Neuronale Informationsverarbeitung

Colloquium Summer Term 2026

Day, time & location:

Both “virtual” and “analogue” colloquia take place weekly during term time, typically Tuesdays from 14:30 till 16:00 hrs (Central European Summer Time, CEST). Please note that some talks from international speakers may have to be held at a different time or day (if applicable this is indicated below). Even if the colloquium is virtual you are invited to join us—analogue-style—to watch it together with the members of NIP in the 1st floor meeting room 10-10/A12, Maria-von-Linden-Str. 6.

Virtual NIP colloquia are open to guests from anywhere in the world. If you are interested in attending one or several of the talks, one option is to subscribe to our mailing list by sending an empty email to nip-colloquium-subscribespam prevention@listserv.uni-tuebingen.de. (Please send the empty email from an official university account, otherwise your registration is likely going to be delayed or even impossible.) You will then receive the zoom link, the abstract and the password the day before the talk via an email to the mailing list.
Alternatively you can join our virtual colloquia spontaneously and without registration on our mailing list via the Zoom link posted here—it will be posted 24 hours prior to the colloquium. Please click here:

Zoom link

…will be online in due time…

Important note for students in the Bachelor Cognitive Science: The NIP colloquium is officially listed in Alma, and thus you can have your participation in a colloquium be counted in the module "Forschungskolloquium Kognitionswissenschaft”. In the case of a virtual colloquium please write an email to Felix Wichmann (preferably while or immediately after the talk and from your official University account). In case of an analogue, in person colloquium please approach Felix Wichmann directly after the colloquium and ask him to sign your form.

datespeakertitle
14.04.2026no colloquium
21.04.2026no colloquium
28.04.2026Thomas Klein, NIP      Measuring alignment and interpretability of deep vision models
05.05.2026Marvin Theiß, NIP      Rethinking representational similarity as evidence for shared computation: Function-preserving manipulations in DNNs
12.05.2026Maryam Jannati, NIP & Jannik Reichert, NIPProgress on understanding and modelling human pattern perception
19.05.2026no colloquium
26.05.2026no colloquium (Pentecost)
02.06.2026no colloquium
09.06.2026no colloquium
16.06.2026tba 
23.06.2026Alban Flachot, Justus-Liebig-Universität Giessentba
30.06.2026no colloquium
07.07.2026Lukas Huber, NIPtba
14.07.2026no colloquium
21.07.2026tba 
28.07.2026no colloquium