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Evidence Integration

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evidence integration

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with evidence integration across World Wide.
3 curated items3 Seminars
Updated almost 4 years ago
3 items · evidence integration
3 results
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Frontal circuit specialisations for information search and decision making

Laurence Hunt
Oxford University
Jan 27, 2022

During primate evolution, prefrontal cortex (PFC) expanded substantially relative to other cortical areas. The expansion of PFC circuits likely supported the increased cognitive abilities of humans and anthropoids to sample information about their environment, evaluate that information, plan, and decide between different courses of action. What quantities do these circuits compute as information is being sampled towards and a decision is being made? And how can they be related to anatomical specialisations within and across PFC? To address this, we recorded PFC activity during value-based decision making using single unit recording in non-human primates and magnetoencephalography in humans. At a macrocircuit level, we found that value correlates differ substantially across PFC subregions. They are heavily shaped by each subregion’s anatomical connections and by the decision-maker’s current locus of attention. At a microcircuit level, we found that the temporal evolution of value correlates can be predicted using cortical recurrent network models that temporally integrate incoming decision evidence. These models reflect the fact that PFC circuits are highly recurrent in nature and have synaptic properties that support persistent activity across temporally extended cognitive tasks. Our findings build upon recent work describing economic decision making as a process of attention-weighted evidence integration across time.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Multi-resolution Multi-task Gaussian Processes: London air pollution

Ollie Hamelijnck
The Alan Turing Institute, London
Jul 8, 2020

Poor air quality in cities is a significant threat to health and life expectancy, with over 80% of people living in urban areas exposed to air quality levels that exceed World Health Organisation limits. In this session, I present a multi-resolution multi-task framework that handles evidence integration under varying spatio-temporal sampling resolution and noise levels. We have developed both shallow Gaussian Process (GP) mixture models and deep GP constructions that naturally handle this evidence integration, as well as biases in the mean. These models underpin our work at the Alan Turing Institute towards providing spatio-temporal forecasts of air pollution across London. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our framework on both synthetic examples and applications on London air quality. For further information go to: https://www.turing.ac.uk/research/research-projects/london-air-quality. Collaborators: Oliver Hamelijnck, Theodoros Damoulas, Kangrui Wang and Mark Girolami.