March 2024 Newsletter

Dear colleagues,

Welcome to the first 2024 TEATIME COST Action newsletter for improving biomedical research by automated behaviour monitoring in the animal home-cage. In this edition we invite you to apply for our Grant Funding, and an update on where to find TEATIME presentations this quarter.
There is still time to apply:
Are you planning to present your work at a scientific conference in a poster or talk? Need funding for your travel, registration, and accommodation costs?
TEATIME can provide a grant for this if you are under 40 years old and affiliated to a legal entity in a COST Inclusiveness Target Country for the Conference fund.
 
Do you want to travel to another laboratory? Learning skills related to HCM?
Our grants cover travel, accommodation, and limited lab expenses to cover these visits: Short-Term Scientific Missions
 
Find our open grant calls
Our Resource page is growing!

We invite you to read some of our new resources including a Manual developed from the 1st TEATIME Advanced Training Workshop). Our website is updated regularly with new information.

Find our resources
Where to find a TEATIME presenter this quarter

Lars Lewejohann and Lior Bikovski are hosting a session at Measuring Behaviour focusing on insights and lessons learnt around Home Cage Monitoring. 

Action member Stefano Gaburro is hosting a session discussing the developing field of digital animal research. 
TEATIME at MB

TEATIME are hosting an eventing event on TheBehaviourForum.org at the Federation of European Neuroscience Societies (FENS) Forum in Vienna. Click below for more information on this and other events.

TEATIME at FENS
TEATIME Webinars

Look out for the new videos, including. Smart-Kage: the home cage monitoring system for fully automated AI-based long-term continuous phenotyping of mouse cognition and behaviour

Watch our webinars
TEATIME Reflections from Gender equality month
We were delighted to be offered the opportunity to reflect upon women representation of our COST Action and zoom in on the gender statistics of the grants we have awarded.
Read the blog
Second TEATIME HCM Advanced Training School
We have had a great response to our call for applications to join our second advanced training course. We will inform all successful applicants by 4th April. A report from the Training School will be published later this year.
Training school information
Paper with TEATIME Author contributors

We are pleased to share a paper which includes contributions from COST Action CA20135 (TEATIME) members. The paper discusses the repurposing of nonclinical in vivo data using a minimal metadata set (MNMS).

Read our paper

We hope you have found this newsletter interesting and informative. We would be very happy to hear from any of you with feedback and comments. Please also share this newsletter with your colleagues and if you have been forwarded this email and don’t want to miss future newsletters, then please subscribe. All new webinars will be announced on the website and via X 2-3 weeks before the event so please watch the space!

On behalf of all members of the TEATIME Action,

Vootele Voikar – TEATIME Chair
Sara Wells – Grant Holder, TEATIME Vice-chair
Sabine Hölter-Koch – Science Communication Coordinator

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This newsletter is based upon work from COST Action TEATIME, supported by COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology). COST is a funding agency for research and innovation networks. Our Actions help connect research initiatives across Europe and enable scientists to grow their ideas by sharing them with their peers. This boosts their research, career, and innovation.

In celebration of International Women’s Day 2024, we are pleased to share with you insights of some of the amazing female researchers in our Action

Every year International Women’s Day is an excellent opportunity to hold on for a moment and to reflect on the specific contributions of women to our societies and our well-being, and to potentially look for role models. This year, we @COST-TEATIME asked the marvellous female scientists in the leadership of our Action what drove them to pursue a career in science, what motivates them and what they gained so far from the participation in the leadership of a COST Action. We are very happy about the responses we got and think they pretty much reflect the science-driven and collaborative spirit we perceive within our Action. Take a look at their statements and see for yourself!

Dear colleagues,

Welcome to the TEATIME COST Action newsletter for improving biomedical research by automated behaviour monitoring in the animal home-cage. In this edition we are pleased to share our year end review, as well as reports from our Hackathon and Machine Learning Workshops and the systematic review of the development and application of HCM.  
Call for 2024 Grant Applications
Our call for grants for 2024 is now open! Please visit the Grants page of the TEATIME website for more information and details on how to apply.
Find our open grant calls
Second TEATIME HCM Advanced Training School

Will be held in Berlin, Germany from 4th to 7th June 2024. Intended for Masters, PhD, and post-doctoral students, with at least 2 years’ experience in rodent behavioural research. Applications open 15 Jan 2024.

Training school information
Hackathon 2023
In October 2023 we held our first Hackathon, which brought researchers from across Europe together to work collaboratively to produce machine learning models for behaviour classification in the home cage. The models and source code will be shared on TEATIME’s GitHub.                 
Read more about this initiative
Machine Learning Workshop
In September 2023, in Jurmala, Latvia, we brought together 26 experts from 15 countries to discuss the proliferation of tools and machine learning applications allowing users to track animal movement and analyse behaviour.
Read more about this event
Grants awarded by TEATIME in 2023
This year we have been delighted to offer grants to researchers to complete 8 Short Term Scientific Missions (STSM) in a lab in a different country to their own, 3 ITC Conference Grants and 4 Dissemination Grants to attend and present at academic conferences. Reports can be found on our grant page.
Find reports from previous grants
TEATIME Webinars
Look out for the new videos, including Quantifying behaviour using deep learning. Talmo Pereira. Updates from participants at our Advanced Training School. Is that time for a renaissance of ethologically based measure of anxiety-like behaviors in rodents? 
Watch our webinars
Systematic Review of HCM

We are pleased to share a link to this review of the development and application of HCM in rodents, published in BCM Biology.

Read our paper
TEATIME and IMPC Behaviour and Sensory WG
Silvia Mandillo gave an interesting presentation where she discussed the interaction of TEATIME with the International Mouse Phenotyping Consortium (IMPC).
Presentation slides
Year End Review

Reflecting on our 2023 achievements
 
We have had a full program across 2023 and we are delighted to share our reflections on this year here:

Read our review

We hope you have found this newsletter interesting and informative. We would be very happy to hear from any of you with feedback and comments. Please also share this newsletter with your colleagues and if you have been forwarded this email and don’t want to miss future newsletters, then please subscribe. All new webinars will be announced on the website and via X 2-3 weeks before the event so please watch the space!

On behalf of all members of the TEATIME Action,

Vootele Voikar – TEATIME Chair
Sara Wells – Grant Holder, TEATIME Vice-chair
Sabine Hölter-Koch – Science Communication Coordinator
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YouTube
Website
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This newsletter is based upon work from COST Action TEATIME, supported by COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology). COST is a funding agency for research and innovation networks. Our Actions help connect research initiatives across Europe and enable scientists to grow their ideas by sharing them with their peers. This boosts their research, career, and innovation.

This autumn we have unveiled a comprehensive paper delving into the transformative potential of home-cage monitoring technology (HCM) in the realm of biomedical animal research. Traditionally, laboratory rodents undergo individual examinations in external test apparatuses at specific time points, a practice that may overlook crucial data influenced by various factors. To address these limitations, the research community has increasingly turned to longitudinally monitoring mice and rats within their home cages. The recently published systematic review, drawing insights from 521 publications sourced from PubMed and Web of Science, sheds light on the evolution of HCM and its current state-of-the-art applications.

Over the covered period, numerous studies have shown a remarkable enhancement in techniques for HCM of mice and rats. The ongoing development signifies a promising trajectory for the field, indicating that continuous, longitudinal, and non-invasive monitoring of various parameters in group-housed small rodents within their home cages is within reach. By monitoring animals in their home cages over extended periods, we can capture a more accurate representation of their natural behavior and physiological responses. This not only enhances the reliability of our findings but also opens up new possibilities for studying a broader array of parameters in a group setting. The implications of this research extend beyond mere technological progress. The ability to monitor animals continuously within their familiar environment holds the potential to revolutionize experimental designs, offering a more comprehensive understanding of the impact of various interventions and stimuli. As the field of HCM continues to evolve, researchers anticipate further refinements and validations of monitoring systems. These improvements will inevitably broaden the applications of HCM, allowing for a nuanced understanding of the intricacies of animal behavior and physiology over time.

In conclusion, the paper signifies a pivotal moment in biomedical research, highlighting the strides made in home-cage monitoring technology and hinting at a future where the continuous observation of small rodents within their home cages becomes standard practice in laboratories worldwide.

I was privileged to present the groundbreaking TEATIME Action at the 5th Congress of the Society for Laboratory Animals of Slovenia and the 3rd joint SLAS – CroLASA meeting on June 15, 2023, in Ljubljana, Slovenia. My lecture focused on the transformative potential of automated behavior monitoring in the home cages of laboratory animals, particularly mice and rats, aiming to elevate the standards of biomedical research.

TEATIME Action, launched in 2021 and spanning 34 European countries, unites experts in mouse behavior, data science, and animal welfare. Focused on home cage monitoring (HCM) technologies, it aims to enhance the reliability of measures in laboratory rodents, setting standards for ethical preclinical research. TEATIME fosters collaboration through surveys and a systematic review, providing a catalog of HCM systems and offering training programs. This initiative not only refines experimental conditions and reduces animal use but also builds a diverse, interconnected network for a more ethical and efficient future in biomedical research. The abstract of the lecture can be found in the Book of Abstracts (1 (slas.si)).

As the topic unfolded, I was delighted to witness the audience’s curiosity ignite. The flood of questions that followed indicated a genuine interest in the subject. What thrilled me even more was the realization that the information shared was breaking new ground for many researchers. Some attendees were encountering the fascinating realm of Home Cage Monitoring (HCM) systems for the first time. The allure of our shared mission—improving research using laboratory animals—resonated with fellow researchers. Many expressed not only their desire to learn more but also their interest in joining our Action. It’s the kind of collaborative spirit that propels our collective pursuit of knowledge forward. The exchange of ideas and the prospect of forging new connections left me inspired and excited about the collective journey ahead.

dr. Maša Čater
Biotechnical faculty
University of Ljubljana
Slovenia

COST-TEATIME Newsletter, July 2023

Dear colleagues,

Welcome to the TEATIME COST Action newsletter for improving biomedical research by automated behaviour monitoring in the animal home-cage. In this edition we are pleased to announce the launch of the new Home Cage Monitoring Forum.  We apologise and have corrected the link to Silvia Mandillo’s Grant Report from the previous edition; please use the link in this edition to read her report on the 8th Mediterranean Neuroscience Society (MNS).

Our Behaviour Forum has been launched
We are pleased to inform you all that our Forum is now available for you to join the discussion, share ideas, and get support. Please use the QR code to find the Forum.
The Behaviour Forum
TEATIME Grant Reports
TEATIME has awarded eight grants to individuals this year to undertake Short-term Scientific Missions (STSM) to visit labs in countries other than their own. Recent reports are included here.
ITC Grant Report
Mailis Carrilho presenting her research at the 17th Rodens et Spatim – International Conference on Rodent Biology in Spain.
STSM Grant Reports
Alice Melloni visited Prof Stuart Peirson’s laboratory in Oxford and discussed the setups dedicated to behavioural testing.

Lionie Pakulat visited Nuno Franco’s laboratory at the University of Porto and discussed the automated cages for mice.

TEATIME Dissemination Grant Reports
Aleksandra Bartelik with a TEATIME presentation at Central-East European Laboratory Animal Science Congress, Prague.

Silvia Mandillo was awarded our first TEATIME Dissemination grant which enabled her to attend the 8th Mediterranean Neuroscience Society (MNS) Conference Dubrovnik, Croatia. We are delighted to share her report in this newsletter.

Read more about our grants
TEATIME Webinars

A critical review of conventional models of depression and alternative approaches to studying emotional behaviour in non-human species. Emma Robinson. Radial maze without food deprivation: a new, automated, stress-free and voluntary test for assessment of spatial memory in mice. Dr Jie Mei.

Watch our webinars
Training School workshop
In July 2023 we held our second workshop to offer education, advice, networking, and training in Home Cage Monitoring to academic researchers. We were pleased to welcome 24 students from across 13 different European countries. A full report will be published in our Autumn newsletter.

We hope you have found this newsletter interesting and informative. We would be very happy to hear from any of you with feedback and comments. Please also share this newsletter with your colleagues and if you have been forwarded this email and don’t want to miss future newsletters, then please subscribe. All new webinars will be announced on the website and via Twitter 2-3 weeks before the event so please watch the space!

On behalf of all members of the TEATIME Action,

Vootele Voikar – TEATIME Chair
Sara Wells – Grant Holder, TEATIME Vice-chair
Sabine Hölter-Koch – Science Communication Coordinator
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LinkedIn
YouTube
Website
Website

TEATIME logo

COST TEATIME Newsletter – May 2023

Dear colleagues,
Welcome to the TEATIME COST Action newsletter for improving biomedical research by automated behaviour monitoring in the animal home-cage. In this edition we 
are pleased to announce our catalogue of devices and software, that fall under our definition of HCM, is now online.

Closing Date for Grants Extended to 30th of June
If you need help with your application, please let us know
 
Apply for Grant
TEATIME Frontiers Special Edition
A few of our TEATIME members are editors of a new special edition called: Home Cage-based Phenotyping in Rodents: Innovation, Standardization, Reproducibility and Translational Improvement – Volume II
Link to topic
2022 Dissemination Grant Report
Silvia Mandillo was awarded our first TEATIME Dissemination grant which enabled her to attend the 8th Mediterranean Neuroscience Society (MNS) Conference Dubrovnik, Croatia. We are delighted to share her report in this newsletter.
Read Report
TEATIME Webinars

AMBER: automated maternal behavior during early life in rodents. Dr. Hannah Lapp(University of Texas at Austin)

Introducing a novel, syndrome-based approach for depression modelling in translational neuropsychiatry: opportunities and challenges.  Dr. Iven-Alex von Mücke-Heim (Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry, Munich, Germany)

Revolutionizing translational psychiatry through rodent neuroethology. Dr. Yair Shemesh (Department of Brain Sciences, Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel).

Radial maze without food deprivation: a new, automated, stress-free and voluntary test for assessment of spatial memory in    mice. Dr. Jie Mei (International Research Center for Neurointelligence (IRCN), University of Tokyo, Japan) rael).

Watch our webinars
TEATIME News
TEATIME Catalogue
We have compiled a list of devices and software that falls under our definition of HCM. The list can be filtered and searched. Our aim is to create a useful and accurate resource. If you have more content to add, please email us.
Catalogue
TEATIME Publications
We will continue to highlight events and papers in this newsletter. However, we are pleased to announce we now have a webpage dedicated to TEATIME publications and conferences, as well as many other resources. 
Link to Resources

Training School  

We had over 50 applications for our training School, but we can only accept 24 and we are looking forward to meeting them in Porto later this year.

 

Constitutive depletion of brain serotonin differentially affects rats’ social and cognitive abilities

was co-authored by TEATIME colleagues published online in iScience

 Systematic Review of Home Cage Monitoring in Rodents

 

Members of the TEATIME consortium have worked together with other researchers to complete and publish a Systematic Review to shed light on the development of home cage monitoring (HCM) and the current state of the art. The review was carried out on 521 publications retrieved through PubMed and Web of Science.

Click here to read the full Systematic Review
What are the benefits of joining the TEATIME Network?
Join the TEATIME Network

We hope you have found this newsletter interesting and informative. We would be very happy to hear from any of you with feedback and comments. Please also share this newsletter with your colleagues and if you have been forwarded this email and don’t want to miss future newsletters, then please subscribe. All new webinars will be announced on the website and via Twitter 2-3 weeks before the event so please watch the space!
 

On behalf of all members of the TEATIME Action,
 
Vootele Voikar – TEATIME Chair
Sara Wells – Grant Holder, TEATIME Vice-chair
Sabine Hölter-Koch – Science Communication Coordinator
Twitter
LinkedIn
YouTube
Website
Website

TEATIME logo

COST-TEATIME Newsletter, January 2023

Dear colleagues,

Welcome to the TEATIME COST Action newsletter for improving biomedical research by automated behaviour monitoring in the animal home-cage. In this edition we give an overview of this Action, talk about some of our accomplishments in 2022 and look forward to our plans for 2023.

Our Mission
To improve animal research and animal welfare for the sake of translational medicine. New monitoring technologies for laboratory animals will benefit biomedical research and ultimately patients.
Read more

Do you want to visit a laboratory in another country to work with home-cage monitoring for a week or more?
TEATIME offers grants of up to €4,000 for Short Term Scientific Missions (STSMs)

Apply for a grant
TEATIME Presentations in 2022
In 2022 COST Action members gave presentations at various International meetings including the Swiss Lab Animal Science Association meeting in Lausanne. These meetings are always a good opportunity for networking and promoting TEATIME.
 
See a list of meetings attended in 2022
Open Call for ITC Conference Grants
TEATIME is offering 4 ITC (Inclusiveness Target Country) Conference Grants (of up to €2,000 each) for young researchers and innovators to attend a high-level conference and present their work as a poster or oral presentation.
Apply for a grant
TEATIME Webinars

We have hosted two recent webinars; Dr. A. Kravitz “Open source approaches for studying home cage behaviour& Dr. C. Ferland-Beckham “Modelling neuropsychiatric disorders in the laboratory: Why sex matters?

These and more are available on demand via our YouTube channel.
We currently have three webinars coming up:

24.1.23 – 3 pm CET – WG2 webinar: Balint Kiraly, Balazs Hangya (Institute of Experimental Medicine, Hungary): Efficient, stress-free learning of mice in a fully automated training system.
https://cost-eu.zoom.us/j/85971753727
 
28.2.23 – 3 pm CET – TEATIME webinar: Hannah Lapp (Univ Austin Texas, USA):  AMBER: automated maternal behavior during early life in rodents (Summary: Using open-source deep learning tools and computational behavioral analysis to measure maternal behavior in the home cage.)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yBS2_9it__I
 
23.3.23 – 3 pm CET – TEATIME webinar: Iven Mücke-Heim (MPI Psychiatry, Germany): presentation of their recent review “Introducing a depression-like syndrome for translational neuropsychiatry: a plea for taxonomical validity and improved comparability between humans and mice”
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41380-022-01762-w
 
Watch our webinars
Key events in 2022
FENS Networking event
We held a special workshop to share with international behaviourists and other researchers, and inform about our future workshops and training events, that will take place in the next 3 years.  
Training workshop
In September 2022 we held our first education, advice, networking and training workshop in HCM for academic researchers. The workshop was well attended. The TEATIME Advanced Training School will be 10-14 July 2023 in Oporto, Portugal.
 
Report on our Working Group meeting in Prague
October 2022 saw our first all action groups meeting in Prague. It was a good occasion for us to talk face to face and give updates on how the workstreams are progressing.
Report on Working Groups’ activities
There are five Working groups aligned to TEATIME, each group meets regularly throughout the year and focuses on its workstream. A brief overview for each Action stream can be found via the link below.
Read our reports
Development of an IntelliCage-based cognitive bias test for mice was authored by TEATIME colleagues and was the first Open Research publication
Plans for 2023
In 2023, you can find us at Scand-LAS 2023, European Brain and Behaviour Society and many more. Watch this space!
Find all upcoming events
We will be offering more training and education opportunities across 2023 both online and in person.
Find all upcoming training
Home Cage Monitoring System: a Working Definition
The Olog depicted above is a representation of the definition of Home Cage Monitoring. “A system that collects information on an animal which lives inside an enclosure that provides food, water, social contacts, and environmental enrichment”.
View a downloadable enhanced version of the olog

We hope you have found this newsletter interesting and informative. We would be very happy to hear from any of you with feedback and comments. Please also share this newsletter with your colleagues and if you have been forwarded this email and don’t want to miss future newsletters, then please subscribe. All new webinars will be announced on the website and via Twitter 2-3 weeks before the event so please watch the space!

On behalf of all members of the TEATIME Action,

Vootele Voikar – TEATIME Chair
Sara Wells – Grant Holder, TEATIME Vice-chair
Sabine Hölter-Koch – Science Communication Coordinator
Twitter
LinkedIn
YouTube
Website
Website

Over the last two years, this acronym has become a keyword for more than 100 European researchers, signaling not only the latest art in monitoring of experimental animals, but also communication and collaboration.

It all started exactly when the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic hit Europe, in March 2020. A group of preclinical researchers specialized in behavior analysis of animal models established a working group which grew rapidly. Many of us knew each other already, but all the work to establish this project was done via virtual meetings. By October 2020, we had a community of more than 50 researchers from 23 European countries who reached a consensus to submit a proposal for the COST Action. COST Actions are bottom-up networks enabling researchers and innovators to grow their ideas and share them with their peers. The proposal was approved for funding in May 2021 and the project kicked off in October 2021 when the first Management Committee meeting was held virtually. Thereafter, it began to rapidly attract more researchers to join. As of September 2022, the network consists of more than 120 researchers from 34 European countries working in various fields of biomedicine, laboratory animal science, data science and technology providers.

Laboratory animals are used throughout the biomedical field of research to study physiological and pathological conditions in living organisms with the ultimate aim to understand the mechanisms and to develop treatments for human and animal disorders. More than 70% of the total number of animals used for this purpose in Europe are mice and rats. This work is guided by the principles of the 3Rs (Replacement, Reduction, Refinement), where developing refined experimental conditions could substantially improve animal welfare and, importantly, enhance the translational value by improving quality and reproducibility of the data. There are also implications in regard to Reduction, as more accurate and reliable data reduces the waste of animals in unreproducible research. Additionally, the ability to monitor animals without disturbance can reduce variability caused by handling stress, thus allowing for a better ‘signal-to-noise’ ratio, with fewer animals thus being required to detect a given effect size.

In a nutshell, the main aims of the Action are (i) to develop a framework for enhancing the sensitivity, reliability, and reproducibility of behavioral and physiological measures from laboratory rodents in a home cage; (ii) to strengthen pan-European preclinical research by establishing standards and guidelines in promoting emerging tools for home-cage monitoring; and (iii) to improve data relevance and reproducibility in compliance with animal welfare and ethical considerations. The objectives of the Action are further discussed in a recent perspective article in Laboratory Animals https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/00236772221117451

The Action has five working groups, 3 of them focused on generating the knowledge and the remaining two at generating the output. In order to achieve our aims, we are seeking for substantial outreach and a critical mass of researchers to join the network or follow our progress via our website, our social media accounts or publications. One of our first steps has been to gather community requirements for Home-Cage Monitoring (HCM), i.e. 24/7 collection of data in undisturbed animals in their home environment. To this end we conduct a survey.

HCM is not only a tool for behavioral scientists, as welfare assessments rely mostly on behavior and physiology and any intervention can cause alterations in any of the measured parameters. We are working on a systematic review of the existing (and published) HCM methodologies, and developing a framework for an enhanced definition of HCM (see https://www.cost-teatime.org/about/olog/). The concept of ‘home cage’ itself has led to interesting debates in our network. Our current aim is therefore to generate a searchable catalogue of HCM methods, accompanied by keywords, glossary, references and general guidance. Another major challenge posed by HCM systems is that of collecting, handling, mining and storing of data and the support of data scientists, bioinformaticians and technology providers will be essential to tackle it. Finally, technical training and dissemination will also be a key output of the Action and suitable training facilities and expert trainers will be needed as well as able communicators to disseminate all outcomes.

During its first year, TEATIME members were highly visible in several international meetings. FELASA-2022 (~2000 participants, https://www.felasa2022.eu/) and FENS-2022 (~8000 participants, https://forum.fens.org/) were the largest European meetings in the field of laboratory animal science and neuroscience, respectively. At #FELASA2022 conference, the common themes were “communication” and “interaction” – at various levels of engagement of the animals and humans. The meeting was summarized in a comment written for LabAnimal (https://www.nature.com/articles/s41684-022-01041-9) by two TEATIME members, Nuno Franco (TEATIME responsible person for 3Rs and ethics) and Vootele Voikar (Action chair). Several sessions were dedicated to HCM and twenty TEATIME members had been invited to the conference to present a talk or poster on their work. They showed convincingly how novel technology can be used both for monitoring animal welfare and collecting valuable research data while the conventional “out-of-cage” testing of animals can be affected by a variety of uncontrollable and unspecific stressors. Moreover, the benefits for welfare assessment, which is traditionally and frequently done by cage side observation relying on the human eye, are undeniable. The ability to measure environmental factors (like temperature, noise, light, vibrations, humidity) simultaneously and in combination with behavioral and physiological profiles of the animals in their home cage would allow a much better description of the animal models for the study of the subject’s response to treatment, development of the disease symptoms etc. The development and standardization of efficient HCM systems has a high potential to improve the translational validity of disease models. However, the human factor cannot be completely eliminated, as none of the existing HCM systems is an “all-in-one” solution able to capture all required parameters. Each of the currently available solutions has its strengths and limitations and many of them have been designed for scoring specific behavioral or physiological parameters depending on the investigated domain.

3Rs, welfare, ethics of research, societal outreach (openness, transparency) and commitment to the current legislation (Directive 2010/63/EU) were common topics at #FELASA2022 but much less discussed at #FENS2022. However, a substantial number of animals are used in neuroscience research (more than 20% of the total number of mice and rats used in Europe, ALURES database, https://ec.europa.eu/environment/chemicals/lab_animals/alures_en.htm). For this reason, we argue that more needs to be done in educating the neuroscience (or any other discipline in biomedicine) community on the most responsible use of animals for experimental procedures (for instance, endorsing and implementing PREPARE and ARRIVE guidelines and EQIPD quality system).

A special interest event at #FENS2022, organized by the European Animal Research Association (https://www.eara.eu/), attracted a few hundred attendees to discuss the topic “Phasing out animal research: a justified worry for neuroscience?”. Surely, everyone using animals in their research has also an obligation to participate in public debate so the scientists do not remain part of “the silent majority”, as coined by Kirk Leech, the executive director of EARA. This event was moderated by Sabine Hölter (TEATIME Science Communication Coordinator), who is also a coordinator of the Predictive Model Systems (PREMOS) cluster in the European Brain Research Area (https://www.ebra.eu/premos/). The primary objective of PREMOS is to enhance the alignment of EU disease model development resources and preclinical research expertise with clinical and brain research community needs across academia and industry, thus very much aligned with some objectives of TEATIME.

TEATIME also held a very successful networking event during #FENS2022. More than 50 people attended the discussion where TEATIME members (Wim Crusio, Sabine Hölter, Ewelina Knapska, Silvia Mandillo, Lior Bikovski, Marion Rivalan and Vootele Voikar) answered the questions from the audience and were able to attract several new members to the Action! Neuroscience is developing extremely rapidly and novel technologies (computer vision, artificial intelligence) are applied in many laboratories with increasing pace. Thus, the take-home message from these two conferences was that communication and dialogue between major stakeholder groups (lab animal and welfare science, biomedicine and behavioral neuroscience, data science) needs to be improved and deepened. Moreover, we cannot ignore the people who eventually are the “end-users” of our research – clinicians and patients. Only then can we move forward to reaching common goals of understanding the brain in health and disease!

In September, ten TEATIME members were invited to present their work at the 2nd Digital Vivarium Forum and to discuss the solutions offered by digital technology for better facility management, welfare monitoring and research data. Last but not least, our first year culminated with the first TEATIME training school, where 24 students selected from more than 50 applicants learn from our experts (Lior Bikovski, Anna Olsson, Claudia Pitzer, Nuno Franco, Silvia Mandillo, Erika Roman, Michael Tsoory, Reinko Roelofs, Stefano Gaburro) the secrets of assessing rodent behavior and welfare reliably. The interactive nature of the course was highly appreciated by the students. Their constructive feedback will help us to improve the organization and content of the course in coming years.

It is important to mention that we are not working alone in this field and there are several other consortia with whom we have already established connections or we plan to do so. The first one to mention is the Translational Digital Biomarkers Initiative (https://www.na3rsc.org/tdb/) with whom we have already established quarterly briefings. In 2022, two new COST Actions are starting which may be of special interest for us and where we can find synergy and common topics to discuss. CA21139 – “3Rs concepts to improve the quality of biomedical science (IMPROVE)” is bearing similarities already in the title, aiming at establishing a network which will work to refine, harmonize and promote 3Rs concepts, data and documents, in order to improve the quality of biomedical science (https://www.cost.eu/actions/CA21139/). CA21113 – “Genome Editing to Treat Human Diseases (GenE-Humdi)” will tackle the knowledge fragmentation with the aim to accelerate the translation of GE technologies to the treatment of human diseases (https://www.cost.eu/actions/CA21113/).

The first year has been intense – all working groups and core group have been meeting regularly, and not only meeting but working hard on tasks and deliverables. I do believe that it has been a very successful time, we are getting to know each other much better and the network is growing and gaining momentum.

I can feel a good spirit in this Action and enthusiasm expressed by all participants, assuring confidence before the second Management Committee meeting in October, to be held as hybrid event in Prague, at the Czech Centre for Phenogenomics where we will conclude the first grant period and plan the work for the next year.

If you got interested in working with us towards shaping the future of HCM please visit the COST website where you can find instructions for joining the working groups – https://www.cost.eu/actions/CA20135/.

TEATIME members Lior Bikovski, Ewelina Knapska, Silvia Mandillo, Sabine Hölter, Wim Crusio and Vootele Voikar at TEATIME networking event at FENS Forum 2022 (Paris, July 2022)
TEATIME members Reinko Roelofs, Anna Kiryk, Giuseppe Di Giovanni, Silvia Mandillo and Lior Bikovski attended the Mediterranean Neuroscience Meeting in Dubrovnik (29 May – June 2, 2022), where Silvia Mandillo was awarded COST Dissemination Grant to present the Action in her talk “Improving biomedical research by automated behavior monitoring in the animal home-cage”
TEATIME members at FELASA2022 – Anna Olsson, Otto Kalliokoski, Katharina Hohlbaum, Stefano Gaburro, Fabrizio Scorrano, Sara Capas Peneda, Sara Wells, Vootele Voikar, Joanna Moore, Reinko Roelofs, Sonia Bains, Masa Cater, Jordi Tremoleda, Elisabetta Golini, Silvia Mandillo (Marseille, June 2022)
TEATIME Chair Vootele Voikar presenting the Action at #FELASA2022, workshop chaired by Stefano Gaburro (Marseille, June 2022).