We’re opening submissions for the next season of the Dementia Researcher Salon Showcase, running from September through November, and we want to hear from you.
The Salon is our space for early career researchers to share what they’re actually working on with a community of peers who get it. No grand panels, no senior professors hogging the mic, no need to have everything wrapped up with a neat conclusion. If you’re partway through a project, sitting on findings you’re trying to make sense of, or working on something methodological that you think others would benefit from seeing, this is the slot for you.
What we’re looking for
Researchers at any stage from Research Assistants to PhD Students, through to Senior Fellows, working anywhere in dementia and neurodegeneration. We welcome work from across the field: basic science, clinical, care research, social science, public health, technology, lived experience research, the lot. First-time speakers are particularly encouraged to apply, and we’ll work with you on shaping your talk if presenting is new to you.
You don’t need to be UK-based. Previous showcases have featured speakers from across our 196-country community, and we’re happy to schedule sessions that work across time zones.
What’s involved
Each showcase session is short and focused 45 minutes total: a 20 minute presentation followed by audience questions and discussion. Sessions run online, are recorded with your permission, and the recordings live on our website and YouTube channel afterwards so your work reaches well beyond the live audience.
We handle the tech, the promotion, the chairing, and the awkward bits. You bring the research and the willingness to talk about it honestly, including the parts that didn’t go to plan.
How to apply
Complete the application form on our website. It’ll ask you for the basics: who you are, where you’re based, the topic you’d like to present, why it matters to other ECRs, and your preferred date (September, October, or November).
Slots are allocated on a rolling basis as the schedule fills, so don’t sit on it. If you’ve been thinking “maybe next time” for a while now, this is the next time. We’d love to hear from you.

Print This Post
This platform is doing an important job in connecting early-career researchers with real developments in dementia research. The mix of funding updates, jobs, and scientific discussions makes it feel very practical and community-driven.