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SeminarPast EventNeuroscience

A computational explanation for domain specificity in the human brain

Katharina Dobs

PhD

University Giessen

Schedule
Wednesday, November 25, 2020

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Schedule

Wednesday, November 25, 2020

3:20 PM Europe/Berlin

Host: CompCogSci Darmstadt

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Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

View source

Host

CompCogSci Darmstadt

Duration

70 minutes

Abstract

Many regions of the human brain conduct highly specific functions, such as recognizing faces, understanding language, and thinking about other people’s thoughts. Why might this domain specific organization be a good design strategy for brains, and what is the origin of domain specificity in the first place? In this talk, I will present recent work testing whether the segregation of face and object perception in human brains emerges naturally from an optimization for both tasks. We trained artificial neural networks on face and object recognition, and found that networks were able to perform both tasks well by spontaneously segregating them into distinct pathways. Critically, networks neither had prior knowledge nor any inductive bias about the tasks. Furthermore, networks optimized on tasks which apparently do not develop specialization in the human brain, such as food or cars, and object categorization showed less task segregation. These results suggest that functional segregation can spontaneously emerge without a task-specific bias, and that the domain-specific organization of the cortex may reflect a computational optimization for the real-world tasks humans solve.

Topics

artificial neural networkscognitioncomputational optimizationcortexdomain specificityface recognitionfunctional segregationhuman braininductive biasobject perceptiontask categorizationvision

About the Speaker

Katharina Dobs

PhD

University Giessen

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

www.katharinadobs.com

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