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Assistant Professor
University College London
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Schedule
Thursday, December 2, 2021
2:00 AM America/New_York
Recording provided by the organiser.
Domain
NeuroscienceHost
Neuromatch 4
Duration
60 minutes
The world around us is complex, but at the same time full of meaningful regularities. We can detect, learn and exploit these regularities automatically in an unsupervised manner i.e. without any direct instruction or explicit reward. For example, we effortlessly estimate the average tallness of people in a room, or the boundaries between words in a language. These regularities and prior knowledge, once learned, can affect the way we acquire and interpret new information to build and update our internal model of the world for future decision-making processes. Despite the ubiquity of passively learning from the structured information in the environment, the mechanisms that support learning from real-world experience are largely unknown. By combing sophisticated cognitive tasks in human and rats, neuronal measurements and perturbations in rat and network modelling, we aim to build a multi-level description of how sensory history is utilised in inferring regularities in temporally extended tasks. In this talk, I will specifically focus on a comparative rat and human model, in combination with neural network models to study how past sensory experiences are utilized to impact working memory and decision making behaviours.
Athena Akrami
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University College London
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