TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
8Total items
4Seminars
4ePosters

Latest

SeminarNeuroscience

Dyslexia, Rhythm, Language and the Developing Brain

Usha Goswami CBE
University of Cambridge
Feb 22, 2024

Recent insights from auditory neuroscience provide a new perspective on how the brain encodes speech. Using these recent insights, I will provide an overview of key factors underpinning individual differences in children’s development of language and phonology, providing a context for exploring atypical reading development (dyslexia). Children with dyslexia are relatively insensitive to acoustic cues related to speech rhythm patterns. This lack of rhythmic sensitivity is related to the atypical neural encoding of rhythm patterns in speech by the brain. I will describe our recent data from infants as well as children, demonstrating developmental continuity in the key neural variables.

SeminarNeuroscience

BrainLM Journal Club

Connor Lane
Sep 29, 2023

Connor Lane will lead a journal club on the recent BrainLM preprint, a foundation model for fMRI trained using self-supervised masked autoencoder training. Preprint: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.09.12.557460v1 Tweeprint: https://twitter.com/david_van_dijk/status/1702336882301112631?t=Q2-U92-BpJUBh9C35iUbUA&s=19

SeminarNeuroscience

1.8 billion regressions to predict fMRI (journal club)

Mihir Tripathy
Jul 28, 2023

Public journal club where this week Mihir will present on the 1.8 billion regressions paper (https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2022.03.28.485868v2), where the authors use hundreds of pretrained model embeddings to best predict fMRI activity.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Reading out responses of large neural population with minimal information loss

Tatyana Sharpee
Salk Institute for Biological Studies
Apr 9, 2021

Classic studies show that in many species – from leech and cricket to primate – responses of neural populations can be quite successfully read out using a measure neural population activity termed the population vector. However, despite its successes, detailed analyses have shown that the standard population vector discards substantial amounts of information contained in the responses of a neural population, and so is unlikely to accurately describe how signal communication between parts of the nervous system. I will describe recent theoretical results showing how to modify the population vector expression in order to read out neural responses without information loss, ideally. These results make it possible to quantify the contribution of weakly tuned neurons to perception. I will also discuss numerical methods that can be used to minimize information loss when reading out responses of large neural populations.

ePosterNeuroscience

Neural encoding of sensory “surprise” in the mouse cortex

Diego Benusiglio, Richard Somervail, Giandomenico Iannetti, Hiroki Asari
ePosterNeuroscience

Describing neural encoding from large-scale brain recordings: A deep learning model of the central auditory system

Fotios Drakopoulos, Yiqing Xia, Andreas Fragner, Nicholas A Lesica

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Neural encoding of sensory “surprise” in the mouse cortex

Diego Benusiglio, Sofija Perovic, Richard Somervail, Gian Domenico Iannetti, Hiroki Asari

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Robust assessment of the neural encoding of lexical information using the Temporal Response Function

Amirhossein Chalehchaleh, Martin Winchester, Giovanni M. Di Liberto

FENS Forum 2024

neural encoding coverage

8 items

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