surface mail ONLY by sending 6 copies of the abstract and summary to:
CNS*95 Submissions
Division of Biology 216-76
Caltech
Pasadena, CA. 91125
REGISTRATION AND ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
All submitting authors will be sent registration material automatically. Others may acquire registration as well as other information about the conference though any of the methods listed below. We strongly suggest that you take advantage of our ON-LINE REGISTRATION PROCESS if you are a WWW or telnet user.
- By Using our on-line WWW information and registration server
- By Using our on-line text-based registration server telnet and login as "cns95" (no password)
- By ftp-ing a registration form from our ftp site.
- By Sending Email
- By Sending Surface Mail to
CNS*95 Registration Information
Division of Biology 216-76
Caltech
Pasadena, CA. 91125
TRAVEL SUPPORT:
In each of the last three years, the meeting has been able to provide travel assistance for students presenting papers. In order to be eligaible for travel support YOU MUST CHECK the "info on travel grant" section of your registration form!
CNS*95 ORGANIZING COMMITTEE:
- Co-meeting chair logistics - John Miller, UC Berkeley
- Co-meeting chair program - Jim Bower, Caltech
Program committee:
- Gwen Jacobs, University of California, Berkeley
- Catherine Carr, University of Maryland, College Park
- Dennis Glanzman, NIMH/NIH
- Charles Wilson, University of Tennessee, Memphis
- Philip Ulinski, University of Chicago
- Christiane Linster, ESPCI, Paris, France
Regional Organizers:
- Europe - Erik DeSchutter (Belgium)
- Middle East - Idan Segev (Jerusalem)
- Down Under - Mike Paulin (New Zealand)
- South America - Renato Sabbatini (Brazil)
- Asia - Zhaoping Li (Hong Kong)