Difference between revisions of "EyeWire Wiki Table of Contents"
From Eyewire
Amyrobinson (Talk | contribs) (rearrange order) |
Amyrobinson (Talk | contribs) |
||
Line 20: | Line 20: | ||
*[[Citizen Science and Citizen Neuroscience]] | *[[Citizen Science and Citizen Neuroscience]] | ||
*[[Excerpts from Connectome the book]] | *[[Excerpts from Connectome the book]] | ||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
=====How Connectomics is Done===== | =====How Connectomics is Done===== | ||
Line 49: | Line 46: | ||
*[[MOSTEC]]--A summer program at MIT for high school students interested in Connectomics. | *[[MOSTEC]]--A summer program at MIT for high school students interested in Connectomics. | ||
*[[High school outreach]] | *[[High school outreach]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Meet Seung Lab=== | ||
+ | ====[[Who is EyeWire HQ?]]==== | ||
===[[EyeWire Library]]=== | ===[[EyeWire Library]]=== |
Revision as of 17:59, 17 April 2014
EyeWire is a game to map the brain from Sebastian Seung's Lab at MIT. This citizen science human-based computation game challenges players to map 3D neurons in a retina. Eyewire was officially launched on December 10, 2012 and has since grown to over 120,000 players from 150 countries.
Contents
The Game
Instructions
FAQ
- Help with WebGL
The Science
Background
- Connectomics: An Introduction
- Anatomy of the eye and the retina
- Retinal Connectomics
- Citizen Science and Citizen Neuroscience
- Excerpts from Connectome the book
How Connectomics is Done
- Serial block-face scanning electron microscopy (SBFSEM)
- Machine-learning-enabled Image Analysis
- Artificial Intelligence
- Tracing using Omni
- Neural computational models
Our Data
Neurons
Amacrine Cell
Bipolar Cell
Ganglion Cell
Glial Cell
Substructures of the neuron
EyeWire in Schools
- MOSTEC--A summer program at MIT for high school students interested in Connectomics.
- High school outreach
Meet Seung Lab
Who is EyeWire HQ?
EyeWire Library
A collection of papers for those interested in delving deeper into the science behind EyeWire.
Making a Contribution of Your Own
- Make a Prezi Presentation!
- How to Read a Science Paper
- Conduct your own research
- Add your contribution to the site