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SeminarPast EventNeuroscience

Understanding the role of prediction in sensory encoding

Jason Mattingley

Prof

Monash Biomedical Imaging

Schedule
Thursday, July 29, 2021

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Schedule

Friday, July 30, 2021

6:30 AM Australia/Melbourne

Host: Ad hoc

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Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

View source

Host

Ad hoc

Duration

70 minutes

Abstract

At any given moment the brain receives more sensory information than it can use to guide adaptive behaviour, creating the need for mechanisms that promote efficient processing of incoming sensory signals. One way in which the brain might reduce its sensory processing load is to encode successive presentations of the same stimulus in a more efficient form, a process known as neural adaptation. Conversely, when a stimulus violates an expected pattern, it should evoke an enhanced neural response. Such a scheme for sensory encoding has been formalised in predictive coding theories, which propose that recent experience establishes expectations in the brain that generate prediction errors when violated. In this webinar, Professor Jason Mattingley will discuss whether the encoding of elementary visual features is modulated when otherwise identical stimuli are expected or unexpected based upon the history of stimulus presentation. In humans, EEG was employed to measure neural activity evoked by gratings of different orientations, and multivariate forward modelling was used to determine how orientation selectivity is affected for expected versus unexpected stimuli. In mice, two-photon calcium imaging was used to quantify orientation tuning of individual neurons in the primary visual cortex to expected and unexpected gratings. Results revealed enhanced orientation tuning to unexpected visual stimuli, both at the level of whole-brain responses and for individual visual cortex neurons. Professor Mattingley will discuss the implications of these findings for predictive coding theories of sensory encoding. Professor Jason Mattingley is a Laureate Fellow and Foundation Chair in Cognitive Neuroscience at The University of Queensland. His research is directed toward understanding the brain processes that support perception, selective attention and decision-making, in health and disease.

Topics

EEGattentiondecision-makingneural adaptationorientation tuningprediction errorspredictive codingsensory encodingsensory processingstimulus presentationtwo-photon calcium imagingvisual cortex

About the Speaker

Jason Mattingley

Prof

Monash Biomedical Imaging

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

www.monash.edu/researchinfrastructure/mbi/home

@Mon_Bio_Imaging

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twitter.com/Mon_Bio_Imaging

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