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SeminarPast EventNeuroscience

When and (maybe) why do high-dimensional neural networks produce low-dimensional dynamics?

Eric Shea-Brown

Prof.

Department of Applied Mathematics, University of Washington

Schedule
Thursday, November 18, 2021

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Schedule

Thursday, November 18, 2021

4:00 PM Europe/Berlin

Host: Tubingen Neuro Campus

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Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

View source

Host

Tubingen Neuro Campus

Duration

70 minutes

Abstract

There is an avalanche of new data on activity in neural networks and the biological brain, revealing the collective dynamics of vast numbers of neurons. In principle, these collective dynamics can be of almost arbitrarily high dimension, with many independent degrees of freedom — and this may reflect powerful capacities for general computing or information. In practice, neural datasets reveal a range of outcomes, including collective dynamics of much lower dimension — and this may reflect other desiderata for neural codes. For what networks does each case occur? We begin by exploring bottom-up mechanistic ideas that link tractable statistical properties of network connectivity with the dimension of the activity that they produce. We then cover “top-down” ideas that describe how features of connectivity and dynamics that impact dimension arise as networks learn to perform fundamental computational tasks.

Topics

collective dynamicscomputational neurosciencecomputational taskshigh-dimensional neural networkslearninglow-dimensional dynamicsmechanistic ideasnetwork connectivityneural codesstatistical properties

About the Speaker

Eric Shea-Brown

Prof.

Department of Applied Mathematics, University of Washington

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

amath.washington.edu/people/eric-shea-brown

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