SciTransfer
Organization

EODYNE SYSTEMS SL

Barcelona SME building computational brain simulation and neurostimulation tools for neurological disease research and brain-inspired technologies.

Technology SMEdigitalESSME
H2020 projects
3
As coordinator
0
Total EC funding
€723K
Unique partners
55
What they do

Their core work

Eodyne Systems is a Barcelona-based technology SME specializing in computational brain modeling, simulation, and neurotechnology solutions. They develop software tools that translate neuroscience research into practical applications for understanding and treating neurological and neurodegenerative diseases. Their work spans from cloud-based brain simulation platforms and decision support systems to neurostimulation technologies, bridging the gap between computational neuroscience and clinical use. They contribute technical expertise in high-performance computing and data-driven modeling to large European research consortia.

Core expertise

What they specialise in

Computational brain modeling and simulationprimary
3 projects

Core contributor across VirtualBrainCloud (brain simulation), euSNN (computational modelling), and iNavigate (brain-inspired technologies).

Neurodegenerative disease decision supportprimary
1 project

VirtualBrainCloud focused on personalized recommendations for neurodegenerative disease using big data and cloud computing.

Network neuroscience and neuroimagingsecondary
1 project

euSNN project covered connectivity analysis, neuroimaging, and translational network approaches for neurological disorders.

Neurostimulation and brain-inspired technologiesemerging
2 projects

euSNN included neurostimulation and optogenetics; iNavigate explored brain-inspired navigation technologies.

Cloud and HPC for biomedical datasecondary
1 project

VirtualBrainCloud explicitly required big data, cloud, and high-performance computing infrastructure for brain simulation.

Evolution & trajectory

How they've shifted over time

Early focus
Brain simulation infrastructure
Recent focus
Network neuroscience and neurostimulation

Eodyne's early H2020 work (2018) centered on large-scale brain simulation infrastructure — cloud computing, big data, and HPC applied to neurodegenerative disease modeling. By 2019, their focus shifted toward network neuroscience, neuroimaging analysis, and interventional approaches like neurostimulation and optogenetics. This evolution suggests a move from building computational platforms toward applying them for translational neuroscience and brain-inspired engineering.

Eodyne is moving from pure computational modeling toward translational neurotechnology applications, including brain-inspired engineering and interventional neuroscience — positioning them for clinical and industrial neurotech collaborations.

Collaboration profile

How they like to work

Role: specialist_contributorReach: European16 countries collaborated

Eodyne operates exclusively as a consortium participant, contributing specialized technical capabilities rather than leading projects. Despite only three projects, they have worked with 55 unique partners across 16 countries, indicating they integrate well into large, diverse consortia. Their participation in both research actions (RIA) and training networks (MSCA) suggests they are valued as both a technology provider and a training host for early-career researchers.

Eodyne has built a remarkably broad network for a small company — 55 consortium partners across 16 countries from just three projects. Their reach spans most of Europe, reflecting the large consortia typical of brain research initiatives.

Why partner with them

What sets them apart

Eodyne occupies a rare niche as a private SME with deep computational neuroscience expertise — most organizations in this space are universities or public research institutes. Their ability to develop production-grade software tools for brain modeling makes them a practical technology partner who can turn research prototypes into usable systems. For consortium builders, they offer the agility of a small company combined with serious scientific depth in neural simulation and neuroimaging.

Notable projects

Highlights from their portfolio

  • VirtualBrainCloud
    Largest project by funding (€407,500), combining cloud-scale brain simulation with clinical decision support for neurodegenerative diseases — a direct translational application.
  • euSNN
    European School of Network Neuroscience — an MSCA training network, showing Eodyne's role in developing the next generation of computational neuroscientists.
  • iNavigate
    Explores brain-inspired navigation technologies, representing a pivot from clinical neuroscience toward engineering applications of brain research.
Cross-sector capabilities
Health — neurodegenerative disease tools and clinical decision supportResearch Excellence — training and network neuroscienceTransport — brain-inspired navigation and mobility systemsAI and robotics — computational models applicable to intelligent systems
Analysis note: Profile based on only 3 projects (2018-2019 start dates). Eodyne's commercial product portfolio and current activity beyond H2020 are not visible in this data. The company website was not available in the dataset, limiting verification of their full capabilities. Confidence is moderate — the projects tell a coherent story but the sample is small.