Re: vision: a community-driven replication initiative for image-related neuroscience
Dear colleagues, We are excited to announce re:vision, a community-driven initiative for replicating and generalizing findings in image-related neuroscience and we'd love for you to take part. Condition-rich fMRI datasets have transformed how we study visual representations, but they rest on two assumptions: that their stimuli sample natural images broadly, and that findings generalize across that distribution. These assumptions are rarely tested directly. re:vision sets out to change that. The initiative is built on the new LAION-fMRI dataset: densely-sampled 7T fMRI responses to 25,000+ natural images, designed to cover the space of natural images at exceptional scale and diversity. Participants pick a published finding, replicate it using LAION-fMRI, and test whether it holds and generalizes. No new data collection is required, all data, preprocessed betas, and annotations are provided through our Python package. Anyone with an interest in neuroscience can participate in teams of 1 - 3 researchers. From the PI that wants to get their hands dirty again to the master's student looking for a thesis project. We advise that at least one member of your replication team has experience with fMRI analysis. Why participate? - Be part of the consortium paper — every team that submits a valid report is given the chance to co-author the final publication. - Compete for cash prizes: a $2,500 Replication Award, a $2,500 Generalization Award, and a $1,000 Facilitator Award. Key dates: - Sign-up & proposal: by September 15th 2026 - Report submission: by February 15th 2027 You can learn more, browse suggested studies, and sign up at re-vision-initiative.org. Please feel free to forward this to colleagues or students who might be interested. Kind regards the re:vision team re:vision team: Luca Kämmer, Justus-Liebig-University Gießen & Max Planck Institute CBS Josefine Zerbe, Justus-Liebig-University Gießen & Max Planck Institute CBS Johannes Roth, Justus-Liebig-University Gießen & Max Planck Institute CBS Alessandro Gifford, Freie Universität Berlin Apurva Ratan Murty, Georgia Institute of Technology Iris Groen, Amsterdam University Michael Bonner, Johns Hopkins University Margaret Henderson, Carnegie Mellon University Radoslaw Cichy, Freie Universität Berlin Martin Hebart, Justus-Liebig-University Gießen & Max Planck Institute CBS
participants (1)
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Alessandro Gifford