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Teaching award for Janina Kirsch
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University of Freiburg honours BCF staff member’s excellence in teaching
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BCF PhD students receive CNS poster prizes
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At the 20th annual Computational Neuroscience meeting, Susanne Kunkel, Man Yi Yim and Sarah Jarvis were awarded prizes for their poster presentations.
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Third Place in National Health Science Slam
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On November 8, Bernstein Center PhD student Sarah Jarvis participated in the national finals in a "Science Slam" dedicated to health research and won third place.
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State Teaching Award for Janina Kirsch
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Baden-Württemberg honours successful teaching concept
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Niels Birbaumer receives honorary doctorate of the Complutense University, Madrid
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Niels Birbaumer, a pioneer in neuroprostheses that enable the communication of people with cerebral palsy, receives a honorary doctorate by the Complutense University, Madrid.
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Jury Award for "The Brain Modulator" at Super 8/16mm film festival
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After winning first prizes at the NeuroVision Film Contest during the Bernstein Conference 2011, Florian Rau's film now received the jury award at the 13th "Dresdner Schmalfilmtage".
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New Concepts for University Instruction - BCF among awardees
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The University of Freiburg has recognized six projects from various disciplines with the Instructional Development Award (IDA) 2012. The awards are worth € 70,000 each.
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Volker Pernice receives Hans Spemann Award
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Former PhD student is honored for his outstanding thesis.
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New publication by BCF members in the Journal of Computational Neuroscience
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Jens Kremkow, Laurent U. Perrinet, Guillaume S. Masson and Ad Aertsen published an article on "Functional consequences of correlated excitatory and inhibitory conductances in cortical networks" in the journal's current issue
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Article by BCF/RIKEN members published in PLoS Computational Biology
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Using computer simulations of brain-like networks, researchers from Germany and Japan have discovered why nerve cells transmit information through small electrical pulses. Not only allows this the brain to process information much faster than previously thought: single neurons are already able to multiply, opening the door to more complex forms of computing.
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