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Empowering Arab neuroscientists to shape the future of brain science


We are a community of Arabic speakers passionate about Neuroscience, Cognitive Science, Psychiatry, and NeuroAI, aimed at fostering connections, collaboration, and contributions among aspiring Arab neuroscientists. Our goal is to engage Arabic-speaking neuroscientists through hands-on experiences, kick-starting their careers and driving meaningful advancements in the field.


Arabs in Neuroscience is an incorporated not-for-profit organization under the Canada Not-for-profit Corporations Act.

How AiN started!

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The Team Behind AiN


Team Leads


Mohamed Abdelhack

Mohamed Abdelhack

Communication

Krembil Centre for Neuroinformatics

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Rawan AlSubaie

Rawan AlSubaie

Academic Affairs

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Abdalrhman Mostafa

Abdalrhman Mostafa

Fundraising

Institute of Global Health and Human Ecology, The American University in Cairo

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Mai Gamal

Mai Gamal

Country Ambassadors

Computer Science and Engineering Program, German University in Cairo

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Mohamed Zaky

Mohamed Zaky

Logistics

Christchurch Neurotechnology Research Programme, New Zealand Brain Research Institute

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Reem Abedi

Reem Abedi

Content Creation

Faculty of Medicine, Lebanese University

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Sarah Hosni

Sarah Hosni

Academic Affairs & Summer School Lead

Old Dominion University

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Yasmine Bassil

Yasmine Bassil

General Member Liaison

Emory University

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Volunteers


Partners

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ABRIR (Advancing Big-team Reproducible Science through Increased Representation) began as an initiative to identify the unique challenges faced by social science researchers (psychologists particularly) from developing countries. Today it is a Consortium of psychological scientists from developing countries. ABRIR's mission is to borrow from our community of diverse researchers to identify struggles and devise solutions collaboratively to conduct open and reproducible psychological science. In this endeavor, we are grateful to our brilliant collaborators who have been helping us achieve this mission. ABRIR and Arabs in Neuroscience are working towards reducing barriers to neuroscience research and teaching in developing countries.