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UCL Neuroscience Symposium 2024

UCL Neuroscience Symposium 2024: From Molecules to Mind

Celebrating 15 years of the UCL Neuroscience Symposium

2024 marked the 15th annual UCL Neuroscience Symposium, showcasing the cutting-edge neuroscience research at UCL and connecting over 600 attendees from the neuroscience research community. The theme of the 2024 symposium, organised by the UCL Neuroscience Domain,was “From Molecules to Mind” reflecting the breadth of research at լƵ in molecular, cellular, circuit and cognitive neuroscience.

The symposium featured keynote speaker Professor Pieter Roelfsema, Director of the Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience in Amsterdam whose research focuses on the circuit mechanisms of visual perception and cognition to develop cortical prostheses to restore vision in blindness. Professor Karen Duff, Director of the UK Dementia Research Institute, also gave a keynote talk on her research seeking to understand the molecular causes and consequences of tauopathy in Alzheimer’s disease and identify and test novel therapeutic targets.

Keynote Speakers


Professor Pieter Roelfsema

Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience

Conscious visual perception and how to restore it when the eyes fail

Professor Pieter Roelfsema presenting a keynote talk at the 2024 UCL Neuroscience Symposium

Professor Karen Duff

UK Dementia Research Institute

Unravelling the contribution of tau to Alzheimer’s disease and frontotemporal dementia

Professor Karen Duff presents a keynote talk at the UCL Neuroscience Symposium 2024


Plenary Speakers

The symposium featured talks from plenary speakers covering a range of topics from the neural basis of social behaviour in zebrafish to importance of heart-brain interactions for mental health. Speakers included:

Dr Athena Akrami

The Sainsbury Wellcome Centre, UCL

Learning and exploiting sensory statistics across multiple species

Dr Athena Akrami gives talk at the 2024 UCL Neuroscience Symposium

Dr Elena Dreosti

Cell & Developmental Biology, UCL

Social swimmers: Zebrafish leading the way in mental health and pain research

Dr Elena Dreosti gives a talk at the 2024 UCL Neuroscience Symposium

Professor Sarah Garfinkel

Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, UCL

Clinical neuroscience and the heart-brain axis

Professor Sarah Garfinkel gives a talk at the UCL Neuroscience Symposium 2024

Professor Aman Saleem

Experimental Psychology, UCL

Visual cortical processing - more than what meets the eye

Professor Aman Saleem gives talk at UCL Neuroscience Symposium 2024


2024 Early Career Neuroscience Prize

Each year the UCL Neuroscience Domain presents the Early Career Neuroscience Prize to two լƵ neuroscientists, recognising outstanding work published in the past year in any field of neuroscience. The 2024 junior category winner was Dr Anya Suppermpool, research fellow at the UCL Ear Institute and Dr Pip Coen, Principal Research Fellow, Cell and Developmental Biology, UCL Division of Biosciences won the advanced category prize.

Dr Anya Suppermpool

UCL Ear Institute

Anya Suppermpool wins prize at UCL Neuroscience Symposium

Dr Pip Coen

Cell and Developmental Biology, UCL

Pip Coen gives talk after winning prize at UCL Neuroscience Symposium 2024


2024 Jon Driver Prize

To honour the memory of Jon Driver, an annual prize is awarded each year at the symposium to outstanding young neuroscientists from UCL. Reflecting Jon Driver’s commitment to mentorship, and his seminal contribution to promoting neuroscience at UCL, the prize is awarded competitively every year to recognise the high-quality research of students completing their PhD in the field of neuroscience at UCL. The winners of the 2024 Jon Driver Prize were PhD Students Eleanor Spens (UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience) and Maxime Beau (Wolfson Institute for Biomedical Research).

Eleanor Spens

UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience

eanor Spens gives talk at the UCL Neurosicence Symposium

Maxime Beau

Wolfson Institute for Biomedical Research

Maxime Beau gives talk at UCL Neuroscience Symposium 2024