Topic: Biological Motion

Seminar
2 seminars
ePoster
1 ePoster

Latest

SeminarNeuroscience

Neurocognitive mechanisms of proactive temporal attention: challenging oscillatory and cortico-centered models

Assaf Breska
Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, Tübingen
Dec 2, 2021

To survive in a rapidly dynamic world, the brain predicts the future state of the world and proactively adjusts perception, attention and action. A key to efficient interaction is to predict and prepare to not only “where” and “what” things will happen, but also to “when”. I will present studies in healthy and neurological populations that investigated the cognitive architecture and neural basis of temporal anticipation. First, influential ‘entrainment’ models suggest that anticipation in rhythmic contexts, e.g. music or biological motion, uniquely relies on alignment of attentional oscillations to external rhythms. Using computational modeling and EEG, I will show that cortical neural patterns previously associated with entrainment in fact overlap with interval timing mechanisms that are used in aperiodic contexts. Second, temporal prediction and attention have commonly been associated with cortical circuits. Studying neurological populations with subcortical degeneration, I will present data that point to a double dissociation between rhythm- and interval-based prediction in the cerebellum and basal ganglia, respectively, and will demonstrate a role for the cerebellum in attentional control of perceptual sensitivity in time. Finally, using EEG in neurodegenerative patients, I will demonstrate that the cerebellum controls temporal adjustment of cortico-striatal neural dynamics, and use computational modeling to identify cerebellar-controlled neural parameters. Altogether, these findings reveal functionally and neural context-specificity and subcortical contributions to temporal anticipation, revising our understanding of dynamic cognition.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Learning to See Biological Motion

Shlomit Ben Ami
MIT and Project Prakash
Jul 21, 2020
ePosterNeuroscience

IS THE MIRROR NEURON SYSTEM INVOLVED IN WHOLE BODY BIOLOGICAL MOTION PERCEPTUAL ENCODING? A PRELIMINARY TDCS STUDY OVER THE VENTRAL PREMOTOR CORTEX

Umberto Quartetti, Antonio Cangelosi, Mario Piazza, Giulio Musotto, Giuditta Gambino, Dimitri Ognibene, Giuseppe Giglia

FENS Forum 2026

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