We need your help!

Two projects are actively recruiting citizen scientists right now. Learn the tools, pass the challenge, claim a neuron, and help map the brain.

Brain mappers needed EyeWire II, mouse retina neurons

EyeWire II

The next‑generation EyeWire, mapping thousands of neurons in the mouse retina, the light‑sensing tissue at the back of the eye where vision begins. Here you own your cell start to finish: no consensus committee, you're its first and last check.

Location
Mouse retina
Approx. neurons
~100,000
Brain mappers needed FlyWire BANC, proofreading the fly brain and ventral nerve cord

FlyWire BANC

The fruit fly's complete central nervous system, brain and ventral nerve cord together, well over 100,000 neurons, so you can trace a signal all the way from sensing to movement. Request access, join #banc‑citsci, and start splitting and merging.

Location
Fly brain + nerve cord
Approx. neurons
~188,000

New to EyeWire II? Here's how it works

More datasets to explore

Open-access connectomes you can browse, search, and build on.

FlyWire, 50 largest neurons of the fly brain (Sloan & Sterling)

FlyWire

The first complete wiring diagram of an adult fruit fly brain, imaged with electron microscopy. In about 140,000 neurons the fly brain runs vision, smell, navigation, learning and memory. Small enough to map completely, complex enough to reveal how brains compute.

Location
Fly brain
Approx. neurons
140,000
EyeWire preview, Halloween neurons

EyeWire

The original brain‑mapping game. Players reconstructed neurons in the mouse retina, the eye's light‑sensing tissue, and helped reveal how it detects motion, mapping hundreds of neurons across some 47 retinal cell types.

Location
Mouse retina
Approx. neurons
>10,000
MICrONS, brightened cortical layers visualization

MICrONS

A cubic millimeter of mouse visual cortex, the region that makes sense of what the eyes see, reconstructed in full and paired with recordings of the very same neurons in action. About 200,000 cells and 523 million synapses, linking wiring to activity.

Location
Mouse visual cortex
Approx. cells
>200,000
Pyr CA3 banner showing Pyr branding with a stylized hippocampus illustration. Text: Pyr CA3.

Hippocampus CA3 (Pyr)

The CA3 region of the mouse hippocampus, the brain area most critical for learning and memory, where new memories are formed and recalled. A large, growing reconstruction that the community proofreads and annotates cell by cell.

Location
Mouse hippocampus (CA3)
Approx. neurons
In progress
Pyr

Citizen Science

Citizen scientists have been a part of Seung Lab since 2012, ever since the AI-powered brain-mapping game EyeWire proved to the world that science accelerates when we invite everyone to join the quest.


If you're a citizen scientist: Thank you! Your contributions have been invaluable to advancing our understanding of neural circuits and brain function.


Citizen science at the Seung Lab centers on mapping and identifying neurons across several public datasets. These datasets share a common visualization and annotation environment: Neuroglancer. A complete Neuroglancer user guide is available here: Neuroglancer 101 . New here? Jump to the resources below to get started.

Stats
>350,000
Citizen scientists
>140
Countries
6
Datasets
12
Co‑authored publications
2,300+
Citations

Resources for Citizen Scientists

New to connectomics, or back for another proofreading session? Here's everything you need to get started, sharpen your skills, and connect with the community.

  1. 1

    Join the community

    Ask questions, share finds, and proofread alongside researchers and fellow citizen scientists in the community forum.

  2. 2

    Learn the tools

    Every dataset is viewed and edited in Neuroglancer / Spelunker. The guides below walk you through it, click by click.

  3. 3

    Pick a dataset

    Choose a project above, a fly brain, a mouse retina, or a slice of hippocampus, and follow its link to sign up.

Start here

Onboarding & sign‑up

Pick a project and get your account set up.

Go deeper

Wikis, blogs & reference

Background reading and reference material.

Watch & learn

Video tutorials

Prefer to watch someone do it first?

FlyWire Academy, a colorful 3D rendering of a fly brain connectome with a heads-up-display overlay
In the classroom

FlyWire Academy

Three interactive lessons that take students inside a real connectome, built for high school and college classrooms.