
Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Animal Research
Includes a Live Web Event on 06/03/2025 at 7:00 AM (EDT)
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3 June 2025 at 7:00 a.m. EDT
Free to IASP members; Non-members $25 USD
This webinar is the second in a series on Artificial Intelligence.
Assessing pain in animals is difficult: we cannot use our gold standard, the patient report. Historically, evoked responses have been interpreted as pain, but this has methodological limitations. Complex behavioural measurements, however, can be hard to replicate across assessors, and are highly resource intensive. Automated image and video analysis using AI promises improved assays.
Speakers:
Thomas Nevia, PhD, University of Bern, Switzerland
Daniel Segelcke, PhD, University of Munster, Germany
Moderator:
David Finn, PhD, University of Galway, Ireland

Thomas Nevian, PhD
Professor
University of Bern
Thomas Nevian studied physics and biophysics in Heidelberg, Germany, St. Andrews, UK and at the Cornell University, USA. He performed his PhD work with Prof. Dr. Bert Sakmann at the Max-Planck-Institute for Medical Research in Heidelberg, investigating cellular mechanisms of plasticity in cortical neurons. After his dissertation in 2003 and two further years as post-doc in Heidelberg, he became a group leader in the Department of Physiology at the University of Bern (Switzerland). In 2010 he received a Research-Professorship of the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF-Professor). In 2012 he was appointed Tenure-Track-Assistentprofessor and since 2014 he is Full Professor of Physiology (Ordinarius) at the University of Bern and Co-Director of the Department of Physiology. His research in Neuroscience was awarded with the Pfizer Research Prize twice (2008, 2016) and in 2012 he received the Theodor-Kocher-Preis as best young researcher of the University of Bern. In 2015 he received an ERC-Consolidator grant to study the neuronal networks involved in pain processing in the cerebral cortex. He is a member of the steering committee of the Clinical Neurosciences Bern (CNB) and was Secretary of the Swiss Society for Neuroscience.
Thomas Nevian investigates the fundamental mechanisms of signal processing in the brain using state-of-the-art microscopy and electrophysiology techniques. His research group investigates the biophysics of neurons, principles of memory formation and the development of chronic pain. Here the main focus is to understand nociceptive processing in the anterior cingulate cortex, a brain region that is involved in the emotional evaluation of the experience that comprises pain.

Daniel Segelcke, PhD
Post Doctoral Researcher
University of Münster
Daniel Segelcke graduated at the Ruhr University of Bochum, where he received extensive training in behavioral biology and animal pain models for migraine. Following his PhD in 2012, he joined the laboratories of Esther Pogatzki-Zahn (EPZ) at the University of Münster to investigate behavioral, cerebral processing and proteome signatures in animal models for post-surgical, pathogene pain, neuropathic pain, and bone-tumor induced pain. He successfully established novel rodent behavior assays, devices and analytic methods to investigate multidimensional pain modalities in rats and mice in longitudinal studies. Machine learning approaches performs some of these analysis methods. During his time at the University of Münster, he raised peer-reviewed funding for a preclinical systematic review, which investigate the impact of buprenorphine (opioid) in biomedical animal research. During his time at the University of Münster, he raised peer-reviewed funding for a preclinical systematic review, which investigate the impact of buprenorphine (opioid) in biomedical animal research.

David Finn, PhD (Moderator)
Professor
University of Galway
David Finn is Established Professor of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Principal Investigator and Founding Co-Director of the Centre for Pain Research at University of Galway, Ireland. Professor Finn graduated with a BSc (Hons) in Biotechnology from University of Galway and a PhD in Neuroscience from University of Bristol, and he worked as a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Nottingham. His research focuses on the affective and cognitive dimensions of pain, stress-pain interactions, and neuroinflammatory processes, with an emphasis on the endogenous cannabinoid system. He is Past-President of the International Cannabinoid Research Society (ICRS) and of the Irish Pain Society. He has been a member of the Presidential Task Forces for Cannabis, Cannabinoids and Chronic Pain of both the International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) and the European Pain Federation (EFIC), and leader of the Basic Science Work Package for the IASP Task Force. He is a member of the EFIC Working Groups for Translational Pain Research and Pain Research Strategy, the IASP Task Force for Use of Animals in Pain Research, a member of the Scientific Programme Committees for the IASP 2026 and 2024 World Pain Congresses, NeuPSIG 2025, EFIC 2022, and a member of EFIC Council. Professor Finn is a member of the Editorial Boards of multiple international scientific journals including Pain, Journal of Psychopharmacology, Frontiers in Neuropharmacology, Frontiers in Pain Research, and the Scandinavian Journal of Pain. He has published over 190 peer-reviewed journal papers and book chapters and frequently lectures at international conferences.
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