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Get to know the Bernstein Network!

Get to know the Bernstein Network!

Bernstein Network Computational Neuroscience

Bernstein Network Computational Neuroscience

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Bernstein Conference 2026

Bernstein Conference 2025

Bernstein Conference

Bernstein Conference

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Welcome

The Bernstein Network Computational Neuroscience connects experimental and theoretical scientists. It comprises more than 200 research groups and 450 individual scientists from all over the world who combine experimental neuroscientific approaches with theoretical models and computer simulations.

The Bernstein Network was launched in 2004 through a major funding initiative of the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) which aimed at advancing the transfer of theoretical knowledge to clinical and technical applications. The network is named after the German physiologist and biophysicist Julius Bernstein (1839-1917).

News

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Göttingen, Germany December 19, 2026

How coordination emerges during real-time social interaction

New study from the Cognition of Interaction Collaborative Research Consortium elucidates continuous dynamics of cooperation and competition.

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Chemnitz, Germany January 30, 2026

Reaping the benefits of the brain’s information processing principles

The Chair of Artificial Intelligence at Chemnitz University of Technology and the Chair of Neuropsychology at Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg want to make artificial intelligence more powerful by drawing inspiration from the brain's habit learning processes.

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Marburg, Germany January 29, 2026

AI meets psychiatry

The MindShift project at the University of Marburg's Faculty of Medicine is receiving over € 870,000 in funding from the state of Hesse. The aim of the project is to develop and validate personalized, AI-supported neurostimulation approaches to treat depression and anxiety disorders. With this project, Marburg University will strengthen its international visibility in the field of computational psychiatry and make an important contribution to the development of personalized, data-driven approaches in psychiatric care.

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Magdeburg, Germany January 8, 2026

How the brain conquers space

An international research team led by biologist Prof. Andrew Parker from Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg has succeeded in demonstrating, without invasive procedures, how the human brain perceives and processes spatial depth and distances. The scientists used high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging to visualize the activity of small, distinct processing units in humans non-invasively for the first time.

Events

Bernstein Conference

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Bernstein Conference 2026

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Past and future conferences

Calls

FENS-Kavli Network of Excellence PhD Thesis Prize

The FENS-Kavli Network of Excellence PhD Thesis Prize is awarded every second year at the FENS Forum and honors a young neuroscientist for his/her outstanding PhD thesis in any domain of neuroscience. Personal prize money: 2.000 €.

Deadline: 15.02.2026

FENS-Kavli Network of Excellence Mentoring Prize

The FENS-Kavli Scholars aim to promote neuroscience and support early-career neuroscientists in Europe. We recognize that mentoring plays an essential role in fostering scientists, but mentoring efforts are often not recognised or rewarded in a scientific career. Personal prize money: 2.000 €.

Deadline: 15.02.2026

Ernst Schering Prize

The Schering Stiftung is pleased to announce the call for nominations for the Ernst Schering Prize 2026. This prestigious award recognizes exceptional achievements in basic research across the life sciences. The prize is designed to support outstanding scientists who are distinguished by their unique scientific profiles. It carries a prize money of € 50,000.
Eligible for nomination are both individual scientists and collaborative teams worldwide: who perform biological, medical, or chemical basic research in the field of biomedicine; whose pioneering research has in recent years resulted in new and inspiring pathways or led to breakthroughs in biomedical knowledge; who actively participate in relevant debates between science and society, or who have started initiatives to guide future generations and inspire them to further their career. A special focus is on nominees actively pursuing their scientific goals for the benefit of society. Nominations are welcome by established scientists, scientific societies, or scientific organizations.

Deadline: 16.02.2026