This Research Topic is a celebration of the 15 Year Anniversary of the Frontiers in Computational, inviting some key contributors to the success of the Journals and the community to highlight significant elements of the past, present, and future of Computational Neuroscience focusing on computational perception and cognition. The Topic, as a part of a series that showcase some of the most notable advances in the field of Computational Neuroscience over the past 15 years, provides discussion around the key current challenges facing the field, and looks forward to exciting new research developments to come in the next 15 years of computational perception and cognition.
By following its mission to freely disseminate high-quality research with a worldwide reach, Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience will continue to play a key role in accelerating the progress of research in the field and making Open Science a global reality.
To ensure that the historical significance of this issue is truly reflected in high-quality work, the type of articles that will be accepted for this special Research Topic are:
(1) High-level reviews of impactful open topics and issues on computational perception and cognition.
(2) Research reports of ground-breaking new concepts, which must clearly not be incremental developments of existing ideas and methods.
Important please note: Articles that are submitted to this special Research Topic must be within the scope of the journal. Topic Editors will be choosing the best of the best submissions, and these will be accepted and promoted by Frontiers on social media.
Due to the special nature of this Research Topic, any rejections will be made without feedback.
This Research Topic is a celebration of the 15 Year Anniversary of the Frontiers in Computational, inviting some key contributors to the success of the Journals and the community to highlight significant elements of the past, present, and future of Computational Neuroscience focusing on computational perception and cognition. The Topic, as a part of a series that showcase some of the most notable advances in the field of Computational Neuroscience over the past 15 years, provides discussion around the key current challenges facing the field, and looks forward to exciting new research developments to come in the next 15 years of computational perception and cognition.
By following its mission to freely disseminate high-quality research with a worldwide reach, Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience will continue to play a key role in accelerating the progress of research in the field and making Open Science a global reality.
To ensure that the historical significance of this issue is truly reflected in high-quality work, the type of articles that will be accepted for this special Research Topic are:
(1) High-level reviews of impactful open topics and issues on computational perception and cognition.
(2) Research reports of ground-breaking new concepts, which must clearly not be incremental developments of existing ideas and methods.
Important please note: Articles that are submitted to this special Research Topic must be within the scope of the journal. Topic Editors will be choosing the best of the best submissions, and these will be accepted and promoted by Frontiers on social media.
Due to the special nature of this Research Topic, any rejections will be made without feedback.