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Seminarâś“ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

Dr Lindsay reads from "Models of the Mind : How Physics, Engineering and Mathematics Shaped Our Understanding of the Brain" đź“–

Grace Lindsay

Dr

Gatsby Unit for Computational Neuroscience

Schedule
Monday, May 10, 2021

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Schedule

Monday, May 10, 2021

9:00 PM Europe/Berlin

Watch recording
Host: The Book Club

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Recording provided by the organiser.

Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

View source

Host

The Book Club

Duration

70 minutes

Abstract

Though the term has many definitions, computational neuroscience is mainly about applying mathematics to the study of the brain. The brain—a jumble of all different kinds of neurons interconnected in countless ways that somehow produce consciousness—has been described as “the most complex object in the known universe”. Physicists for centuries have turned to mathematics to properly explain some of the most seemingly simple processes in the universe—how objects fall, how water flows, how the planets move. Equations have proved crucial in these endeavors because they capture relationships and make precise predictions possible. How could we expect to understand the most complex object in the universe without turning to mathematics? — The answer is we can’t, and that is why I wrote this book. While I’ve been studying and working in the field for over a decade, most people I encounter have no idea what “computational neuroscience” is or that it even exists. Yet a desire to understand how the brain works is a common and very human interest. I wrote this book to let people in on the ways in which the brain will ultimately be understood: through mathematical and computational theories. — At the same time, I know that both mathematics and brain science are on their own intimidating topics to the average reader and may seem downright prohibitory when put together. That is why I’ve avoided (many) equations in the book and focused instead on the driving reasons why scientists have turned to mathematical modeling, what these models have taught us about the brain, and how some surprising interactions between biologists, physicists, mathematicians, and engineers over centuries have laid the groundwork for the future of neuroscience. — Each chapter of Models of the Mind covers a separate topic in neuroscience, starting from individual neurons themselves and building up to the different populations of neurons and brain regions that support memory, vision, movement and more. These chapters document the history of how mathematics has woven its way into biology and the exciting advances this collaboration has in store.

Topics

brain modelingbrain regionscomputational neuroscienceconsciousnessengineeringmathematical modelingmathematicsmemoryneuronsneuroscience historyphysicsthoeoryvision

About the Speaker

Grace Lindsay

Dr

Gatsby Unit for Computational Neuroscience

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

gracewlindsay.com

@neurograce

Follow on Twitter/X

twitter.com/neurograce

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