Connectionists: Call for submissions: Frontiers Research Topic on “Neuroinformatics of Large-Scale Brain Modelling"

John Griffiths j.davidgriffiths at gmail.com
Thu Feb 11 12:19:46 EST 2021


Dear all,

We are excited to announce an upcoming Research Topic, jointly within
Frontiers in Neuroinformatics and Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience,
on “Neuroinformatics of Large-Scale Brain Modelling”.

This Research Topic will document the various ways in which
neuroinformatics approaches are being applied in large-scale brain
modelling, informing readers on both established practices and emerging
techniques. We seek Original Research, Review, Mini-Review, Hypothesis and
Theory, Perspective, and Opinion articles that cover, but are not limited
to, the following topics:


   -

   Ontologies, systems, and tools for definition and specification of
   large-scale neural models
   -

   New approaches to parameter optimization, parameter space exploration,
   and systematic tracking of simulation behaviour across parameter
   combinations
   -

   Informing neural models with genetic and multi-omic data from
   large-scale databases and individual patients/subjects
   -

   Systematic computational modelling studies on large numbers of subjects,
   and/or using large-scale open-access datasets (HCP, ABCD, etc.)
   -

   ‘Hybrid’ modelling schemes that combine mean-field with spiking network
   models
   -

   ‘Hybrid’ approaches to defining connectivity in large-scale brain models
   (e.g. supplementing tractography with microscopy data for higher-resolution
   subcortical connectivity structure)
   -

   Simulations using high-resolution neuroanatomical data from initiatives
   such as BigBrain, Allen Institute, etc.
   -

   ‘High-density’ (large number of regions; small parcels) connectome-based
   neural mass modelling
   -

   Other neuroinformatics challenges and solutions in large-scale brain
   simulations
   -

   Comparisons between detailed spiking/morphological simulations and
   neural mass model simulations
   -

   Comparisons between models based on high-resolution and low-resolution
   Allen atlas connectivities



Full details can be found on the research topic webpage at:
www.frontiersin.org/research-topics/16641/neuroinformatics-of-large-scale-brain-modelling


If you are considering submitting, please submit an abstract by Fri 26 Feb
2021. Deadline for submission of full manuscripts is Fri 30th July 2021.


We look forward to your hearing from you and sharing this exciting work
with the community.

Your Research Topic co-editors,

John Griffiths

Padraig Gleeson

Kelly Shen






-- 

Dr. John D. Griffiths

Independent Scientist @ Krembil Centre for Neuroinformatics, CAMH, Toronto

Assistant Professor @ Department of Psychiatry & Institute of Medical
Sciences, University of Toronto

www.grifflab.com


~~~

Frontiers in Neuroinformatics

& Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience

joint Research Topic:

“Neuroinformatics of Large-Scale Brain Modelling”

*Eds. John Griffiths, Kelly Shen, Padraig Gleeson*

*Now accepting submissions! *

Abstract deadline 26 Feb 2021. Manuscript deadline 30 July 2021.

See topic page here
<https://www.frontiersin.org/research-topics/16641/neuroinformatics-of-large-scale-brain-modelling>
for more info
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