How to cite BrainPy?#

If BrainPy has been significant in your research, and you would like to acknowledge the project in your academic publication, we suggest citing the following papers:

If you are using BrainPy=2.x, please use:

  • Chaoming Wang, Xiaoyu Chen, Tianqiu Zhang, Si Wu. BrainPy: a flexible, integrative, efficient, and extensible framework towards general-purpose brain dynamics programming. bioRxiv 2022.10.28.514024; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.10.28.514024

@article {Wang2022brainpy,
    author = {Wang, Chaoming and Chen, Xiaoyu and Zhang, Tianqiu and Wu, Si},
    title = {BrainPy: a flexible, integrative, efficient, and extensible framework towards general-purpose brain dynamics programming},
    elocation-id = {2022.10.28.514024},
    year = {2022},
    doi = {10.1101/2022.10.28.514024},
    publisher = {Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory},
    URL = {https://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2022/10/28/2022.10.28.514024},
    eprint = {https://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2022/10/28/2022.10.28.514024.full.pdf},
    journal = {bioRxiv}
}

If you are using BrainPy=1.x, please use:

  • Wang, C., Jiang, Y., Liu, X., Lin, X., Zou, X., Ji, Z., & Wu, S. (2021, December). A Just-In-Time Compilation Approach for Neural Dynamics Simulation. In International Conference on Neural Information Processing (pp. 15-26). Springer, Cham.

@inproceedings{wang2021just,
  title={A Just-In-Time Compilation Approach for Neural Dynamics Simulation},
  author={Wang, Chaoming and Jiang, Yingqian and Liu, Xinyu and Lin, Xiaohan and Zou, Xiaolong and Ji, Zilong and Wu, Si},
  booktitle={International Conference on Neural Information Processing},
  pages={15--26},
  year={2021},
  organization={Springer}
}