TopicNeuro

connectivity

50 Seminars40 ePosters

Latest

SeminarNeuroscience

From Spiking Predictive Coding to Learning Abstract Object Representation

Prof. Jochen Triesch
Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies
Jun 12, 2025

In a first part of the talk, I will present Predictive Coding Light (PCL), a novel unsupervised learning architecture for spiking neural networks. In contrast to conventional predictive coding approaches, which only transmit prediction errors to higher processing stages, PCL learns inhibitory lateral and top-down connectivity to suppress the most predictable spikes and passes a compressed representation of the input to higher processing stages. We show that PCL reproduces a range of biological findings and exhibits a favorable tradeoff between energy consumption and downstream classification performance on challenging benchmarks. A second part of the talk will feature our lab’s efforts to explain how infants and toddlers might learn abstract object representations without supervision. I will present deep learning models that exploit the temporal and multimodal structure of their sensory inputs to learn representations of individual objects, object categories, or abstract super-categories such as „kitchen object“ in a fully unsupervised fashion. These models offer a parsimonious account of how abstract semantic knowledge may be rooted in children's embodied first-person experiences.

SeminarNeuroscience

Circuit Mechanisms of Remote Memory

Lauren DeNardo, PhD
Department of Physiology, David Geffen School of Medicine, UCLA
Feb 11, 2025

Memories of emotionally-salient events are long-lasting, guiding behavior from minutes to years after learning. The prelimbic cortex (PL) is required for fear memory retrieval across time and is densely interconnected with many subcortical and cortical areas involved in recent and remote memory recall, including the temporal association area (TeA). While the behavioral expression of a memory may remain constant over time, the neural activity mediating memory-guided behavior is dynamic. In PL, different neurons underlie recent and remote memory retrieval and remote memory-encoding neurons have preferential functional connectivity with cortical association areas, including TeA. TeA plays a preferential role in remote compared to recent memory retrieval, yet how TeA circuits drive remote memory retrieval remains poorly understood. Here we used a combination of activity-dependent neuronal tagging, viral circuit mapping and miniscope imaging to investigate the role of the PL-TeA circuit in fear memory retrieval across time in mice. We show that PL memory ensembles recruit PL-TeA neurons across time, and that PL-TeA neurons have enhanced encoding of salient cues and behaviors at remote timepoints. This recruitment depends upon ongoing synaptic activity in the learning-activated PL ensemble. Our results reveal a novel circuit encoding remote memory and provide insight into the principles of memory circuit reorganization across time.

SeminarNeuroscience

Analyzing Network-Level Brain Processing and Plasticity Using Molecular Neuroimaging

Alan Jasanoff
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Jan 28, 2025

Behavior and cognition depend on the integrated action of neural structures and populations distributed throughout the brain. We recently developed a set of molecular imaging tools that enable multiregional processing and plasticity in neural networks to be studied at a brain-wide scale in rodents and nonhuman primates. Here we will describe how a novel genetically encoded activity reporter enables information flow in virally labeled neural circuitry to be monitored by fMRI. Using the reporter to perform functional imaging of synaptically defined neural populations in the rat somatosensory system, we show how activity is transformed within brain regions to yield characteristics specific to distinct output projections. We also show how this approach enables regional activity to be modeled in terms of inputs, in a paradigm that we are extending to address circuit-level origins of functional specialization in marmoset brains. In the second part of the talk, we will discuss how another genetic tool for MRI enables systematic studies of the relationship between anatomical and functional connectivity in the mouse brain. We show that variations in physical and functional connectivity can be dissociated both across individual subjects and over experience. We also use the tool to examine brain-wide relationships between plasticity and activity during an opioid treatment. This work demonstrates the possibility of studying diverse brain-wide processing phenomena using molecular neuroimaging.

SeminarNeuroscience

Learning and Memory

Nicolas Brunel, Ashok Litwin-Kumar, Julijana Gjeorgieva
Duke University; Columbia University; Technical University Munich
Nov 29, 2024

This webinar on learning and memory features three experts—Nicolas Brunel, Ashok Litwin-Kumar, and Julijana Gjorgieva—who present theoretical and computational approaches to understanding how neural circuits acquire and store information across different scales. Brunel discusses calcium-based plasticity and how standard “Hebbian-like” plasticity rules inferred from in vitro or in vivo datasets constrain synaptic dynamics, aligning with classical observations (e.g., STDP) and explaining how synaptic connectivity shapes memory. Litwin-Kumar explores insights from the fruit fly connectome, emphasizing how the mushroom body—a key site for associative learning—implements a high-dimensional, random representation of sensory features. Convergent dopaminergic inputs gate plasticity, reflecting a high-dimensional “critic” that refines behavior. Feedback loops within the mushroom body further reveal sophisticated interactions between learning signals and action selection. Gjorgieva examines how activity-dependent plasticity rules shape circuitry from the subcellular (e.g., synaptic clustering on dendrites) to the cortical network level. She demonstrates how spontaneous activity during development, Hebbian competition, and inhibitory-excitatory balance collectively establish connectivity motifs responsible for key computations such as response normalization.

SeminarNeuroscience

Sensory cognition

SueYeon Chung, Srini Turaga
New York University; Janelia Research Campus
Nov 29, 2024

This webinar features presentations from SueYeon Chung (New York University) and Srinivas Turaga (HHMI Janelia Research Campus) on theoretical and computational approaches to sensory cognition. Chung introduced a “neural manifold” framework to capture how high-dimensional neural activity is structured into meaningful manifolds reflecting object representations. She demonstrated that manifold geometry—shaped by radius, dimensionality, and correlations—directly governs a population’s capacity for classifying or separating stimuli under nuisance variations. Applying these ideas as a data analysis tool, she showed how measuring object-manifold geometry can explain transformations along the ventral visual stream and suggested that manifold principles also yield better self-supervised neural network models resembling mammalian visual cortex. Turaga described simulating the entire fruit fly visual pathway using its connectome, modeling 64 key cell types in the optic lobe. His team’s systematic approach—combining sparse connectivity from electron microscopy with simple dynamical parameters—recapitulated known motion-selective responses and produced novel testable predictions. Together, these studies underscore the power of combining connectomic detail, task objectives, and geometric theories to unravel neural computations bridging from stimuli to cognitive functions.

SeminarNeuroscience

Intrinsic timescales in the visual cortex change with selective attention and reflect spatial connectivity

Attempto Prize Awardee I Roxana Zeraati
IMPRS-MMFD, MPI-BC & University of Tübingen
Oct 31, 2024
SeminarNeuroscience

Beyond Homogeneity: Characterizing Brain Disorder Heterogeneity through EEG and Normative Modeling

Mahmoud Hassan
Founder and CEO of MINDIG, Rennes, France. Adjunct professor, Reykjavik University, Reykjavik, Iceland.
Oct 9, 2024

Electroencephalography (EEG) has been thoroughly studied for decades in psychiatry research. Yet its integration into clinical practice as a diagnostic/prognostic tool remains unachieved. We hypothesize that a key reason is the underlying patient's heterogeneity, overlooked in psychiatric EEG research relying on a case-control approach. We combine HD-EEG with normative modeling to quantify this heterogeneity using two well-established and extensively investigated EEG characteristics -spectral power and functional connectivity- across a cohort of 1674 patients with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, autism spectrum disorder, learning disorder, or anxiety, and 560 matched controls. Normative models showed that deviations from population norms among patients were highly heterogeneous and frequency-dependent. Deviation spatial overlap across patients did not exceed 40% and 24% for spectral and connectivity, respectively. Considering individual deviations in patients has significantly enhanced comparative analysis, and the identification of patient-specific markers has demonstrated a correlation with clinical assessments, representing a crucial step towards attaining precision psychiatry through EEG.

SeminarNeuroscience

Modelling the fruit fly brain and body

Srinivas Turaga
HHMI | Janelia
May 15, 2024

Through recent advances in microscopy, we now have an unprecedented view of the brain and body of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster. We now know the connectivity at single neuron resolution across the whole brain. How do we translate these new measurements into a deeper understanding of how the brain processes sensory information and produces behavior? I will describe two computational efforts to model the brain and the body of the fruit fly. First, I will describe a new modeling method which makes highly accurate predictions of neural activity in the fly visual system as measured in the living brain, using only measurements of its connectivity from a dead brain [1], joint work with Jakob Macke. Second, I will describe a whole body physics simulation of the fruit fly which can accurately reproduce its locomotion behaviors, both flight and walking [2], joint work with Google DeepMind.

SeminarNeuroscience

The quest for brain identification

Enrico Amico
Aston University
Mar 21, 2024

In the 17th century, physician Marcello Malpighi observed the existence of distinctive patterns of ridges and sweat glands on fingertips. This was a major breakthrough, and originated a long and continuing quest for ways to uniquely identify individuals based on fingerprints, a technique massively used until today. It is only in the past few years that technologies and methodologies have achieved high-quality measures of an individual’s brain to the extent that personality traits and behavior can be characterized. The concept of “fingerprints of the brain” is very novel and has been boosted thanks to a seminal publication by Finn et al. in 2015. They were among the firsts to show that an individual’s functional brain connectivity profile is both unique and reliable, similarly to a fingerprint, and that it is possible to identify an individual among a large group of subjects solely on the basis of her or his connectivity profile. Yet, the discovery of brain fingerprints opened up a plethora of new questions. In particular, what exactly is the information encoded in brain connectivity patterns that ultimately leads to correctly differentiating someone’s connectome from anybody else’s? In other words, what makes our brains unique? In this talk I am going to partially address these open questions while keeping a personal viewpoint on the subject. I will outline the main findings, discuss potential issues, and propose future directions in the quest for identifiability of human brain networks.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Imaging the subcortex; Microstructural and connectivity correlates of outcome variability in functional neurosurgery for movement disorders

Birte Forstmann, PhD & Francisca Ferreira, PhD
University of Amsterdam, Netherlands / University College London, UK
Dec 14, 2023

We are very much looking forward to host Francisca Ferreira and Birte Forstmann on December 14th, 2023, at noon ET / 6PM CET. Francisca Ferreira is a PhD student and Neurosurgery trainee at the University College of London Queen Square Institute of Neurology and a Royal College of Surgeons “Emerging Leaders” program laureate. Her presentation title will be: “Microstructural and connectivity correlates of outcome variability in functional neurosurgery for movement disorders”. Birte Forstmann, PhD, is the Director of the Amsterdam Brain and Cognition Center, a Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience at the University of Amsterdam, and a Professor by Special Appointment of Neuroscientific Testing of Psychological Models at the University of Leiden. Besides her scientific presentation (“Imaging the human subcortex”), she will give us a glimpse at the “Person behind the science”. You can register via talks.stimulatingbrains.org to receive the (free) Zoom link!

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Virtual Brain Twins for Brain Medicine and Epilepsy

Viktor Jirsa
Aix Marseille Université - Inserm
Nov 8, 2023

Over the past decade we have demonstrated that the fusion of subject-specific structural information of the human brain with mathematical dynamic models allows building biologically realistic brain network models, which have a predictive value, beyond the explanatory power of each approach independently. The network nodes hold neural population models, which are derived using mean field techniques from statistical physics expressing ensemble activity via collective variables. Our hybrid approach fuses data-driven with forward-modeling-based techniques and has been successfully applied to explain healthy brain function and clinical translation including aging, stroke and epilepsy. Here we illustrate the workflow along the example of epilepsy: we reconstruct personalized connectivity matrices of human epileptic patients using Diffusion Tensor weighted Imaging (DTI). Subsets of brain regions generating seizures in patients with refractory partial epilepsy are referred to as the epileptogenic zone (EZ). During a seizure, paroxysmal activity is not restricted to the EZ, but may recruit other healthy brain regions and propagate activity through large brain networks. The identification of the EZ is crucial for the success of neurosurgery and presents one of the historically difficult questions in clinical neuroscience. The application of latest techniques in Bayesian inference and model inversion, in particular Hamiltonian Monte Carlo, allows the estimation of the EZ, including estimates of confidence and diagnostics of performance of the inference. The example of epilepsy nicely underwrites the predictive value of personalized large-scale brain network models. The workflow of end-to-end modeling is an integral part of the European neuroinformatics platform EBRAINS and enables neuroscientists worldwide to build and estimate personalized virtual brains.

SeminarNeuroscience

Brain Connectivity Workshop

Ed Bullmore, Jianfeng Feng, Viktor Jirsa, Helen Mayberg, Pedro Valdes-Sosa
Sep 20, 2023

Founded in 2002, the Brain Connectivity Workshop (BCW) is an annual international meeting for in-depth discussions of all aspects of brain connectivity research. By bringing together experts in computational neuroscience, neuroscience methodology and experimental neuroscience, it aims to improve the understanding of the relationship between anatomical connectivity, brain dynamics and cognitive function. These workshops have a unique format, featuring only short presentations followed by intense discussion. This year’s workshop is co-organised by Wellcome, putting the spotlight on brain connectivity in mental health disorders. We look forward to having you join us for this exciting, thought-provoking and inclusive event.

SeminarNeuroscience

How curiosity affects learning and information seeking via the dopaminergic circuit

Matthias J. Gruber
Cardiff University, UK
Jun 13, 2023

Over the last decade, research on curiosity – the desire to seek new information – has been rapidly growing. Several studies have shown that curiosity elicits activity within the dopaminergic circuit and thereby enhances hippocampus-dependent learning. However, given this new field of research, we do not have a good understanding yet of (i) how curiosity-based learning changes across the lifespan, (ii) why some people show better learning improvements due to curiosity than others, and (iii) whether lab-based research on curiosity translates to how curiosity affects information seeking in real life. In this talk, I will present a series of behavioural and neuroimaging studies that address these three questions about curiosity. First, I will present findings on how curiosity and interest affect learning differently in childhood and adolescence. Second, I will show data on how inter-individual differences in the magnitude of curiosity-based learning depend on the strength of resting-state functional connectivity within the cortico-mesolimbic dopaminergic circuit. Third, I will present findings on how the level of resting-state functional connectivity within this circuit is also associated with the frequency of real-life information seeking (i.e., about Covid-19-related news). Together, our findings help to refine our recently proposed framework – the Prediction, Appraisal, Curiosity, and Exploration (PACE) framework – that attempts to integrate theoretical ideas on the neurocognitive mechanisms of how curiosity is elicited, and how curiosity enhances learning and information seeking. Furthermore, our findings highlight the importance of curiosity research to better understand how curiosity can be harnessed to improve learning and information seeking in real life.

SeminarNeuroscience

Dynamic endocrine modulation of the nervous system

Emily Jabocs
US Santa Barbara Neuroscience
Apr 18, 2023

Sex hormones are powerful neuromodulators of learning and memory. In rodents and nonhuman primates estrogen and progesterone influence the central nervous system across a range of spatiotemporal scales. Yet, their influence on the structural and functional architecture of the human brain is largely unknown. Here, I highlight findings from a series of dense-sampling neuroimaging studies from my laboratory designed to probe the dynamic interplay between the nervous and endocrine systems. Individuals underwent brain imaging and venipuncture every 12-24 hours for 30 consecutive days. These procedures were carried out under freely cycling conditions and again under a pharmacological regimen that chronically suppresses sex hormone production. First, resting state fMRI evidence suggests that transient increases in estrogen drive robust increases in functional connectivity across the brain. Time-lagged methods from dynamical systems analysis further reveals that these transient changes in estrogen enhance within-network integration (i.e. global efficiency) in several large-scale brain networks, particularly Default Mode and Dorsal Attention Networks. Next, using high-resolution hippocampal subfield imaging, we found that intrinsic hormone fluctuations and exogenous hormone manipulations can rapidly and dynamically shape medial temporal lobe morphology. Together, these findings suggest that neuroendocrine factors influence the brain over short and protracted timescales.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

The strongly recurrent regime of cortical networks

David Dahmen
Jülich Research Centre, Germany
Mar 29, 2023

Modern electrophysiological recordings simultaneously capture single-unit spiking activities of hundreds of neurons. These neurons exhibit highly complex coordination patterns. Where does this complexity stem from? One candidate is the ubiquitous heterogeneity in connectivity of local neural circuits. Studying neural network dynamics in the linearized regime and using tools from statistical field theory of disordered systems, we derive relations between structure and dynamics that are readily applicable to subsampled recordings of neural circuits: Measuring the statistics of pairwise covariances allows us to infer statistical properties of the underlying connectivity. Applying our results to spontaneous activity of macaque motor cortex, we find that the underlying network operates in a strongly recurrent regime. In this regime, network connectivity is highly heterogeneous, as quantified by a large radius of bulk connectivity eigenvalues. Being close to the point of linear instability, this dynamical regime predicts a rich correlation structure, a large dynamical repertoire, long-range interaction patterns, relatively low dimensionality and a sensitive control of neuronal coordination. These predictions are verified in analyses of spontaneous activity of macaque motor cortex and mouse visual cortex. Finally, we show that even microscopic features of connectivity, such as connection motifs, systematically scale up to determine the global organization of activity in neural circuits.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Asymmetric signaling across the hierarchy of cytoarchitecture within the human connectome

Linden Parkes
Rutgers Brain Health Institute
Mar 23, 2023

Cortical variations in cytoarchitecture form a sensory-fugal axis that shapes regional profiles of extrinsic connectivity and is thought to guide signal propagation and integration across the cortical hierarchy. While neuroimaging work has shown that this axis constrains local properties of the human connectome, it remains unclear whether it also shapes the asymmetric signaling that arises from higher-order topology. Here, we used network control theory to examine the amount of energy required to propagate dynamics across the sensory-fugal axis. Our results revealed an asymmetry in this energy, indicating that bottom-up transitions were easier to complete compared to top-down. Supporting analyses demonstrated that asymmetries were underpinned by a connectome topology that is wired to support efficient bottom-up signaling. Lastly, we found that asymmetries correlated with differences in communicability and intrinsic neuronal time scales and lessened throughout youth. Our results show that cortical variation in cytoarchitecture may guide the formation of macroscopic connectome topology.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Orientation selectivity in rodent V1: theory vs experiments

German Mato
CONICET, Bariloche
Feb 15, 2023

Neurons in the primary visual cortex (V1) of rodents are selective to the orientation of the stimulus, as in other mammals such as cats and monkeys. However, in contrast with those species, their neurons display a very different type of spatial organization. Instead of orientation maps they are organized in a “salt and pepper” pattern, where adjacent neurons have completely different preferred orientations. This structure has motivated both experimental and theoretical research with the objective of determining which aspects of the connectivity patterns and intrinsic neuronal responses can explain the observed behavior. These analysis have to take into account also that the neurons of the thalamus that send their outputs to the cortex have more complex responses in rodents than in higher mammals, displaying, for instance, a significant degree of orientation selectivity. In this talk we present work showing that a random feed-forward connectivity pattern, in which the probability of having a connection between a cortical neuron and a thalamic neuron depends only on the relative distance between them is enough explain several aspects of the complex phenomenology found in these systems. Moreover, this approach allows us to evaluate analytically the statistical structure of the thalamic input on the cortex. We find that V1 neurons are orientation selective but the preferred orientation of the stimulus depends on the spatial frequency of the stimulus. We disentangle the effect of the non circular thalamic receptive fields, finding that they control the selectivity of the time-averaged thalamic input, but not the selectivity of the time locked component. We also compare with experiments that use reverse correlation techniques, showing that ON and OFF components of the aggregate thalamic input are spatially segregated in the cortex.

SeminarNeuroscience

How do Astrocytes Sculpt Synaptic Circuits?

Cagla Eroglu
Duke University
Jan 11, 2023
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Convex neural codes in recurrent networks and sensory systems

Vladimir Itskov
The Pennsylvania State University
Dec 14, 2022

Neural activity in many sensory systems is organized on low-dimensional manifolds by means of convex receptive fields. Neural codes in these areas are constrained by this organization, as not every neural code is compatible with convex receptive fields. The same codes are also constrained by the structure of the underlying neural network. In my talk I will attempt to provide answers to the following natural questions: (i) How do recurrent circuits generate codes that are compatible with the convexity of receptive fields? (ii) How can we utilize the constraints imposed by the convex receptive field to understand the underlying stimulus space. To answer question (i), we describe the combinatorics of the steady states and fixed points of recurrent networks that satisfy the Dale’s law. It turns out the combinatorics of the fixed points are completely determined by two distinct conditions: (a) the connectivity graph of the network and (b) a spectral condition on the synaptic matrix. We give a characterization of exactly which features of connectivity determine the combinatorics of the fixed points. We also find that a generic recurrent network that satisfies Dale's law outputs convex combinatorial codes. To address question (ii), I will describe methods based on ideas from topology and geometry that take advantage of the convex receptive field properties to infer the dimension of (non-linear) neural representations. I will illustrate the first method by inferring basic features of the neural representations in the mouse olfactory bulb.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Universal function approximation in balanced spiking networks through convex-concave boundary composition

W. F. Podlaski
Champalimaud
Nov 10, 2022

The spike-threshold nonlinearity is a fundamental, yet enigmatic, component of biological computation — despite its role in many theories, it has evaded definitive characterisation. Indeed, much classic work has attempted to limit the focus on spiking by smoothing over the spike threshold or by approximating spiking dynamics with firing-rate dynamics. Here, we take a novel perspective that captures the full potential of spike-based computation. Based on previous studies of the geometry of efficient spike-coding networks, we consider a population of neurons with low-rank connectivity, allowing us to cast each neuron’s threshold as a boundary in a space of population modes, or latent variables. Each neuron divides this latent space into subthreshold and suprathreshold areas. We then demonstrate how a network of inhibitory (I) neurons forms a convex, attracting boundary in the latent coding space, and a network of excitatory (E) neurons forms a concave, repellant boundary. Finally, we show how the combination of the two yields stable dynamics at the crossing of the E and I boundaries, and can be mapped onto a constrained optimization problem. The resultant EI networks are balanced, inhibition-stabilized, and exhibit asynchronous irregular activity, thereby closely resembling cortical networks of the brain. Moreover, we demonstrate how such networks can be tuned to either suppress or amplify noise, and how the composition of inhibitory convex and excitatory concave boundaries can result in universal function approximation. Our work puts forth a new theory of biologically-plausible computation in balanced spiking networks, and could serve as a novel framework for scalable and interpretable computation with spikes.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Nonlinear computations in spiking neural networks through multiplicative synapses

M. Nardin
IST Austria
Nov 9, 2022

The brain efficiently performs nonlinear computations through its intricate networks of spiking neurons, but how this is done remains elusive. While recurrent spiking networks implementing linear computations can be directly derived and easily understood (e.g., in the spike coding network (SCN) framework), the connectivity required for nonlinear computations can be harder to interpret, as they require additional non-linearities (e.g., dendritic or synaptic) weighted through supervised training. Here we extend the SCN framework to directly implement any polynomial dynamical system. This results in networks requiring multiplicative synapses, which we term the multiplicative spike coding network (mSCN). We demonstrate how the required connectivity for several nonlinear dynamical systems can be directly derived and implemented in mSCNs, without training. We also show how to precisely carry out higher-order polynomials with coupled networks that use only pair-wise multiplicative synapses, and provide expected numbers of connections for each synapse type. Overall, our work provides an alternative method for implementing nonlinear computations in spiking neural networks, while keeping all the attractive features of standard SCNs such as robustness, irregular and sparse firing, and interpretable connectivity. Finally, we discuss the biological plausibility of mSCNs, and how the high accuracy and robustness of the approach may be of interest for neuromorphic computing.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Shallow networks run deep: How peripheral preprocessing facilitates odor classification

Yonatan Aljadeff
University of California, San Diego (UCSD)
Nov 9, 2022

Drosophila olfactory sensory hairs ("sensilla") typically house two olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs) which can laterally inhibit each other via electrical ("ephaptic") coupling. ORN pairing is highly stereotyped and genetically determined. Thus, olfactory signals arriving in the Antennal Lobe (AL) have been pre-processed by a fixed and shallow network at the periphery. To uncover the functional significance of this organization, we developed a nonlinear phenomenological model of asymmetrically coupled ORNs responding to odor mixture stimuli. We derived an analytical solution to the ORNs’ dynamics, which shows that the peripheral network can extract the valence of specific odor mixtures via transient amplification. Our model predicts that for efficient read-out of the amplified valence signal there must exist specific patterns of downstream connectivity that reflect the organization at the periphery. Analysis of AL→Lateral Horn (LH) fly connectomic data reveals evidence directly supporting this prediction. We further studied the effect of ephaptic coupling on olfactory processing in the AL→Mushroom Body (MB) pathway. We show that stereotyped ephaptic interactions between ORNs lead to a clustered odor representation of glomerular responses. Such clustering in the AL is an essential assumption of theoretical studies on odor recognition in the MB. Together our work shows that preprocessing of olfactory stimuli by a fixed and shallow network increases sensitivity to specific odor mixtures, and aids in the learning of novel olfactory stimuli. Work led by Palka Puri, in collaboration with Chih-Ying Su and Shiuan-Tze Wu.

SeminarNeuroscience

Setting network states via the dynamics of action potential generation

Susanne Schreiber
Humboldt University Berlin, Germany
Oct 5, 2022

To understand neural computation and the dynamics in the brain, we usually focus on the connectivity among neurons. In contrast, the properties of single neurons are often thought to be negligible, at least as far as the activity of networks is concerned. In this talk, I will contradict this notion and demonstrate how the biophysics of action-potential generation can have a decisive impact on network behaviour. Our recent theoretical work shows that, among regularly firing neurons, the somewhat unattended homoclinic type (characterized by a spike onset via a saddle homoclinic orbit bifurcation) particularly stands out: First, spikes of this type foster specific network states - synchronization in inhibitory and splayed-out/frustrated states in excitatory networks. Second, homoclinic spikes can easily be induced by changes in a variety of physiological parameters (like temperature, extracellular potassium, or dendritic morphology). As a consequence, such parameter changes can even induce switches in network states, solely based on a modification of cellular voltage dynamics. I will provide first experimental evidence and discuss functional consequences of homoclinic spikes for the design of efficient pattern-generating motor circuits in insects as well as for mammalian pathologies like febrile seizures. Our analysis predicts an interesting role for homoclinic action potentials as an integral part of brain dynamics in both health and disease.

SeminarNeuroscience

Development and evolution of neuronal connectivity

Alain Chédotal
Vision Institute, Paris, France
Sep 28, 2022

In most animal species including humans, commissural axons connect neurons on the left and right side of the nervous system. In humans, abnormal axon midline crossing during development causes a whole range of neurological disorders ranging from congenital mirror movements, horizontal gaze palsy, scoliosis or binocular vision deficits. The mechanisms which guide axons across the CNS midline were thought to be evolutionary conserved but our recent results suggesting that they differ across vertebrates.  I will discuss the evolution of visual projection laterality during vertebrate evolution.  In most vertebrates, camera-style eyes contain retinal ganglion cell (RGC) neurons projecting to visual centers on both sides of the brain. However, in fish, RGCs are thought to only innervate the contralateral side. Using 3D imaging and tissue clearing we found that bilateral visual projections exist in non-teleost fishes. We also found that the developmental program specifying visual system laterality differs between fishes and mammals. We are currently using various strategies to discover genes controlling the development of visual projections. I will also present ongoing work using 3D imaging techniques to study the development of the visual system in human embryo.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

A parsimonious description of global functional brain organization in three spatiotemporal patterns

Taylor Bolt
Emory University
Sep 23, 2022

Resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has yielded seemingly disparate insights into large-scale organization of the human brain. The brain’s large-scale organization can be divided into two broad categories: zero-lag representations of functional connectivity structure and time-lag representations of traveling wave or propagation structure. In this study, we sought to unify observed phenomena across these two categories in the form of three low-frequency spatiotemporal patterns composed of a mixture of standing and traveling wave dynamics. We showed that a range of empirical phenomena, including functional connectivity gradients, the task-positive/task-negative anti-correlation pattern, the global signal, time-lag propagation patterns, the quasiperiodic pattern and the functional connectome network structure, are manifestations of these three spatiotemporal patterns. These patterns account for much of the global spatial structure that underlies functional connectivity analyses and unifies phenomena in resting-state functional MRI previously thought distinct.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Learning static and dynamic mappings with local self-supervised plasticity

Pantelis Vafeidis
California Institute of Technology
Sep 7, 2022

Animals exhibit remarkable learning capabilities with little direct supervision. Likewise, self-supervised learning is an emergent paradigm in artificial intelligence, closing the performance gap to supervised learning. In the context of biology, self-supervised learning corresponds to a setting where one sense or specific stimulus may serve as a supervisory signal for another. After learning, the latter can be used to predict the former. On the implementation level, it has been demonstrated that such predictive learning can occur at the single neuron level, in compartmentalized neurons that separate and associate information from different streams. We demonstrate the power such self-supervised learning over unsupervised (Hebb-like) learning rules, which depend heavily on stimulus statistics, in two examples: First, in the context of animal navigation where predictive learning can associate internal self-motion information always available to the animal with external visual landmark information, leading to accurate path-integration in the dark. We focus on the well-characterized fly head direction system and show that our setting learns a connectivity strikingly similar to the one reported in experiments. The mature network is a quasi-continuous attractor and reproduces key experiments in which optogenetic stimulation controls the internal representation of heading, and where the network remaps to integrate with different gains. Second, we show that incorporating global gating by reward prediction errors allows the same setting to learn conditioning at the neuronal level with mixed selectivity. At its core, conditioning entails associating a neural activity pattern induced by an unconditioned stimulus (US) with the pattern arising in response to a conditioned stimulus (CS). Solving the generic problem of pattern-to-pattern associations naturally leads to emergent cognitive phenomena like blocking, overshadowing, saliency effects, extinction, interstimulus interval effects etc. Surprisingly, we find that the same network offers a reductionist mechanism for causal inference by resolving the post hoc, ergo propter hoc fallacy.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Spontaneous Emergence of Computation in Network Cascades

Galen Wilkerson
Imperial College London
Aug 6, 2022

Neuronal network computation and computation by avalanche supporting networks are of interest to the fields of physics, computer science (computation theory as well as statistical or machine learning) and neuroscience. Here we show that computation of complex Boolean functions arises spontaneously in threshold networks as a function of connectivity and antagonism (inhibition), computed by logic automata (motifs) in the form of computational cascades. We explain the emergent inverse relationship between the computational complexity of the motifs and their rank-ordering by function probabilities due to motifs, and its relationship to symmetry in function space. We also show that the optimal fraction of inhibition observed here supports results in computational neuroscience, relating to optimal information processing.

SeminarNeuroscience

The role of astroglia-neuron interactions in generation and spread of seizures

Emre Yaksi
Kavli Institute for Systems Neuroscience, Norwegian University of Science and technology
Jul 6, 2022

Astroglia-neuron interactions are involved in multiple processes, regulating development, excitability and connectivity of neural circuits. Accumulating number of evidences highlight a direct connection between aberrant astroglial genetics and physiology in various forms of epilepsies. Using zebrafish seizure models, we showed that neurons and astroglia follow different spatiotemporal dynamics during transitions from pre-ictal to ictal activity. We observed that during pre-ictal period neurons exhibit local synchrony and low level of activity, whereas astroglia exhibit global synchrony and high-level of calcium signals that are anti correlated with neural activity. Instead, generalized seizures are marked by a massive release of astroglial glutamate release as well as a drastic increase of astroglia and neuronal activity and synchrony across the entire brain. Knocking out astroglial glutamate transporters leads to recurrent spontaneous generalized seizures accompanied with massive astroglial glutamate release. We are currently using a combination of genetic and pharmacological approaches to perturb astroglial glutamate signalling and astroglial gap junctions to further investigate their role in generation and spreading of epileptic seizures across the brain.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

A Game Theoretical Framework for Quantifying​ Causes in Neural Networks

Kayson Fakhar​
ICNS Hamburg
Jul 6, 2022

Which nodes in a brain network causally influence one another, and how do such interactions utilize the underlying structural connectivity? One of the fundamental goals of neuroscience is to pinpoint such causal relations. Conventionally, these relationships are established by manipulating a node while tracking changes in another node. A causal role is then assigned to the first node if this intervention led to a significant change in the state of the tracked node. In this presentation, I use a series of intuitive thought experiments to demonstrate the methodological shortcomings of the current ‘causation via manipulation’ framework. Namely, a node might causally influence another node, but how much and through which mechanistic interactions? Therefore, establishing a causal relationship, however reliable, does not provide the proper causal understanding of the system, because there often exists a wide range of causal influences that require to be adequately decomposed. To do so, I introduce a game-theoretical framework called Multi-perturbation Shapley value Analysis (MSA). Then, I present our work in which we employed MSA on an Echo State Network (ESN), quantified how much its nodes were influencing each other, and compared these measures with the underlying synaptic strength. We found that: 1. Even though the network itself was sparse, every node could causally influence other nodes. In this case, a mere elucidation of causal relationships did not provide any useful information. 2. Additionally, the full knowledge of the structural connectome did not provide a complete causal picture of the system either, since nodes frequently influenced each other indirectly, that is, via other intermediate nodes. Our results show that just elucidating causal contributions in complex networks such as the brain is not sufficient to draw mechanistic conclusions. Moreover, quantifying causal interactions requires a systematic and extensive manipulation framework. The framework put forward here benefits from employing neural network models, and in turn, provides explainability for them.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Transcriptional controls over projection neuron fate diversity

Esther Klingler
Jabaudon lab, University of Geneva
Jun 29, 2022

The cerebral cortex is the most evolved structure of the brain and the site for higher cognitive functions. It consists of 6 layers, each composed of specific types of neurons. Interconnectivity between cortical areas is critical for sensory integration and sensorimotor transformation. Inter-areal cortical projection neurons are located in all cortical layers and form a heterogeneous population, which send their axon across cortical areas, both within and across hemispheres. How this diversity emerges during development remains largely unknown. Here, we address this question by linking the connectome and transcriptome of developing cortical projection neurons and show distinct maturation paces in neurons with distinct projections, which correlates with the sequential development of sensory and motor functions during postnatal period.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Reprogramming the nociceptive circuit topology reshapes sexual behavior in C. elegans

Vladyslava Pechuk
Oren lab, Weizmann Institute of Science
Jun 8, 2022

In sexually reproducing species, males and females respond to environmental sensory cues and transform the input into sexually dimorphic traits. Yet, how sexually dimorphic behavior is encoded in the nervous system is poorly understood. We characterize the sexually dimorphic nociceptive behavior in C. elegans – hermaphrodites present a lower pain threshold than males in response to aversive stimuli, and study the underlying neuronal circuits, which are composed of the same neurons that are wired differently. By imaging receptor expression, calcium responses and glutamate secretion, we show that sensory transduction is similar in the two sexes, and therefore explore how downstream network topology shapes dimorphic behavior. We generated a computational model that replicates the observed dimorphic behavior, and used this model to predict simple network rewirings that would switch the behavior between the sexes. We then showed experimentally, using genetic manipulations, artificial gap junctions, automated tracking and optogenetics, that these subtle changes to male connectivity result in hermaphrodite-like aversive behavior in-vivo, while hermaphrodite behavior was more robust to perturbations. Strikingly, when presented with aversive cues, rewired males were compromised in finding mating partners, suggesting that the network topology that enables efficient avoidance of noxious cues would have a reproductive "cost". To summarize, we present a deconstruction of a sex-shared neural circuit that affects sexual behavior, and how to reprogram it. More broadly, our results are an example of how common neuronal circuits changed their function during evolution by subtle topological rewirings to account for different environmental and sexual needs.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Heterogeneity and non-random connectivity in reservoir computing

Abigail Morrison
Jülich Research Centre & RWTH Aachen University, Germany
Jun 1, 2022

Reservoir computing is a promising framework to study cortical computation, as it is based on continuous, online processing and the requirements and operating principles are compatible with cortical circuit dynamics. However, the framework has issues that limit its scope as a generic model for cortical processing. The most obvious of these is that, in traditional models, learning is restricted to the output projections and takes place in a fully supervised manner. If such an output layer is interpreted at face value as downstream computation, this is biologically questionable. If it is interpreted merely as a demonstration that the network can accurately represent the information, this immediately raises the question of what would be biologically plausible mechanisms for transmitting the information represented by a reservoir and incorporating it in downstream computations. Another major issue is that we have as yet only modest insight into how the structural and dynamical features of a network influence its computational capacity, which is necessary not only for gaining an understanding of those features in biological brains, but also for exploiting reservoir computing as a neuromorphic application. In this talk, I will first demonstrate a method for quantifying the representational capacity of reservoirs without training them on tasks. Based on this technique, which allows systematic comparison of systems, I then present our recent work towards understanding the roles of heterogeneity and connectivity patterns in enhancing both the computational properties of a network and its ability to reliably transmit to downstream networks. Finally, I will give a brief taster of our current efforts to apply the reservoir computing framework to magnetic systems as an approach to neuromorphic computing.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Apathy and impulsivity in neurological disease – cause, effect and treatment

James Rowe
Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Cambridge
May 24, 2022
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

The balance of excitation and inhibition and a canonical cortical computation

Yashar Ahmadian
Cambridge, UK
Apr 27, 2022

Excitatory and inhibitory (E & I) inputs to cortical neurons remain balanced across different conditions. The balanced network model provides a self-consistent account of this observation: population rates dynamically adjust to yield a state in which all neurons are active at biological levels, with their E & I inputs tightly balanced. But global tight E/I balance predicts population responses with linear stimulus-dependence and does not account for systematic cortical response nonlinearities such as divisive normalization, a canonical brain computation. However, when necessary connectivity conditions for global balance fail, states arise in which only a localized subset of neurons are active and have balanced inputs. We analytically show that in networks of neurons with different stimulus selectivities, the emergence of such localized balance states robustly leads to normalization, including sublinear integration and winner-take-all behavior. An alternative model that exhibits normalization is the Stabilized Supralinear Network (SSN), which predicts a regime of loose, rather than tight, E/I balance. However, an understanding of the causal relationship between E/I balance and normalization in SSN and conditions under which SSN yields significant sublinear integration are lacking. For weak inputs, SSN integrates inputs supralinearly, while for very strong inputs it approaches a regime of tight balance. We show that when this latter regime is globally balanced, SSN cannot exhibit strong normalization for any input strength; thus, in SSN too, significant normalization requires localized balance. In summary, we causally and quantitatively connect a fundamental feature of cortical dynamics with a canonical brain computation. Time allowing I will also cover our work extending a normative theoretical account of normalization which explains it as an example of efficient coding of natural stimuli. We show that when biological noise is accounted for, this theory makes the same prediction as the SSN: a transition to supralinear integration for weak stimuli.

SeminarNeuroscience

The functional connectome across temporal scales

Sepideh Sadaghiani
Assistant Professor, University of Illinois, USA
Mar 30, 2022

The view of human brain function has drastically shifted over the last decade, owing to the observation that the majority of brain activity is intrinsic rather than driven by external stimuli or cognitive demands. Specifically, all brain regions continuously communicate in spatiotemporally organized patterns that constitute the functional connectome, with consequences for cognition and behavior. In this talk, I will argue that another shift is underway, driven by new insights from synergistic interrogation of the functional connectome using different acquisition methods. The human functional connectome is typically investigated with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) that relies on the indirect hemodynamic signal, thereby emphasizing very slow connectivity across brain regions. Conversely, more recent methodological advances demonstrate that fast connectivity within the whole-brain connectome can be studied with real-time methods such as electroencephalography (EEG). Our findings show that combining fMRI with scalp or intracranial EEG in humans, especially when recorded concurrently, paints a rich picture of neural communication across the connectome. Specifically, the connectome comprises both fast, oscillation-based connectivity observable with EEG, as well as extremely slow processes best captured by fMRI. While the fast and slow processes share an important degree of spatial organization, these processes unfold in a temporally independent manner. Our observations suggest that fMRI and EEG may be envisaged as capturing distinct aspects of functional connectivity, rather than intermodal measurements of the same phenomenon. Infraslow fluctuation-based and rapid oscillation-based connectivity of various frequency bands constitute multiple dynamic trajectories through a shared state space of discrete connectome configurations. The multitude of flexible trajectories may concurrently enable functional connectivity across multiple independent sets of distributed brain regions.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Brain dynamics and flexible behaviors

Lucina Uddin
Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, University of California, Los Angeles
Mar 16, 2022

Executive control processes and flexible behaviors rely on the integrity of, and dynamic interactions between, large-scale functional brain networks. The right insular cortex is a critical component of a salience/midcingulo-insular network that is thought to mediate interactions between brain networks involved in externally oriented (central executive/lateral frontoparietal network) and internally oriented (default mode/medial frontoparietal network) processes. How these brain systems reconfigure with development is a critical question for cognitive neuroscience, with implications for neurodevelopmental pathologies affecting brain connectivity. I will describe studies examining how brain network dynamics support flexible behaviors in typical and atypical development, presenting evidence suggesting a unique role for the dorsal anterior insular from studies of meta-analytic connectivity modeling, dynamic functional connectivity, and structural connectivity. These findings from adults, typically developing children, and children with autism suggest that structural and functional maturation of insular pathways is a critical component of the process by which human brain networks mature to support complex, flexible cognitive processes throughout the lifespan.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Network science and network medicine: New strategies for understanding and treating the biological basis of mental ill-health

Petra Vértes
Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge
Mar 15, 2022

The last twenty years have witnessed extraordinarily rapid progress in basic neuroscience, including breakthrough technologies such as optogenetics, and the collection of unprecedented amounts of neuroimaging, genetic and other data relevant to neuroscience and mental health. However, the translation of this progress into improved understanding of brain function and dysfunction has been comparatively slow. As a result, the development of therapeutics for mental health has stagnated too. One central challenge has been to extract meaning from these large, complex, multivariate datasets, which requires a shift towards systems-level mathematical and computational approaches. A second challenge has been reconciling different scales of investigation, from genes and molecules to cells, circuits, tissue, whole-brain, and ultimately behaviour. In this talk I will describe several strands of work using mathematical, statistical, and bioinformatic methods to bridge these gaps. Topics will include: using artificial neural networks to link the organization of large-scale brain connectivity to cognitive function; using multivariate statistical methods to link disease-related changes in brain networks to the underlying biological processes; and using network-based approaches to move from genetic insights towards drug discovey. Finally, I will discuss how simple organisms such as C. elegans can serve to inspire, test, and validate new methods and insights in networks neuroscience.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Flexible motor sequence generation by thalamic control of cortical dynamics through low-rank connectivity perturbations

Laureline Logiaco
Center for Theoretical Neuroscience, Columbia University
Mar 9, 2022

One of the fundamental functions of the brain is to flexibly plan and control movement production at different timescales to efficiently shape structured behaviors. I will present a model that clarifies how these complex computations could be performed in the mammalian brain, with an emphasis on the learning of an extendable library of autonomous motor motifs and the flexible stringing of these motifs in motor sequences. To build this model, we took advantage of the fact that the anatomy of the circuits involved is well known. Our results show how these architectural constraints lead to a principled understanding of how strategically positioned plastic connections located within motif-specific thalamocortical loops can interact with cortical dynamics that are shared across motifs to create an efficient form of modularity. This occurs because the cortical dynamics can be controlled by the activation of as few as one thalamic unit, which induces a low-rank perturbation of the cortical connectivity, and significantly expands the range of outputs that the network can produce. Finally, our results show that transitions between any motifs can be facilitated by a specific thalamic population that participates in preparing cortex for the execution of the next motif. Taken together, our model sheds light on the neural network mechanisms that can generate flexible sequencing of varied motor motifs.

ePosterNeuroscience

Homeostatic regulation of synaptic connectivity across connectomes

Andre Ferreira Castro, Ingo Fritz, Feiyu Wang, Ricardo Chirif Molina, Mikołaj Maurycy Miękus, Julijana Gjorgjieva

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Identifying the impact of local connectivity features on network dynamics

Yuxiu Shao, David Dahmen, Stefano Recanatesi, Eric Shea-Brow, Srdjan Ostojic

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Investigating the role of recurrent connectivity in connectome-constrained and task-optimized models of the fruit fly’s motion pathway

Zinovia Stefanidi, Janne Lappalainen, Srinivas Turaga, Jakob Macke

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Linking causal and structural connectivity in nonlinear networks

Kai Chen, Songting Li, Douglas Zhou

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Two opposing forces in inhibitory spike-timing-dependent plasticity differentially regulate network connectivity

Dylan Festa, Claudia Cusseddu, Julijana Gjorgjieva

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Reconsideration of local spatial connectivity and target specificity in the cortical microcircuit based on volumetric reconstruction

Anno Kurth, Jasper Albers, Markus Diesmann, Sacha van Albada

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

"Why" resting state functional connectivity must be restlessly dynamic?

Simachew Mengiste, Demian Battaglia

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

The role of gap junctions and clustered connectivity in emergent synchronisation patterns of spiking inhibitory neuronal networks

Helene Todd, Boris Gutkin, Alex Cayco-Gajic

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Unified C. elegans Neural Activity and Connectivity Datasets for Building Foundation Models of a Small Nervous System

Quilee Simeon, Anshul Kashyap, Konrad Kording, Ed Boyden

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Clustered recurrent connectivity promotes the development of E/I co-tuning via synaptic plasticity

Emmanouil Giannakakis,Oleg Vinogradov,Anna Levina

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Contextual modulation of mesoscale functional connectivity

Matthew Harvey,Adil Khan

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Direct measurement of whole-brain functional connectivity in C. elegans

Francesco Randi,Anuj Sharma,Sophie Dvali,Andrew M Leifer

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Heavy-tailed connectivity emerges from Hebbian self-organization

Christopher Lynn,Caroline Holmes,Stephanie Palmer

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Heavy-tailed connectivity emerges from Hebbian self-organization

Christopher Lynn,Caroline Holmes,Stephanie Palmer

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Operative Dimensions in High-Dimensional Connectivity of Recurrent Neural Networks

Renate Krause,Matthew Cook,Valerio Mante,Giacomo Indiveri

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Operative Dimensions in High-Dimensional Connectivity of Recurrent Neural Networks

Renate Krause,Matthew Cook,Valerio Mante,Giacomo Indiveri

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Optogenetic mapping of circuit connectivity in the motor cortex during goal-directed behavior

Arseny Finkelstein,Kayvon Daie,Ran Darshan,Karel Svoboda

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Optogenetic mapping of circuit connectivity in the motor cortex during goal-directed behavior

Arseny Finkelstein,Kayvon Daie,Ran Darshan,Karel Svoboda

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Predicting connectivity of motion-processing neurons with recurrent neural networks

Whit Jacobs,Matthew Loring,Eva Naumann,Joseph Choo-Choy,Timothy Dunn

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Predicting connectivity of motion-processing neurons with recurrent neural networks

Whit Jacobs,Matthew Loring,Eva Naumann,Joseph Choo-Choy,Timothy Dunn

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Rapid fluctuations in functional connectivity of cortical networks encode spontaneous behavior

Hadas Benisty,Andrew Moberly,Sweyta Lohani,Daniel Barson,Ronald Coifman,Gal Mishne,Jessica Cardin,Michael Higley

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Rapid fluctuations in functional connectivity of cortical networks encode spontaneous behavior

Hadas Benisty,Andrew Moberly,Sweyta Lohani,Daniel Barson,Ronald Coifman,Gal Mishne,Jessica Cardin,Michael Higley

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Real-time neural network denoising of 3D optogenetic connectivity maps

Benjamin Antin,Marta Gajowa,Masato Sadahiro,Marcus Triplett,Amol Pasarkar,Hillel Adesnik,Liam Paninski

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Real-time neural network denoising of 3D optogenetic connectivity maps

Benjamin Antin,Marta Gajowa,Masato Sadahiro,Marcus Triplett,Amol Pasarkar,Hillel Adesnik,Liam Paninski

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Relating local connectivity and global dynamics in excitatory-inhibitory networks

Yuxiu Shao,Srdjan Ostojic

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Relating local connectivity and global dynamics in excitatory-inhibitory networks

Yuxiu Shao,Srdjan Ostojic

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Cell assemblies and their underlying connectivity in a detailed, large-scale cortical model

András Ecker, Daniela Egas Santander, Sirio Bolaños-Puchet, James B. Isbister, Michael Reimann

COSYNE 2023

ePosterNeuroscience

Decomposed linear dynamical systems for C. elegans functional connectivity

Eva Yezerets, Noga Mudrik, Yenho Chen, Christopher Rozell, Adam Charles

COSYNE 2023

ePosterNeuroscience

Slow, low-dimensional dynamics in balanced networks with partially symmetric connectivity

Xiaoyu Yang, Giancarlo La Camera, Gianluigi Mongillo

COSYNE 2023

ePosterNeuroscience

Disentangling partially independent low-rank nerual representations and connectivity

Chengrui Li, Yunmiao Wang, Yule Wang, Weihan Li, Dieter Jaeger, Anqi Wu

COSYNE 2025

ePosterNeuroscience

Dynamical consequences of non-random connectivity in biological neural networks

Archishman Biswas, Arvind Kumar

COSYNE 2025

ePosterNeuroscience

Experience-dependent connectivity of inhibitory neurons in the olfactory cortex

Samuel Muscinelli, Andrew Fink, Shuqi Wang, Marcus Hogan, Courtney Kim, Daniel English, Richard Axel, Ashok Litwin-Kumar, Carl Schoonover

COSYNE 2025

ePosterNeuroscience

Functional connectivity constrained simulations of visuomotor circuits in zebrafish

Kaitlyn Fouke, Jacob Morra, Auke Ijspeert, Eva Naumann

COSYNE 2025

ePosterNeuroscience

Learning dynamics in development-defined microcircuits is rooted in inhibitory connectivity

Roman Huszar, Artem Kirsanov, Griffin Henze, Dhananjay Huilgol, Josh Huang, Gyorgy Buzsaki

COSYNE 2025

ePosterNeuroscience

NetFormer: An interpretable model for recovering dynamical connectivity in neural populations

Wuwei Zhang, Ziyu Lu, Trung Le, Hao Wang, Uygar Sumbul, Eric Shea-Brown, Lu Mi

COSYNE 2025

ePosterNeuroscience

Recurrent connectivity supports motion detection in connectome-constrained models of fly vision

Zinovia Stefanidi, Janne K. Lappalainen, Srinivas C. Turaga, Jakob Macke

COSYNE 2025

ePosterNeuroscience

Relating synaptic connectivity to function based on a full contactome of a Drosophila motor circuit

Felix Waitzmann, Ingo Fritz, Feiyu Wang, Ricardo Chirif Molina, Andre Ferreira Castro, Julijana Gjorgjieva

COSYNE 2025

ePosterNeuroscience

Stimulation-based functional connectivity measurements reveal state-dependent network modulation

Leo Scholl, Ryan Canfield, Pavithra Rajeswaran, Amy Orsborn

COSYNE 2025

ePosterNeuroscience

40Hz visual stimulation attenuates disrupted functional connectivity and restores hippocampal neuronal firing following microinfarcts

Phoebe Mayne, Montana Samantzis, Victor Daniel Vasquez Matsuda, Dongsheng Xiao, Matilde Balbi

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Age Effects on Eye Blink-Related Neural Activity and Functional Connectivity in Driving

Emad Alyan, Stefan Arnau, Stephan Getzmann, Julian Elias Reiser, Melanie Karthaus, Edmund Wascher

Bernstein Conference 2024

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