Welcome to the Community Calendar!
Important OHBM deadlines, webinars and satellite events will be listed here throughout the year.
Each year, during the Annual Meeting, OHBM members may choose to host a satellite event in our host city showcasing like minded topics to our attendees. These events have not been vetted by OHBM’s Program Committee during the selection process; however, they might be of interest to you.
If you have a webinar, in-person or satellite event to add, please submit below. All submissions will be reviewed and approved by OHBM before they appear.
The Scientific Opening Symposium of the Cooperative Brain Imaging Center Frankfurt (CoBIC) will take place on April 20th and 21st, 2026.
CoBIC is a cooperation of Goethe University, the Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, and the Ernst Strüngmann Institute for Neuroscience that unites top nodge brain imaging facilities with a cooperative community of outstanding scientists and students aiming to better understand human cognition, brain function, and find better diagnostics and therapies for neuropsychiatric patients.
Do not miss one of this year's highlights in German brain imaging events! Confirmed speakers include Joachim Gross, Monika Schonauer, Birte Forstmann, Chris Summerfield, Martina Callaghan, Mariya Toneva, Bob Turner, Marcello Massimini, Charlie Stagg, Martijn van den Heuvel, Elia Formisano and Keith Doelling. Speakers will present and discuss newest approaches to brain dynamics, learning and decision making, audition, and brain stimulation. In addition, CoBIC researchers will present and discuss the diversity of research questions we aim to answer at CoBIC.
Please check out the program and register here for free: https://indico.ae.mpg.de/event/39
| Contact: |
Christian Kell
c.kell@em.uni-frankfurt.de |
An event promoting international and interdisciplinary collaboration in neuroscience.
| Contact: |
Michel Thiebaut de Schotten
michel.thiebaut@gmail.com |
A workshop dedicated to brain gradients and their applications.
| Contact: |
Daniel Margulies
daniel.margulies@gmail.com |
The Brain Connectivity Workshop (BCW) is a premier annual international scientific meeting, founded in 2002, dedicated to advancing research in brain connectivity. Its mission is to explore the fundamental principles linking anatomical structure, neural dynamics, and cognitive function, fostering a deeper understanding of the brain as a complex networked system.
BCW provides a unique platform for interdisciplinary collaboration among experts in computational neuroscience, neuroimaging and electrophysiology, and experimental neuroscience. The workshop emphasizes integrative approaches that combine theoretical models, cutting-edge methodologies, and empirical data.
Unlike traditional conferences, BCW adopts a highly interactive format designed to stimulate scientific exchange:
Short presentations (15 minutes, limited to 3 slides) to introduce core ideas succinctly.
Extended discussions (45 minutes following each talk) to critically evaluate concepts, methods, and implications.
This approach encourages rigorous debate, collaborative problem-solving, and the generation of innovative hypotheses, making BCW a catalyst for progress in brain connectivity research.
For detailed information check the program for the past editions below and visit the official website: https://brain-connectivity-workshop.org.
| Contact: |
Fabricio Pereira
fabricio.pereira@unimes.fr +33(0)762588137 |
An open science event focused on collaborative coding and reproducible research.
| Contact: |
Open Science Special Interest Group
ohbmopenscience@gmail.com |
The Neuroimaging Statistics Workshop showcases emerging methods in brain image modeling and analysis. This workshop combines lectures by leaders in neuroimaging statistics and opportunities to network. The workshop is meant to inform and educate students and researchers on emerging new methods.
The workshop features the Keith Worsley Lecture, this year delivered by Sir John Aston of the University of Cambridge; Sir Aston trained with Keith and has made seminal contributions to statistics of imaging and functional data analysis. There will be keynote speakers and oral sessions with invited speakers covering a range of topics including computational methods, brain connectivity, functional imaging, structural imaging and imaging genetics. A detailed program will be available on the website.
This satellite meeting will be held before the Organization for Human Brain Mapping (OHBM) annual meeting, as a joint event with the OHBM Hackathon. Both Neuroimaging Statistics and the Hackathon will be hosted at the Campus Victoire, University of Bordeaux. It starts 1pm Friday 12th June and concludes 1pm Saturday 13th June, allowing attendees to also participate in the Hackathon.
See here for more information: https://sites.google.com/view/nsw2026
| Contact: |
Thomas Nichols
thomas.nichols@bdi.ox.ac.uk |
A community run open to OHBM participants. Additional information is available via the OHBM group on Strava.
| Contact: |
Michel Thiebaut de Schotten
michel.thiebaut@gmail.com |
Hello everyone,
TANGO (ThAlamic nuclei Neuroimaging GrOup) is pleased to invite you to its symposium, which will be held on June 14, 2026, in the Broca Auditorium (Carreire Campus).
The TANGO Symposium brings together researchers from computational neuroscience, MRI physics, biomedical engineering, and clinical neurology around a shared fascination: the thalamus. TANGO 2026 will explore thalamic function in health and disease, with a particular emphasis on connectivity and translational applications.
The program features keynote lectures, invited talks, and abstract-selected short talks, with dedicated space for early-career researchers — fostering the kind of multi-disciplinary dialogue that moves the field forward.
Abstract submission is open!
We invite researchers to submit abstracts presenting original work related to the thalamus and its role in brain function, computation, and clinical applications. This symposium aims to bring together researchers from diverse backgrounds to discuss recent advances in thalamic research and foster exchange.
We strongly encourage submissions from early-career researchers, including graduate students and postdoctoral fellows.
Deadline: April 27, 2026 · Notification: May 4, 2026 |https://tangosymposium.sciencesconf.org/resource/page/id/8
Registration
Attendance is free of charge but registration is mandatory -https://tangosymposium.sciencesconf.org/resource/page/id/1
Symposium webiste : https://tangosymposium.sciencesconf.org/?lang=en
About TANGO
The Thalamic Nuclei Neuroimaging Group (TANGO) is an international, multidisciplinary consortium of researchers united by a shared goal: to advance the accuracy, reliability, and clinical utility of thalamic nuclei segmentation in neuroimaging. TANGO brings together expertise spanning neuroimaging methodology, neuroanatomy, neuroradiology, and clinical neuroscience, and is committed to open science, methodological standardization, and community-driven progress.
Have a nice day,
Best regards,
The organizing committee
| Contact: |
Thomas Tourdias
thomastourdias@yahoo.fr |
We are excited to announce our second international symposium on Molecular Connectivity, entitled “Molecular connectivity: Best practices for data analysis”.
The symposium will be held in the morning of June 19th 2026 at Bordeaux (France),at Neurocampus facilities immediately following the Organization for Human Brain Mapping (OHBM) annual meeting. It builds on the success of our previous events: a satellite meeting held during the Brain & Brain PET and BrainPET conference in Glasgow in May 2022 (374 participants - 50 in person and >1600 views on Youtube), and a first dedicated symposium held in Munich in May 2024 (242 participants - 60 in person). Both events were very successful, led to the formation of our Molecular Connectivity Working group which holds regular online seminars, and has produced influential papers.
We have assembled a superb list of speakers with the program and registration to be found at https://molecularconnectivity.com/events/best-practices-symposium-2026/#registration. The symposium will provide a forum for a vibrant exchange of ideas with the aim of significantly contributing to defining best practices in data analysis in this rapidly evolving field.
| Contact: |
Matthieu Doyen
matthieu.doyen@univ-lorraine.fr |
A hands-on course covering the FSL software suite for neuroimaging analysis.
| Contact: |
Janine Bijsterbosch
janine.bijsterbosch@wustl.edu |
An advanced training program in neuropsychology.
| Contact: |
Lisa Cipolotti
l.cipolotti@ucl.ac.uk |