Tony Bell: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:tony.jpg|150px|left]]  
[[Image:tony.jpg|150px|left]]  
Friedrich T. Sommer, Ph.D. <br />
Anthony J. Bell Ph.D. <br />
Redwood Center for Theoretical Neuroscience <br />
Redwood Center for Theoretical Neuroscience <br />
UC Berkeley <br />
UC Berkeley <br />
132 Barker, MC #3190 <br />
132 Barker, MC #3190 <br />
Berkeley, CA 94720-3190 <br />
Berkeley, CA 94720-3190 <br />
phone (510) 643-1472 <br />
phone (415) 568-0346 <br />
fax (510) 643-4952 <br />
fax (510) 643-4952 <br />
<fsommer at berkeley dot edu><br />
tbell@berkeley.edu <br />
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Associate Adjunct Professor, Redwood Center for Theoretical Neuroscience & Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, University of California, Berkeley <br />
== Research Interest ==
Faculty member (Hochschuldozent), Department of Computer Science, University of Ulm


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(This webpage is under reconstruction. Only a few essential links are posted here.)


Here's my [http://www.snl.salk.edu/~tony Salk web-page] from way back.


Here's me giving a 30 minute talk [http://thesciencenetwork.org/programs/brains-r-us-2/tony-bell Levels, Time and Models] about Levels in Biology. <br>


== Research Interests ==
Here's the only paper I have written on the Levels issue. It covers my thinking up till about 2008: <br>
[http://www.irp.oist.jp/ocnc/2008/bell07.pdf Towards a cross-level theory of neural learning]


Many impressive capabilities of the brain
There are new results on time series analysis coming :)

Latest revision as of 10:50, 14 September 2010

Tony.jpg

Anthony J. Bell Ph.D.
Redwood Center for Theoretical Neuroscience
UC Berkeley
132 Barker, MC #3190
Berkeley, CA 94720-3190
phone (415) 568-0346
fax (510) 643-4952
tbell@berkeley.edu

Research Interest

(This webpage is under reconstruction. Only a few essential links are posted here.)

Here's my Salk web-page from way back.

Here's me giving a 30 minute talk Levels, Time and Models about Levels in Biology.

Here's the only paper I have written on the Levels issue. It covers my thinking up till about 2008:
Towards a cross-level theory of neural learning

There are new results on time series analysis coming :)