Overview of the content for Day 1 of this course.
Best practices: the tips and tricks on how to get your Miniscope to work and how to get your experiments off the ground.
This talk delves into challenges and opportunities of Miniscope design, seeking the optimal balance between scale and function.
Attendees of this talk will learn aobut computational imaging systems and associated pipelines, as well as open-source software solutions supporting miniscope use.
This talk covers the present state and future directions of calcium imaging data analysis, particularly in the context of one-photon vs two-photon approaches.
In this talk, results from rodent experimentation using in vivo imaging are presented, demonstrating how the monitoring of neural ensembles may reveal patterns of learning during spatial tasks.
How to start processing the raw imaging data generated with a Miniscope, including developing a usable pipeline and demoing the Minion pipeline.
The direction of miniature microscopes, including both MetaCell and other groups.
Overview of the content for Day 2 of this course.
Summary and closing remarks for this three-day course.
This lecture covers infrared LED oblique illumination for studying neuronal circuits in in vitro block-preparations of the spinal cord and brain stem.
This lecture covers the application of diffusion MRI for clinical and preclinical studies.
This lecture covers different perspectives on the study of the mental, focusing on the difference between Mind and Brain.
This lesson provides an overview of how to conceptualize, design, implement, and maintain neuroscientific pipelines in via the cloud-based computational reproducibility platform Code Ocean.
In this workshop talk, you will receive a tour of the Code Ocean ScienceOps Platform, a centralized cloud workspace for all teams.
This lesson provides an overview of how to construct computational pipelines for neurophysiological data using DataJoint.
This talk describes approaches to maintaining integrated workflows and data management schema, taking advantage of the many open source, collaborative platforms already existing.
This hands-on tutorial walks you through DataJoint platform, highlighting features and schema which can be used to build robost neuroscientific pipelines.
This lesson provides an introduction to the DataLad, a free and open source distributed data management system that keeps track of your data, creates structure, ensures reproducibility, supports collaboration, and integrates with widely used data infrastructure.
This lesson introduces several open science tools like Docker and Apptainer which can be used to develop portable and reproducible software environments.