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Tobias Rose

@trose-neuro

Vision & Motion. Stability & Plasticity. 
Professor at University of Bonn.
 www.troselab.de

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07.10.2023
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Latest posts by Tobias Rose @trose-neuro

Postdoctoral Researcher (m/f/d) - Systems Neuroscience / NeuroAI, Freely Moving Mouse Vision, Miniature Two-Photon, Deep Network Models - Federation of European Neuroscience Societies

Last chance to join @sinzlab.bsky.social and my lab as a postdoc for a (ok - I am biased...) extremely cool active vision project at the Neuro-AI interface:

www.fens.org/careers/job-...

25.02.2026 14:33 👍 4 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0

It doesn’t? I should definitely tell that to a few people. ;)

25.02.2026 14:04 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
BI 232 How Should Neuroscience Integrate with Ecological Psychology? | Brain Inspired

Very cool @braininspired.bsky.social episode!

Important for anyone considering "naturalistic" behavior and what “ecological” and "affordance" actually mean in neuroscience...

(or why it may not be enough to just switch the PowerPoint Marr intro with a Gibson intro)

braininspired.co/podcast/232/

25.02.2026 10:41 👍 6 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
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From our new paper out now in @currentbiology.bsky.social: www.cell.com/current-biol... w/ @neurofishh.bsky.social @gkafetzis.bsky.social @denilsson.bsky.social

Looking across animals, the vertebrate eye is an obvious outlier. Why is it so different that other highly visual animals?

24.02.2026 10:45 👍 108 🔁 39 💬 1 📌 2
Preview
Pace of ecology drives the tempo of visual perception across the animal kingdom - Nature Ecology & Evolution Using phylogenetic comparative methods across 237 species from disparate phyla, the authors show that species with fast-paced ecologies have higher temporal resolution of perception.

Pace of ecology drives the tempo of visual perception across the animal kingdom www.nature.com/articles/s41... - new paper with Clinton Haarlem, Cliodhna Hynes and colleagues

Different species see the world as fast as they need to...

24.02.2026 10:40 👍 87 🔁 37 💬 4 📌 1
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Build hands-on skills in optical & electrophysiological methods at the TENSS 2026 course & advance your skills in modern systems #neuroscience
🔗 Apply by 1 Mar: https://ibro.org/training-opportunity/perc4_romania/

#IBROinAsiaPacific #IBROinUSCanada #IBROinAfrica #IBROinLatAm #IBROinEurope #training

26.01.2026 12:00 👍 8 🔁 6 💬 1 📌 1
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Quantitative Approaches to Behavior and Virtual Reality - CAJAL […]

You have until March 3rd to apply for the Cajal summer school on Quantitative Approaches to Behavior and VR at Champalimaud! Come surf and track animals with us 🏄🪰🐟🚶
cajal-training.org/on-site/quan...

19.02.2026 17:37 👍 25 🔁 18 💬 1 📌 3

🧪🧠 New preprint: helping resolve a decades-long debate in synaptic plasticity

NMDA receptors are central to Hebbian learning. Yet for >30 years, the existence and function of presynaptic NMDA receptors have remained controversial.

📄 doi.org/10.64898/202...

1/6

16.02.2026 20:28 👍 55 🔁 19 💬 1 📌 2

Using our bee-tracking drone, we discovered that honey bees 🐝 have highly precise and individual routes. Now published at @currentbiology.bsky.social : doi.org/10.1016/j.cu...

16.02.2026 16:22 👍 255 🔁 118 💬 6 📌 9
Timeline of application deadlines for hands on couses in behavioral neuroscience.

Timeline of application deadlines for hands on couses in behavioral neuroscience.

We’re excited to team up once again with advanced training courses to help students with hands-on training about open source tools and methods for behavioral neuroscience.

Don’t forget to apply! Links below.
#OpenEphys #OEdu

26.01.2026 12:08 👍 2 🔁 1 💬 1 📌 0

bsky.app/profile/thea...

14.02.2026 11:12 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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Statistical assessment of the stability of neural movement representations In systems neuroscience, neural activity that represents movements or sensory stimuli is often characterized by spatial tuning curves that may change in response to training, attention, altered mechanics, or the passage of time. A vital step in ...

As conceptually fundamental as this paper is, assessing stability in motor control (and, frankly, anywhere else) is tricky. e.g. pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC... - or check out @olveczky.bsky.social and @asheshdhawale.bsky.social 's work.

14.02.2026 08:06 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

Are you coming to cosyne? Would love to discuss that...

13.02.2026 17:10 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

... absolutely. And the software/hardware engineering we can get done in a day now is just absurd. Feels like a superpower. But that's the thing - a very strangely ambivalent professional situation that I feel is not acknowledged enough in the Doomers vs. AI-Bros vs. Luddites spectrum.

13.02.2026 16:11 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 2 📌 0

(and if I may add a science thing: the fact that an allocentric variable can be so stable given the weird things animals do when running around nilly willy is cool - and did surprise us a bit in our own data as well).

13.02.2026 10:51 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

You can't... repeal... a scientific finding. At that point it's just called lying about it.

12.02.2026 20:38 👍 12631 🔁 4473 💬 208 📌 113
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After all, we had this settled once and for all years ago

12.02.2026 18:23 👍 3 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

...I do find it interesting (no judgement) how this illustrious journal is publishing drift "is a thing" "isn't a thing" stories at a high frequency these days, though.

12.02.2026 18:17 👍 3 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0

Also: I am not sure if humans are _on average_ much better at reviewing literature. We just accept mediocrity far more easily if it comes from conspecifics...

12.02.2026 13:43 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0

I agree - and I don't use it like this. I am just not sure it will continue to be. My point was not to hype science AI, but - see OP - it would be foolish to trash current models based on outdated experience and ignore obvious effects on professional identity. This may be more obv. in data science.

12.02.2026 13:41 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0

I certainly had these tiring "ever-drifting" discussions to the same extent as the equally tedious "ever-stable". Maybe more - seeing change is far easier than seeing stability after all. It is sadly just so tempting to attach a narrative to categorical strawmen...

12.02.2026 12:47 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

I disagree. Both sides of these (nonsensical) categorical claims have been made, when interpreting claims uncharitably. But yes: We absolutely have to move past that. Not everything flows - not everything is stable. We need to measure, define, and model better. And maybe get rid of this drift term.

12.02.2026 12:14 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0

Speaking of writing & review in AI times: That seems to be a concept that will hit a brick wall pretty soon. Until then, I'm faced with piles and piles of review requests for 50% LLM texts - my professional pride of spending days on somebody's work to give personal feedback is diminishing rapidly...

12.02.2026 12:00 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 2 📌 0

I guess what I want to say is: Yes. It is helping a lot with boilerplate, bureaucracy, grant-fluff parts, etc. But it is also 'helping' (reasonably proficiently - this is not a slop critique, quality is the problem) with the stuff that needed effort and yielded accomplishment payoffs. That's scary.

12.02.2026 11:48 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0

Writing. I love/hate writing. I teach writing. Nothing is more painful and satisfying than chiseling at this one sentence until it is just right. Now we have an instant fix ("improve using Strunk&White") that is usually not bad at all - and completely dissatisfying, even when good.

12.02.2026 11:48 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0

Digging deep, condensing knowledge, and writing review/opinion articles - is there a point in doing this anymore?

12.02.2026 11:48 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 2 📌 0

Sure.

The software / hardware engineering we do in the lab - complex integrated systems. Wonderful flow-sessions of figuring things out and getting them to run. Claude is now better at this.

12.02.2026 11:48 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 2 📌 0

This is what I find scary, though. The nitty-gritty technical details, the "I can do this" part of the job is something I really love. And in the last months, I came to realize that this may go away....

12.02.2026 11:12 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 2 📌 0

Same. Going from slob-prompting (*meh*) to full codebase integration (claude code / GPT codex) was pretty wild (and also more than a little scary...).

12.02.2026 11:03 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0

can we?

a neuroscientist: "I see drift in area X of species Y under conditions Z therefore it exists everywhere."

also a neuroscientist: "I think we can explain drift, therefore it happens."

12.02.2026 10:11 👍 4 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0