CTN Colloquia Sara Solla (Northwestern)
January 17 (virtual) - Sara Solla (NorthWestern)
Title: Low Dimensional Manifolds for Neural Dynamics
January 17 (virtual) - Sara Solla (NorthWestern)
Title: Low Dimensional Manifolds for Neural Dynamics
February 20 (virtual) - Eric Shea-Brown (Washington)
Title: When do high dimensional networks learn to produce low dimensional dynamics?
March 21 *IN PERSON* E5-2004 - Maurizio de Pitta (Krembil/UofT)*
Title: Neuron-glial switches
April 25 14:30 *In Person*
Speaker: Jeff Orchard (CS, Waterloo)
Title: Cognition using Spiking-Phasor Neurons
Milad Lankarany, Krembil Research Institute
Title: Using Computational Neuroscience and Neuromodulation Techniques to Uncover Mechanisms of Neural Systems
Prof. Eva Dyer (home page) will present on her work on Thursday, March 6, 3:30 p.m. in E5 2004.
Scaling Up Neural Data Pretraining to Uncover Shared Structure in Brain Function
The brain is incredibly complex, with diverse functions that emerge from the coordinated activity of billions of neurons. These functions vary across brain regions and adapt dynamically as we engage in different tasks, process sensory information, or generate behavior. Yet, each neural recording captures only a small glimpse of this immense complexity, offering a limited view of the broader system. This motivates the need for an algorithmic approach to stitch together diverse datasets, integrating neural activity across brain regions, cell types, and individuals. In this talk, I will present our work on building scalable models pretrained on a broad corpus of neural recordings. Our findings demonstrate positive transfer across tasks, cell types, and individuals, effectively bridging gaps between isolated studies. This unified framework opens new possibilities for neural decoding, brain-machine interfaces, and cross-species neuroscience, offering a path toward more generalizable models of brain function.
Mark Reimers, Michigan State (https://iq.msu.edu/mark-reimers/)
Location: E5 2004
Title: A new and inexpensive method for high-resolution imaging of neural activity across the cortex of small animals
Abstract: In this talk I will introduce a new system for imaging the activity of several thousand labelled neurons distributed sparsely across the dorsal cortex of a mouse at high speed. The key is to use extensive computation to make up for the deficits of simple imaging systems. I will describe the ideas behind our system and the technology that we're using to implement these ideas, at a cost of under $50,000. I will describe some of the technical issues we've addressed, and issues that we’re still working on. A natural question to ask is how much of the complex cortical activity can be inferred by recording from a small fraction of neurons in each area. I will present evidence from large-scale Zebrafish and mouse brain recordings to suggest that a surprisingly small fraction of labelled neurons may be sufficient to represent most of the population activity in the upper layers of cortex.
Speaker: Prof. William Lytton, SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University
Title: Neurons and synapses working together happily in brain health; not so happily in brain disease
Abstract: At first approximation, we currently think of the brain as a set of neurons as nodes connected by directed edges, akin to the mathematical description of an Erdős–Rényi graph model. It is now time to redirect attention on the individual neurons, the massive complex entities that are often a locus of disease progression and may also be an additional locus of computation. I will focus on the role of the cortical corticospinal cell in Parkinson's disease (PD) and in migraine/ischemia. In both cases a class of neuron becomes damaged as an effect of disease: the effect becomes a site for the burgeoning disorder.
More generally, I wish to refocus on cell physiology as a basis of brain function. This will help us to better explain how cell pathology produces dysfunction in neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and mild cognitive impairment. The roles played by particular neuron types in performing the computations that underlie brain function will provide a new Neuron-based Computational Theory (NCT) to complement and augment the current dominant Synapse-based Computational Theory (SCT), which gave us Hebbian/Hopfieldian cell assemblies reified in modern
large-language models (LLMs).
Speaker: Patrick Schöfer,
Department of Neuromorphic Information Processing
University of Leipzig
Title: Boredom as Homeostasis of Cognitive Resource Utilization using Spiking Neural Networks
Abstract: In this talk, I will present our approach to modelling boredom as a homeostatic mechanism that maintains an optimal level of cognitive engagement. When engagement deviates from this “Goldilocks zone” due to under- or overstimulation, the system dynamically adjusts neural activity to restore balance. Implemented as a control loop in a spiking neural network, the model monitors and regulates simulated cognitive resource utilization through excitation and inhibition.
The purpose of the meeting is to share with all the CTN faculty what we are each up to and interested in, and to hear from some of the graduate students in each lab.