11.30am – 1pm GMT, 28 January 2026 ‐ 1 hour 30 mins
Morning Session
Panellists from across the sectors will focus on design choices, including how practical aspects such as timelines, deadlines and workflow constraints impact how credibility is defined or perceived, established credibility measures, success criteria.
Head of Histology, Sainsbury Wellcome Centre
Associate Professor in Neuroscience, University of Bristol
Research in the Ashby lab investigates plasticity of the brain, focussing on early life development of synaptic and neuronal circuit function and on how abnormal synaptic biology contributes to neurodegenerative disease.
Using cutting edge fluorescence imaging and photostimulation approaches in mouse and human brain slices and in vivo in mouse models, we have contributed to understanding of emerging synapses in the developing brain and how synaptic turnover shapes ongoing changes in neuronal connectivity. Specific examples include using 2-photon calcium imaging in mouse brain slices to show novel modes of dendritic signalling during synaptic plasticity and in vivo imaging of disruptions to structural synaptic plasticity and neuronal activity in mouse models of neurodegenerative tauopathy.
Executive Director, The UK Reproducibility Network (UKRN)
Marcus Munafò is Deputy Vice Chancellor and Provost at the University of Bath. He has a long-standing interest in meta-research, and the organisational factors, incentive structures and working practices that shape researcher behaviour and research quality.Principal Scientist, Sygnature Discovery
Tatiana Rosenstock has had an exceptional career and has made significant contributions to the field of Neuroscience for 20+ years. Her work has focused on topics such as mitochondrial deregulation, transcription deregulation, and autophagy in neurodegenerative diseases, such as Huntington’s Disease, and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, and Schizophrenia.
At Sygnature Discovery, Tatiana is a Principal Scientist overseeing various neuroscience-related projects in different sub-areas such as metabolism (mitochondrial function), biomarkers, microglial function and activation, and neuroplasticity. During this period, she has been working with distinct in-vitro models, named iPSC-derived neurons, primary cortical neurons, Alzheimer`s and Parkinson`s disease fibroblasts, neuroblastomas cell lines, tissue and biofluids from transgenics animal models of Alzheimer`s disease.
Research Lead, Wellcome Trust
Georgina MacKenzie, a Research Lead at the Wellcome Trust, has expertise in open science and large-scale international collaborations, as demonstrated by her involvement with the International Brain Laboratory (IBL).Associate Director & Cognition Lead , Transpharmation Ltd
John Huxter is Associate Director and Cognition Lead at Transpharmation. John has had more than 25 years of neuroscience experience in both academia and industry, and across diverse therapeutic areas including psychiatric disorders, chronic pain, and neurodegeneration. With a background in both behaviour and electrophysiology (UCL, University of Bristol, Oxford’s MRC Analytical Neuropharmacology Unit), he has led biomarker discovery and assay development efforts at both Pfizer and Eli Lilly before joining Transpharmation in 2020. John is passionate about the translational potential for preclinical neuroscience, and works closely with the Transpharmation teams in the UK, Ireland, Poland and Canada to explore new opportunities for drug discovery and collaboration.Head Research Engineer, Sainsbury Wellcome Centre
Adam Tyson is Head Research Engineer and Head of the Neuroinformatics Unit at the Sainsbury Wellcome Centre and Gatsby Computational Neuroscience Unit.
He is interested in the development of open-source and easy to use software for neuroscience, particularly image analysis. Adam is the co-founder and lead of the development of the BrainGlobe Initiative.
Previously he was Scientific Software Lead at the Institute of Cancer Research and Research Fellow in the Margrie Lab. Adam carried out his PhD at King’s College London in the Andreae Lab.