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Prof
Columbia University
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Schedule
Wednesday, May 6, 2020
11:59 PM America/Los_Angeles
Domain
NeuroscienceHost
U Oregon Neuro
Duration
70 minutes
The electrosensory lobe (ELL) in mormyrid electric fish is a cerebellar-like structure that cancels the sensory effects of self-generated electric fields, allowing prey to be detected. Like the cerebellum, the ELL involves two stages of processing, analogous to the Purkinje cells and cells of the deep cerebellar nuclei. Through the work of Curtis Bell and others, a model was previously developed to describe the output stage of the ELL, but the role of the Purkinje-cell analogs, the medium ganglion (MG) cells, in the circuit had remained mysterious. I will present a complete, multi-layer circuit description of the ELL, developed in collaboration with Nate Sawtell and Salomon Muller, that reveals a novel role for the MG cells. The resulting model provides an example of how a biological system solves well-known problems associated with learning in multi-layer networks, and it reveals that ELL circuitry is organization on the basis of learning rather than by the response properties of neurons.
Larry Abbott
Prof
Columbia University
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