Skip to main content
impact
impact
open science
subheadline
careers and opportunities
subheadline
people & teams
people & teams
subheadline
allenites
subheadline
allen institute advisors
subheadline
board of directors
subheadline
shanahan foundation fellowship
subheadline
next generation leaders
subheadline
research
overview
our approach
subheadline
publications
subheadline
open science
subheadline
accelerator
brain science
subheadline
cell science
subheadline
neural dynamics
subheadline
immunology
subheadline
synthetic biology
subheadline
education
education
science education
subheadline
education resources
subheadline
field trips
subheadline
open science
subheadline
open science quest
subheadline
news
news
stories
subheadline
podcast
subheadline
sign up for our newsletter
subheadline
events
events
all events
subheadline
conferences
subheadline
event code of conduct
subheadline
events
open science quest
subheadline
summer workshop on the dynamic brain
subheadline
open science week
subheadline
brain fest
subheadline
science resources
science resources
allencell.org
subheadline
allenimmunology.org
subheadline
allenneuraldynamics.org
subheadline
brain-bican.org
subheadline
brain-map.org
subheadline
microns-explorer.org
subheadline
impact
back to menu
impact
open science
subheading
careers and opportunities
subheading
people & teams
people & teams
subheading
allen institute advisors
subheading
board of directors
subheading
shanahan foundation fellowship
subheading
next generation leaders
subheading
research
back to menu
impact
Label
subheading
Label
subheading
people & teams
education
back to menu
research
Label
subheading
Label
subheading
Heading
news
back to menu
research
Label
subheading
Label
subheading
Heading
events
back to menu
research
Label
subheading
Label
subheading
Heading
science resources
back to menu
science resources
allencell.org
subheading
allenimmunology.org
subheading
allenneuraldynamics.org
subheading
brain-bican.org
subheading
brain-map.org
subheading
microns-explorer.org
subheading
search
events

Neuroscience Cell Types Webinars

From Allen Institute scientists and collaborators, 5 webinars about various cell types and neuroscience projects.

From Allen Institute scientists and collaborators, 5 webinars about various cell types and neuroscience projects.
share/
This is some text inside of a div block.
location/ Virtual
dates / December 2, 2025 - March 11, 2026
time / 4:00 pm
audience/ 
Graduate
Postdocs
Scientists
Undergraduate

Webinars & Registration Link

Mapping the cellular architecture of the mammalian basal ganglia

December 2, 2025, 9 - 10:30 am PST

New cellular advances allow us to map basal ganglia’s structure and function in both humans and model organisms. We will present major advances by the HMBA consortium on basal ganglia mapping—including cross-species cellular mapping and open-access visualization tools.

This event has passed.

Watch the recording

‍

New Frontiers in Understanding Brain Development

December 9, 2025, 10 - 12:00 pm PST

How does the brain build itself? What sparks the transformation from a handful of cells into a complex organ that powers thought, emotion, and behavior? We will present the findings from 12 coordinated papers aimed at mapping brain development in extraordinary detail.

This event has passed.

Watch the recording

‍

Exploring the New Brain Knowledge Platform

January 14, 2026, 11 - 12pm PST

This webinar will highlight new features and data in the Brain Knowledge Platform.

This event has passed.

Watch the recording

‍

Getting Started with Programmatic Access to ABC Atlas Data

February 11, 2026 10 - 11am PST

This beginner-friendly webinar will focus on installation, set-up, and common questions related to using Jupyter notebooks (Python) for accessing and analyzing ABC Atlas transcriptomic data.

This event has passed.

Watch the recording

‍

Creating a Cross-species Spinal Cord Taxonomy

March 13, 2026 10:30 - 11:30am PST

This webinar will focus on the creation of a new cross-species spinal cord taxonomy, featuring transcriptomic data from human, macaque, and mouse.

Register

‍

‍

More Details About the Webinars

Mapping the cellular architecture of the mammalian basal ganglia | Dec 2, 9-10:30am PST

Webinar Description:
The brain is by far the most complex organ, posing enormous challenges in understanding its normal function and what goes wrong in brain disorders that now represent the largest cause of ill health worldwide.  New cellular and molecular technologies are quickly accelerating the field and can now be used to create cellular maps or atlases of the brain at unprecedented resolution.  The NIH BRAIN Initiative Brain Atlas Network (BICAN) is supporting major efforts to use these techniques to create brain-wide cell atlases in human and model organisms important for biomedical research as catalytic foundational resources in the spirit of the Human Genome.

This webinar will present results on mapping the structural, cellular and molecular architecture of the basal ganglia, structures involved in motor control, cognition and reward, and affected in a range of motor, addictive and psychiatric disorders.  The Human and Mammalian Brain Atlas (HMBA) consortium, a program within BICAN, involves a coordinated effort to create a harmonized atlas of basal ganglia structures and cell types in human and non-human primate brain.  This includes the creation of structural coordinate frameworks, cross-species maps of cell types and their spatial architecture using single cell genomics and spatial transcriptomics methods, and characterization of the morphological and physiological properties of basal ganglia cell types.  Together these data comprise a new foundational cell atlas that comprehensively describe the cellular organization of the basal ganglia, molecular and epigenetic underpinnings of their properties, and both conserved and species-specialized features of this organization.

These cell atlases are created to be foundational community resources. Effective open access tools for visualization, exploration and data mining are essential to realize the potential of these resources to standardize and accelerate efforts across the field to understand brain function and disease.  A rich suite of tools to visualize and mine these data and for users to map their own data against will be introduced and described.

Learning Goals

Cell atlas of the basal ganglia:
What are the basal ganglia?
What is a cell atlas?
What are single cell and spatial genomics methods?
What did we learn from the atlas?

HMBA -omics
What is single cell epigenomics/multiome analysis?  What can we learn from that?
How is it possible to scale up to map the basal ganglia structures?
How can we map across species and why is that important?

HMBA spatial:
What is spatial transcriptomics and why is that important?  What can we learn from that?

HMBA cell phenotyping
What is Patch-seq analysis?  What can we learn from that?

Tools to use atlases:
What online tools are available, and how can they be used?

Speakers

Man with glasses wearing dark blue shirt, smiling at camera

Trygve Bakken, M.D, Ph.D.
Trygve Bakken maps the diversity of cell types in the human brain and compares them to other species to understand how our brains have evolved. By pairing large-scale single-cell genomics with genetic tools for precise circuit access, his work lays the groundwork for new approaches to study and treat brain disorders.

Smiling older man with glasses wearing blue shirt and tie

David Van Essen, Ph.D.
David Van Essen has carried out pioneering studies of the structure, function, connectivity, development, and evolution of cerebral cortex in humans and nonhuman primates. This includes widely cited maps of cortical organization and connectivity in the macaque monkey plus a multi-modal surface-based human cortical parcellation. He co-led the Human Connectome Project (HCP), a large-scale effort that acquired, analyzed, and freely shared high-quality neuroimaging data from 1200 healthy adults. The VanEssen/Glasser lab has been heavily involved in the BICAN project since its inception.

Portrait of a person wearing glasses and a beige turtleneck sweater

Yuanyun Fu, Ph.D.
Yuanyuan Fu is a scientist at the Allen Institute for Brain Science working on single-cell genomics analysis of human and non-human primate brains. Prior to joining the Institute in 2024, Yuanyuan received her PhD at Tsinghua University, where she studied the development of the human brain.

Woman wearing light blue denim shirt standing indoors with hands on hips

Madeleine Hewitt, Ph.D.
Madeleine Hewitt is a Scientist I at the Allen Institute working on spatial transcriptomics analysis of human and non-human primate brains. Prior to joining the Institute in 2023, Madeleine received her PhD at the University of Washington, where she studied cell shape of zebrafish sensory organs.

Young person with shoulder-length wavy dark hair wearing a black shirt

Meghan Turner, Ph.D.
Meghan Turner is a scientist at the Allen Institute for Brain Science working on the analysis of spatial transcriptomics data in human and non-human primate brains. Prior to joining the Institute in 2023, Meghan earned her Ph.D. in Biophysics from the University of California, Berkeley, where she studied the molecular mechanisms of transcriptional regulation during embryonic development.

Woman with glasses and long dark hair wearing purple cardigan smiling

Xiao-Ping Liu, Ph.D.
Xiao-Ping Liu is a member of the Human Cell Types team where she performs quantitative analysis on patch-seq data, which provide multimodal scRNA-seq, electrophysiological, and morphological characterization of neuronal cells. Previously, she completed her Ph.D. in the joint Harvard/MIT Health Sciences Technology program. She has studied neural processing of auditory stimuli, maturation of mechanotransduction and electrophysiological properties in inner ear sensory cells, and ion channels of inner ear sensory neurons.  

Man with gray hair wearing glasses and dark clothing, serious expression.

Boudewijn Lelieveldt, Ph.D.
Boudewijn Lelieveldt is professor of Biomedical Imaging at the Dept of Radiology, Leiden University Medical Center, and at the Pattern Recognition and Bioinformatics lab at Delft University of Technology, the Netherlands. His team focuses on the development of fast algorithms and software for highly interactive visual analytics of integrated single-cell and spatially resolved -omics data (Manivault Studio, Cytosplore Viewer).  For HMBA, his team developed several data viewers for cross-species comparison, data integration and cross-modal visualization of HMBA data. Links for talk: viewer.cytosplore.org, manivault.studio

Woman with wavy brown hair and glasses wearing a black top, smiling at camera

Rachel Hostetler, Ph.D
She joined the Allen Institute in 2023, as part of the Scientific and Public Outreach of Cell Type Taxonomies team. In her role, she provides training, technical support, and outreach to scientific users of Allen’s cell type taxonomy data and tools.

New Frontiers in Understanding Brain Development | Dec 9, 10-11am PST

This webinar is part of the BRAIN Initiative® Cell Atlas Network (BICAN), which is a collaborative effort between neuroscientists, computational biologists and software engineers to create a comprehensive atlas of the human brain. Supported by the U.S. BRAIN Initiative, we are dedicated to advancing our knowledge of the brain by gathering and sharing new data that allows us to develop the “parts list” of the brain, detailing the vast array of neurons and non-neuronal cells in the human brain. The BICAN continues the work of the BICCN consortium.

To learn more about this webinar and BICAN, visit their website.

Exploring the new Brain Knowledge Platform | Jan 14, 11am-12pm PST

This webinar will highlight new features and data in the Brain Knowledge Platform. More details to come.

Getting Started with Programmatic Access to ABC Atlas Data | Feb 11, 10-11:30am PST

This beginner-friendly webinar will focus on installation, set-up, and common questions related to using Jupyter notebooks (Python) for accessing and analyzing ABC Atlas transcriptomic data.

More details to come

Creating a Cross-species Spinal Cord Taxonomy | March 11, 10:30-11:30am PST

This webinar will focus on the creation of a new cross-species spinal cord taxonomy, featuring transcriptomic data from human, macaque, and mouse.

More details to come

‍

Previous Cell Types Webinars
Scientific Cell Types Resources

explore related events

explore more events
event 
IBRO 2023
Meet scientists from the Allen Institute for Brain Science team at the International Brain Research Organization (IBRO) World Congress in Grenada, Spain.
event 
Attendee Details: Fundamentals of Neuroscience Virtual Teacher Academy
At this teacher academy, attendees will have the opportunity to learn from neuroscientists, explore open data, attend a live virtual lab tour, and ask questions to scientists on a panel. This workshop takes place across 2 required sessions on February 27, 2024 and March 5, 2024 from 4:00 pm PST until 5:30 pm PST.
event / February 27 & March 5, 2024
Fundamentals of Neuroscience Virtual Teacher Academy
STEM educators are invited to join us for a two-part virtual professional development workshop all about our open neuroscience concepts and science careers at the Allen Institute. Join us for an opportunity to ask neuroscientists all of the questions you and your students wonder about in class! This workshop takes place across 2 required sessions on February 27, 2024 and March 5, 2024 from 4:00 pm PST until 5:30 pm PST. Application deadline extended! Apply by February 23, 2024.
explore more events
Scientists present colorful microscopy research data on laptop at academic conference poster session

safety, respect, inclusion: our event code of conduct

learn more
we acceleratedevelopcatalyzeimpact

science done differently. shared with the world.

explore our accelerators

brain science

Mapping every cell, connection, and circuit in the brain—openly shared with the world.

cell science

Decoding how cells become tissues, then programming that knowledge into powerful new research tools.

neural dynamics

Revealing the brain's hidden algorithms that transform neural activity into real-world behavior.

immunology

Creating the deepest open reference for the healthy human immune system ever built.

synthetic biology

Engineering cells to record their own histories, transforming how we understand disease over time.

research

Big questions, open answers, and science built to be shared.

education

Inspiring the next generation of scientists through open science resources.

impact

Our science is empowering researchers and advancing health worldwide.
advancing science through open, collaborative research
Get the allen institute newsletter
Stay informed on the latest breakthroughs in neuroscience, bioscience, and AI-driven research.
allen institute
impactpeople & teamscareers & opportunitiesalumnihistory & founder
science resources
allencell.orgallenimmunology.orgallenneuraldynamics.orgbrain-bican.orgbrain-map.orgmicrons-explorer.org
research
brain sciencecell scienceneural dynamicsimmunologysynthetic biologypublications
education
science educationfield tripsprofessional developmenteducation resources
quick links
newseventsopen sciencepodcastscience resourceshuman brain donationvisit uscontact
follow us/

allen institute, 615 Westlake Ave North, Seattle, WA 98109 +12065487055

© 0000 allen institute. all rights reserved.
privacy policyterms of usecitation policyemployee portalpolicy & compliance