Neuromag July 2016 | Page 23

INTERVIEWS WITH THREE OF TÜBINGEN’S FANTASTIC NEUROSCIENTISTS Written by Celia Foster Ever been curious to know a little more about what your friends and colleagues in Tübingen work on, what secrets they have uncovered while living here, and what inspired them to come and work here in the first place? Then read on: three of Tübingen’s finest doctoral students were kind enough to answer my questions on their research work and favourite things about living in Tübingen. Abhilash Dwarakanath is originally from Bangalore, India. He’s lived in Germany for 6 years now, with the last three and a half of those in Tübingen. What made you decide to come to Tübingen? Christoph Kayser was here. He works on multisensory perception with electrophysiology, psychophysics and computational modelling. Along with monkeys and the facilities at this MPI, it was always the first choice. Whose lab do you work in, and what made you choose to work there? I work in the Logothetis department. Even places like MIT do not have the range of technical support and facilities that we find here, coupled with solid veterinary and animal support. And of course, the department is full of excellent scientists with Logothetis himself at the top. What is your current research project about? My current research project is about unravelling the functional connectivities in the monkey pre-frontal cortex. I am also looking at cortico-cortical communication across long distances (i.e. PFC to primary/parietal areas) and how information flow changes or is modulated during multistable perception as opposed to spontaneous activity. What was your favourite course at the GTC? I liked the computational neuroscience course that Martin Giese offered. What’s your best discovery in Tübingen? The Blauer Salon. The Bären but it got closed. The Indian Imbiss behind Belthlestr where the guy has been serving home-style vegetarian food for over thirty years and has won awards. The Hanselmann butcher’s shop on Schmiedtorstr. is one of its kind. Jens Klinzing is German, and moved to Tübingen four years ago. What made you decide to come to Tübingen? I was born in Tübingen but moved away soon after birth. I came back to Tübingen for the master’s program (Neural and Behavioral Sciences) during which I got to know Tübingen for the first time really. The most important reasons to join this particular program were its curriculum that perfectly fit my interests, and the good things I had heard about the program and the city. When I came over for the admission interviews, the weather was beautiful, people were hanging out at the river, and the welcoming was so friendly that I chose Tübingen over Amsterdam and Berlin. Tübingen gets smaller over time but after getting my master’s degree I figJuly 2016 | NEUROMAG | 23