2018-03-28

The Brain and Computation Boot Camp


source: Simons Institute       2018年1月16日
The Boot Camp is intended to acquaint program participants with the key themes of the program. It will consist of four days of tutorial presentations, each with ample time for questions and discussion, as follows:
Anton Arkhipov (Allen Institute for Brain Science) - Allen Institute Large-scale Datasets and Modeling Tools
Jeff Lichtman (Harvard University) - Mapping Neural Connections and Their Development
Wolfgang Maass (Technische Universität Graz) - Computation in Networks of Neurons in the Brain
Bartlett Mel (USC) - Biophysics of Computation
Bruno Olshausen (UC Berkeley) - Neural Mechanisms of Vision
Christos Papadimitriou (UC Berkeley) - Theory of Computation
Peggy Seriès (University of Edinburgh) - Bayesian Theories of Perception and Cognition
Nir Shavit (MIT) - High Throughput Connectomics
Murray Sherman (University of Chicago) - Thalamocortical System
Lena Ting (Emory University and Georgia Institute of Technology) - Neuromechanics and Sensorimotor Control
Santosh Vempala (Georgia Institute of Technology) - Unsupervised Learning
For more information please visit: https://simons.berkeley.edu/workshops...
These presentations were supported in part by an award from the Simons Foundation.

1:02:22 Mapping Neural Connections and Their Development I
2  1:12:16 Mapping Neural Connections and Their Development II
1:31:51 High Throughput Connectomics
1:36:16 Allen Institute Large-scale Datasets and Modeling Tools
1:02:26 Biophysics of Computation I
1:07:51 Biophysics of Computation II
1:00:44 Computation in Networks of Neurons in the Brain I
1:13:11 Computation in Networks of Neurons in the Brain II
1:02:02 Thalamocortical System I
10 1:04:07 Thalamocortical System II
11 1:31:22 The Brain and Body Compute Together: Neuromechanics and Sensorimotor Control
12 1:33:35 Neural Mechanisms of Vision
13 1:00:32 Theory of Computation I
14 1:07:11 Theory of Computation II
15 1:31:08 Unsupervised Learning
16 1:37:39 Bayesian Theories of Perception and Cognition

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