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Founding CTN member Philosopher Paul Thagard has a new book out: Dreams, Jokes and Songs: How Brains Build Consciousness.

The book provides:

  • Clear and empirically supported explanation of consciousness as resulting from four brain  mechanisms.
  • Application to a broad range of conscious experiences including smell, hunger, loneliness,  self-awareness, religious experience, sports performance, and romantic chemistry. 
  • Use of these mechanisms to generate novel theories of dreaming, humor, and musical experience.
  • Proposal of a new theory of time consciousness drawing on recent advances in neuroscience.
  • Assessment of consciousness in non-human animals and machines, including the new generative  AI models such as ChatGPT. 
  • Development of a new solution to the mind-body problem, called coherent materialism. 

And in a preview of coming attractions, stay tuned for his next book AI Boom or Doom?  Philosophy and Psychology of the New Artificial Intelligence, to be published soon by MIT Press

For more information you can follow this link to Paul´s blog.

Sue Ann Campbell is President Elect of the Canadian Applied and Industrial Mathematics Society. CAIMS represents applied and industrial mathematics in Canada. The society has become a significant presence in industrial, scientific, and technological circles within and outside of Canada.

Friday, October 15, 2021

New Course! Neural Networks

CS 479 “Neural Networks” (cross listed as CS 679) is a new course to be offered for the first time Winter 2022. The course is developed by Jeff Orchard (CTN Core member). It was developed over 4 offerings of CS 489 (“Advanced topics in CS”), and should be of interest to undergraduates and graduates with interests in theoretical neuroscience.  For details and pre-requisites please consult cs479.

Tuesday, August 28, 2018

CTN Moves to New E7 Building

The CTN has moved into new space in the just finished E7 building.  See the updated location information for a map.  This move provides unified space for CTN faculty and students to more closely interact on a day to day basis.  The space includes offices, visitor space, collaboration space, meeting space, and research space. If you're wandering by E7, come check us out on the 6th floor.

Professor Jeff Orchard and third-year undergraduate computer science student Louis Castricato received a best paper award at the 24th International Conference on Neural Informational Processing (ICONIP 2017) for their paper titled “Combating adversarial inputs using a predictive-estimator network.”

The conference was held in Guangzhou, China from November 14–18, 2017, and provided an international forum for scientists, researchers, educators, industrial professionals and students to present research results,