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The annual Computational Neuroscience Meeting (CNS) began in 1990 as a
small workshop at the Clark Kerr Campus in Berkeley, California. The
workshop was called Analysis and Modeling of Neural Systems, and was a
small, local event that included 21 invited talks and 36 posters. The
goal of the workshop was to explore the boundary between neuroscience
and computation, which by the late 1980s was just starting to become
an identifiable field in its own right. Riding on the success of the
seminal papers by Hopfield (1982) and Hopfield and Tank (1986),
physicists had made "Neural Networks" fashionable, and soon the
quantitative methods used in these abstract model networks started
permeating the methods and ideas of experimental neuroscientists. As
biologists and computational scientists started talking to each other
and collaborating, new generations of students became fluent in both
experimental and quantitative techniques. The CNS meeting lives at
this interface, where experimental neuroscience meets theoretical,
statistical and computer-simulation analyses, with the hope of turning
large collections of experimental results into a principled
understanding of nervous systems.
In the early 1990s, the CNS meeting received about 100 submissions per
year. By 1997 the number was over 200, and in 2009 it included more
than 650 submissions. Still, the aim is to maintain the collegial
spirit of the early meetings, which revolves around lively discussions
after the talks, during late-night poster presentations, while
enjoying the traditional banquet, or even during excursions to local
touristic sites (yes, even then). In addition to this fun and casual
environment, CNS has two prominent features. First, since its early
editions, CNS has been a forum for young scientists -- graduate
students, postdocs and junior faculty -- who present their work and
have the opportunity to talk with more senior leaders in the field. In
fact, the proportion of faculty, postdoc and student attendees has
remained quite steady over the years, at about one third each. And
second, it has become a truly international meeting. Reflecting this,
in the year 2000 CNS was held in Europe for the first time (in Brugge,
Belgium), and since then European sites were chosen in 2003 (Alicante,
Spain), 2006 (Edinburgh, Scotland) and 2009 (Berlin, Germany).
Those of us involved in the OCNS, board members, local organizers,
members of the program committee, and many of our sponsors, have been
to many CNS meetings throughout the years and want to keep the
tradition going -- not for tradition's sake but because we have all
been energized, challenged and motivated by these meetings, and
believe that new generations will similarly benefit, as both
experimental and computational techniques evolve into more
sophisticated and powerful tools. Our goal is to organize a
high-quality meeting that is both informative and fun, but we also
want our website to serve as a useful resource for computational
neuroscientists. Thus, in addition to details about the upcoming CNS
meeting, our archives will maintain information about past meetings,
and we will post links and announcements that may be useful to the
neuroscience community at large.
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