Events
Past Events
The purpose of this workshop is to provide a forum for exchanging perspectives on defining, interpreting, measuring, and modeling the behavior of multiple agents given predominantly visual data. A panel of speakers from a variety of disciplines will present their work, and discuss the key goals of multi-agent behavior research as it applies to their own field. By identifying common challenges and themes across fields, we aim to foster new cross-disciplinary approaches to the modeling and analysis of multi-agent behavior.
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The BRAIN Initiative Investigators Meeting convenes BRAIN Initiative awardees, staff, and leadership from the contributing federal agencies (NIH, NSF, DARPA, IARPA, and FDA), plus representatives and investigators from participating non-federal organizations, and members of the media, public, and Congress. The purpose of this open meeting is to provide a forum for discussing exciting scientific developments and potential new directions, and to identify areas for collaboration and research coordination.
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The Simons Collaboration on the Global Brain hosts a West Coast group meeting to bring together postdocs and PhD students interested in neural coding and dynamics. This month's speaker is:
Subhaneil Lahiri
Research Scientist, Ganguli Laboratory
Stanford University
Do we really have to sort our spikes?
- SCGB
UPDATE:
This event has been postponed to June 2021. Stay tuned for more information.
TENSS concentrates top-level international expertise to teach a dozen students techniques and concepts in experimental systems neuroscience. We focus on modern optical and electrophysiological methods to study the connectivity and function of neuronal circuits. The course is designed to be intensive and highly interactive, including both lab sessions and theoretical lectures. Coursework will take place in a land of myth and legend, beyond large forests (Transylvania), on the shores of a picturesque natural reserve called Pike Lake. Applications are welcome from interested (and interesting) graduate students and postdocs. Application deadline: March 1st 2020
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Columbia’s Zuckerman Institute and Mount Sinai’s Friedman Brain Institute present Innovators in Neuroscience: From Molecules to Mind, a virtual symposium highlighting recent advances from basic to clinical neuroscience. We invite everyone to hear from today’s experts and tomorrow’s leaders across a variety of neuroscience disciplines. The program features talks from both established and early career researchers, poster presentations, as well as ample networking opportunities and social events where you can connect with fellow researchers and scholars.
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The scientific content of the meeting reflects the breadth of topics in modern vision science, from visual coding to perception, recognition and the visual control of action, as well as the recent development of new methodologies from cognitive psychology, computer vision and neuroimaging.
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Past Events
Speakers:
Andrew Miri, Postdoc, Jessell Lab, Columbia University
Motor cortical influence during movement execution
Caroline Runyan, Postdoc, Harvey Lab, Harvard Medical School
Distinct timescales of population coding across cortex
- SCGB
Speakers:
Chand Chandrasekeran, Postdoc in Krishna Shenoy's lab, Stanford University
Towards a single-trial understanding of the neural circuit dynamics underlying perceptual decision-making
Maria Dadarlat, Postdoc in Michael Stryker's lab, UCSF
Locomotion enhances neural coding of visual stimuli in mouse visual cortex
- SCGB
Speakers:
Selina Solomon, Postdoctoral Researcher, Lab of Adam Kohn, Department of Neuroscience, Albert Einstein College of Medicine
An optogenetic study of feedback circuitry in the macaque visual cortex
Vikram Gadagkar, SCGB Postdoctoral Fellow, Lab of Jesse H. Goldberg, Department of Neurobiology and Behavior, Cornell University
Dopamine neurons encode performance quality relative to recent practice in singing birds
- SCGB
Speakers:
Mikio C. Aoi, Princeton Neuroscience Institute, Princeton University (Pillow Lab)
Low-dimensional, dynamic encoding in prefrontal cortex during decision-making
Daisuke Hattori, Department of Neuroscience, Columbia University (Abbott & Axel Labs)
Representations of novelty and familiarity in a mushroom body compartment
- SCGB
Speakers:
Kanaka Rajan, Biophysics Theory Fellow, Lewis-Sigler Institute, Princeton University
Recurrent network models of evidence accumulation
Michel A. Picardo, Postdoc, Neuroscience institute, New York University
Population-level representation of a temporal sequence underlying song production in the zebra finch
- SCGB
Speakers:
Ashok Litwin-Kumar, Postdoc, Center for Theoretical Neuroscience, Columbia University
Optimal connectivity for random and learned neural representations
Antonio H. Lara, Postdoc, Department of Neuroscience, Columbia University
Conservation of neural events during cue-initiated, self-initiated and quasi-automatic reaches
- SCGB
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