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SeminarPast EventNeuroscience

The evolution of computation in the brain: Insights from studying the retina

Tom Baden

Prof.

University of Sussex (UK)

Schedule
Thursday, June 2, 2022

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Schedule

Thursday, June 2, 2022

4:00 PM Europe/Berlin

Host: Chronobiology & Visual Neuroscience

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Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

View source

Host

Chronobiology & Visual Neuroscience

Duration

60 minutes

Abstract

The retina is probably the most accessible part of the vertebrate central nervous system. Its computational logic can be interrogated in a dish, from patterns of lights as the natural input, to spike trains on the optic nerve as the natural output. Consequently, retinal circuits include some of the best understood computational networks in neuroscience. The retina is also ancient, and central to the emergence of neurally complex life on our planet. Alongside new locomotor strategies, the parallel evolution of image forming vision in vertebrate and invertebrate lineages is thought to have driven speciation during the Cambrian. This early investment in sophisticated vision is evident in the fossil record and from comparing the retina’s structural make up in extant species. Animals as diverse as eagles and lampreys share the same retinal make up of five classes of neurons, arranged into three nuclear layers flanking two synaptic layers. Some retina neuron types can be linked across the entire vertebrate tree of life. And yet, the functions that homologous neurons serve in different species, and the circuits that they innervate to do so, are often distinct to acknowledge the vast differences in species-specific visuo-behavioural demands. In the lab, we aim to leverage the vertebrate retina as a discovery platform for understanding the evolution of computation in the nervous system. Working on zebrafish alongside birds, frogs and sharks, we ask: How do synapses, neurons and networks enable ‘function’, and how can they rearrange to meet new sensory and behavioural demands on evolutionary timescales?

Topics

colour visioncomputational logiccomputational neuroscienceevolutionhomologous neuronsneuronsretinasynaptic layersvertebratevisionvisuo-behavioural demandszebrafish

About the Speaker

Tom Baden

Prof.

University of Sussex (UK)

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

www.badenlab.org

@NeuroFishh

Follow on Twitter/X

twitter.com/NeuroFishh

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