Dear Colleagues

Please see below the announcement of a MICCAI workshop on brain networks in neuroimaging, organised by Mark Woolrich, FMRIB, Oxford:

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Workshop on “Modelling brain networks in functional and structural MRI data".
MICCAI 2009, London, UK (http://www.miccai2009.org)
9:00-12:30, Thursday 24th September
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The field of neuroimaging faces key challenges in the coming years. While techniques are readily available to map regions of the brain whose activity increases during specific tasks, there are fundamental questions that are not addressed by standard methodology, despite relevant information being present in the neuroimaging data. In particular, the understanding of interactions between brain regions, and how these relate to underlying connectional anatomy is of central importance for a mechanistic understanding of function.

This workshop aims to bring together cutting edge developments in characterizing brain dynamics and connectivity. These include the use of biophysical models to capture the dynamic interactions between evoked neuronal populations (e.g. Dynamic Causal Modelling), and our current understanding of spontaneous oscillations of neural activity in FMRI and MEG data. Furthermore, we consider the complementary use structural information (e.g. via diffusion MR tractography) as the anatomical basis of functional interactions.

The workshop will consist of purely invited speakers, including:

Klaas Stephan, University of Zurich. “Dynamic causal modeling of neuronal networks.”

Will Penny, University College, London. “Weakly Coupled Oscillator Models.”

Marcus Kaiser, Newcastle University. “Structural networks and the link to network dynamics.”

Rolf Kötter, University  of Düsseldorf. "Large-scale models of the 'resting state' of the brain."

Andreas Kleinschmidt, Neurospin Center, Paris. “Assessing spontaneous brain activity by EEG and sensory probes.”

The full list of speakers will be announced at a later date.