Secure uninterrupted access to your benefits, including scientific and career resources, discounts, and virtual events. Or, if you will be attending Neuroscience 2022, renew during the meeting to receive a voucher for $15 off your purchase from the on-site SfN Store (see Terms & Conditions).
SfN's Annual Meeting kicks off in just three weeks! Before you go: Customize your itinerary using the Neuroscience Meeting Planner. To access the NMP log with your Neuroscience 2022 registration badge number and the last name used on your registration. Review dates and deadlines, health and safety requirements, and other attendee resources (please note that there will be no luggage or coat check this year). To find shared housing, visit the Roommate Matching Forum.
Purchase a Neuroscience 2022 job posting package on SfN’s NeuroJobs Career Center to advertise your open position online and hold on-site interviews with top talent from across the globe.
Connect informally with meeting attendees virtually or in-person outside of SfN Program hours. SfN members can now organize Neuroscience Meet-Ups, informal social events for attendees who share a common interest. Submit requests (no submission fee) by Wednesday, October 26.
Secure your onsite childcare services at the San Diego Convention Center. Visit the Attendee Resources page for more details.
Mobile App Available to Download October 26
Mark your calendars! The official Neuroscience 2022 Mobile App will allow all annual meeting attendees to access your personalized itinerary, search for sessions, participate in Q&A, and more.
Celebrate brain awareness, and share your outreach activities with Brain Awareness Week organizers from around the world at Neuroscience 2022. Registration closes October 28.
The Neuroscience 2022 Graduate School Fair will be held in the San Diego Convention Center from Saturday, November 12, to Tuesday, November 15, from noon-2 p.m. each day.
In this eNeuro Review, Persaud and Cates summarize and discuss a plethora of DNA methylation, histone modification, and associated gene expression differences underscoring the anxiety phenotype.
In this JNeurosci Viewpoints article, Eve Marder and Mara Rue describe the roughly 20-year path of the Marder laboratory, starting with studies of animal-to-animal variability and leading to the hidden effects of climate change on the nervous system of the crabs and lobsters.
Why You Should Download the Neuroscience 2022 Mobile App
Enhance your Neuroscience 2022 experience by downloading SfN’s Annual Meeting App, available October 26.
As a Sustaining Associate Member (SAM), your organization or institution can benefit from expanded visibility, annual meeting perks, and many other benefits. Sign up today to maximize your benefits at Neuroscience 2022!
The Trainee Professional Development Award (TPDA) program has made it possible for early-career neuroscientists to participate in this year’s annual meeting, with over 270 trainees receiving awards. Donate to the Friends of SfN Fund to continue supporting trainees through TPDA.
Stay up to date with the latest in neuroscience policy news by signing up for the Advocacy Network Newsletter.
Dr. Arati Prabhakar will serve as the Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP). President Biden also announced Dr. Renee Wegrzyn to be the inaugural director for ARPA-H.
This is the first national scale program of its kind, specifically focusing on getting early career researchers access to the mentors that they need to launch their own unique science policy careers. Applications for mentors and mentees are due by October 30.
The National Institute on Aging (NIA) put out a [request for information] (RFI) to the public for comments and suggestions as it endeavors to establish a Real-World Data (RWD) Infrastructure to transform the Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and AD-related dementias (ADRD) research enterprise. Respond via email by October 17.
Subscribe to stay up to date on events, trainings, and meetings that are neuroscience-focused and hosted by either SfN or a peer organization, or submit your own event.
Use SfN’s new Global Events Calendar to find neuroscience-focused events happening around the world — make sure to review guidelines before submitting.
The NIH announced two projects supported by the BRAIN Initiative that have the potential to bring us one step closer to unraveling the complex workings of the human brain. The BRAIN Initiative Cell Atlas Network (BICAN) and the Armamentarium for Precision Brain Cell Access, also known as the BRAIN 2.0 projects, aim to transform our understanding of brain cell types and the precise tools needed to access them.
Explore SfN resources available to help educate the public about the role of animals in research including a PowerPoint highlighting the role of animals in basic, medical, and veterinary health research as well as a wallet card showing the scientific advances made possible through research using animals. Also, check out BrainFacts.org for public outreach resources that can be used to educate others on the value of animal research.
Society for Neuroscience, 1121 14th St. NW, Ste. 1010, Washington, DC 20005, USA, +1 (202) 962-4000