Seminars: Difference between revisions
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* Title: Guiding eye movements for better communication | * Title: Guiding eye movements for better communication | ||
* Abstract: | * Abstract: | ||
'''January 23 (Monday)''' | '''January 23 (Monday)''' | ||
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* Title: Abstract plans and reward signals in a multi-round trust game | * Title: Abstract plans and reward signals in a multi-round trust game | ||
* Abstract: | * Abstract: | ||
== Confirmed Speakers == | |||
'''February 7''' | '''February 7''' | ||
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* Affiliation: U Chicago | * Affiliation: U Chicago | ||
* Host: Bruno | * Host: Bruno | ||
* Title: | * Title: Spontaneous pattern formation in large scale brain activity: what visual migraines and hallucinations tell us about the brain | ||
* Abstract: | * Abstract: In 1952 Turing's paper on the chemical basis of morphogenesis initiated an important approach to the mathematical analysis of spontaneous pattern formation. In 1973 Wilson and Cowan introduced a similar formulation in nets of interacting neurons and in 1979 Ermentrout and Cowan developed the mathematical analysis of such nets using local bifurcation theory and symmetry groups. Bressloff, Cowan, Golubitsky, Thomas and Wiener further developed this approach to characterize and analyze some of the circuitry of the primate visual cortex. The symmetry group used was the Euclidean group in the plane, E(2), under a novel rotation action. Such an action is related to the fact that the visual cortex is a network of oriented edge detectors. However it is clear that much more than the orientation of a local edge is detected in the visual cortex: movement, texture and surface information, color and depth, for example. In this talk I will describe a new approach that allows the incorporation of some of the above features into a comprehensive account of the origins of visual migraines and hallucinations. | ||
'''February 21''' | '''February 21''' |
Revision as of 22:47, 31 January 2006
Instructions
- Check the internal calendar for a free seminar slot.
- Make a note on this page in the Tentative Speakers section that you are going to invite a speaker. Please include your name and email as host in case somebody wants to contact you.
- Invite a speaker.
- As soon as the speaker confirms, put the information in the Confirmed Speakers section.
- Put the date into the internal calendar
- Notify kilian [1] that we have a confirmed speaker so that I can update the web page. Please include title and abstract.
- Notify Pachelle [2] about the seminar date.
--Kilian 21:48, 4 November 2005 (PST)
Tentative Speakers
March 21
- Speaker:
- Affiliation:
- Host:
- Title: TBA
- Abstract: TBA
Previous Seminars
Tuesday 22nd of November 2005
- Speaker: Scott Makeig
- Affiliation: Swartz Center for Computational Neuroscience, Institute for Neural Computation, UCSD
- Title: Viewing event-related brain dynamics from the top down
- Abstract:
Tuesday 29th of November 2005
- Speaker: Stanley Klein
- Affiliation: School of Optometry, UC Berkeley
- Title: TBA
- Abstract:
Tuesday 6th of December 2005
- Speaker: Special debate between Walter J. Freeman and Robert Hecht-Nielsen
- Affiliation: University of California at Berkeley (Walter). University of California at San Diego (Robert)
- Title: Waves or words in neocortex
- Abstract:
January 3
- Speaker: Dan Butts
- Affiliation: Harvard University
- Host: Thomas
- Title: "Temporal hyperacuity": visual neuron function at millisecond time resolution
- Abstract:
January 17
- Speaker: Erhardt Barth
- Affiliation: Institute for Neuro- and Bioinformatics, Luebeck, Germany
- Host: Bruno
- Title: Guiding eye movements for better communication
- Abstract:
January 23 (Monday)
- Speaker: Read Montague
- Affiliation: Baylor College of Medicine
- Host: Bruno
- Title: Abstract plans and reward signals in a multi-round trust game
- Abstract:
Confirmed Speakers
February 7
- Speaker: Christian Wehrhahn
- Affiliation: Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, Tuebingen, Germany
- Host: Tony
- Title: Seeing blindsight: motion at isoluminance?
- Abstract: TBA
- Host:
February 14
- Speaker: Jack Cowan
- Affiliation: U Chicago
- Host: Bruno
- Title: Spontaneous pattern formation in large scale brain activity: what visual migraines and hallucinations tell us about the brain
- Abstract: In 1952 Turing's paper on the chemical basis of morphogenesis initiated an important approach to the mathematical analysis of spontaneous pattern formation. In 1973 Wilson and Cowan introduced a similar formulation in nets of interacting neurons and in 1979 Ermentrout and Cowan developed the mathematical analysis of such nets using local bifurcation theory and symmetry groups. Bressloff, Cowan, Golubitsky, Thomas and Wiener further developed this approach to characterize and analyze some of the circuitry of the primate visual cortex. The symmetry group used was the Euclidean group in the plane, E(2), under a novel rotation action. Such an action is related to the fact that the visual cortex is a network of oriented edge detectors. However it is clear that much more than the orientation of a local edge is detected in the visual cortex: movement, texture and surface information, color and depth, for example. In this talk I will describe a new approach that allows the incorporation of some of the above features into a comprehensive account of the origins of visual migraines and hallucinations.
February 21
- Speaker: Gerard Rinkus
- Affiliation: Brandeis University
- Host: Bruno
- Title: Hierarchical Sparse Distributed Representations of Sequence Recall and Recognition
- Abstract: TBA
February 28
- Speaker: Dario Ringach
- Affiliation: UCLA
- Host: thomas
- Title: TBA
- Abstract: TBA
March 7
- Speaker: Michael Wu
- Affiliation: Gallant lab/UC Berkeley
- Host: Bruno
- Title: TBA
- Abstract: TBA
March 14
- Speaker: Mate Lengyel
- Affiliation: Gatsby Unit/UCL London
- Host: fritz
- Title: Spike timing-based autoassociative memories
- Abstract: TBA
March 21
- Speaker: March Schnitzer
- Affiliation: Stanford University
- Host: Amir
- Title: TBA
- Abstract: TBA
April 4
- Speaker: Odelia Schwartz
- Affiliation: The Salk Institute
- Host: Bruno
- Title: Natural images and cortical representation
- Abstract:
April 25
- Speaker: Tim Lewis
- Affiliation: UC Davis
- Host: Thomas
- Title: tba
- Abstract: