Simons Foundation Now Accepting Applications for Workshop on Canonical Cortical Computations The Center for Computational Neuroscience (CCN) <https://www.simonsfoundation.org/flatiron/center-for-computational-neuroscie...> at the Flatiron Institute and the Simons Foundation Neuroscience Collaborations <https://www.simonsfoundation.org/neuroscience/> invite applications to participate in a workshop aimed at developing a potential collaborative project focused on a mechanistic understanding of canonical cortical computations at the circuit level. The workshop will be held April 27–28, 2026, at the Simons Foundation’s offices in New York City. This workshop represents a new model for fostering large-scale scientific collaborations between CCN researchers and external scientists. We particularly encourage applications from experimentalists working in rodent and/or nonhuman primate models. While the envisioned collaborative project will primarily support external experimental work, theoretical and computational neuroscientists are also welcome to apply. For decades, efforts to fully understand canonical cortical computations were slowed by limited descriptions of cell types and connections, technical barriers to measuring and perturbing circuits in vivo and the abstract nature of theoretical models. Thanks to advances in anatomy, biophysics, connectomics, developmental biology and circuit-level tools, as well as powerful new computational and theoretical approaches, researchers are now poised to build and test models that more faithfully capture the function of canonical cortical circuits. We believe this will be possible only through a highly collaborative, vertically integrated partnership between theorists and experimentalists working together to build a framework for thinking about canonical circuit computations in the cortex. Approximately 30 workshop attendees will be selected from these applications. Participation in this workshop is not a guarantee of inclusion in a potential collaborative project or future funding. To apply, please submit your biosketch and a one-page statement describing your scientific expertise, how it connects to the scientific vision outlined above and what unique perspectives or contributions you will bring to the discussions. Apply here <https://form.jotform.com/apschaffer/application-cortical-computations> by January 5, 2026, at 5 p.m. ET. https://form.jotform.com/apschaffer/application-cortical-computations You will be notified by February 27, 2026, if you are selected to attend. For questions or issues with this application, please contact corticalcomputations@simonsfoundation.org.