TopicNeuroscience

action control

Content Overview
4Total items
3ePosters
1Seminar

Latest

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Learning in pain: probabilistic inference and (mal)adaptive control

Flavia Mancini
Department of Engineering
Apr 20, 2021

Pain is a major clinical problem affecting 1 in 5 people in the world. There are unresolved questions that urgently require answers to treat pain effectively, a crucial one being how the feeling of pain arises from brain activity. Computational models of pain consider how the brain processes noxious information and allow mapping neural circuits and networks to cognition and behaviour. To date, they have generally have assumed two largely independent processes: perceptual and/or predictive inference, typically modelled as an approximate Bayesian process, and action control, typically modelled as a reinforcement learning process. However, inference and control are intertwined in complex ways, challenging the clarity of this distinction. I will discuss how they may comprise a parallel hierarchical architecture that combines pain inference, information-seeking, and adaptive value-based control. Finally, I will discuss whether and how these learning processes might contribute to chronic pain.

ePosterNeuroscience

DORSAL STRIATAL PDE10A GATES COCAINE SEEKING BY BIASING ACTION CONTROL AWAY FROM PERSEVERATIVE RESPONDING

Ruili Li, Nekane Balcells Picaza, Walter Cañedo Riedel, Ana M.M. Oliveira, Rainer Spanagel, Rick E. Bernardi

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

BLA-mPFC-DMS circuitry: The gateway to the effect of fear on action control

Shlomi Habusha, Oded Klavir
ePosterNeuroscience

Prefrontal orchestration: Cortical networks for rodent action control

Zoe Jäckel, Niels Schwaderlapp, Ahmed Adzemovic, Florian Steenbergen, Maxim Zaitsev, Ilka Diester

FENS Forum 2024

action control coverage

4 items

ePoster3
Seminar1

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