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Neural Circuit Dynamics

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TopicWorld Wide

neural circuit dynamics

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with neural circuit dynamics across World Wide.
6 curated items4 Seminars2 Positions
Updated 2 days ago
6 items · neural circuit dynamics
6 results
PositionComputational Neuroscience

Prof. Wenhao Zhang

UT Southwestern Medical Center
Dallas Texas, USA
Dec 5, 2025

The Computational Neuroscience lab directed by Dr. Wenhao Zhang at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center (www.zhang-cnl.org) is currently seeking up to two postdoctoral fellows to study cutting edge problems in computational neuroscience. Research topics include: 1). The neural circuit implementation of normative computation, e.g., Bayesian (causal) inference. 2). Dynamical analysis of recurrent neural circuit models. 3). Modern deep learning methods to solve neuroscience problems. Successful candidates are expected to play an active and independent role in one of our research topics. All projects are strongly encouraged to collaborate with experimental neuroscientists both in UT Southwestern as well as abroad. The initial appointment is for one year with the expectation of extension given satisfactory performance. UT Southwestern provides competitive salary and benefits packages.

PositionComputational Neuroscience

Prof Wenhao Zhang

UT Southwestern Medical Center
Dallas Texas, USA
Dec 5, 2025

The Computational Neuroscience lab directed by Dr. Wenhao Zhang at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center (www.zhang-cnl.org) is currently seeking up to two postdoctoral fellows to study cutting edge problems in computational neuroscience. Research topics include: 1). The neural circuit implementation of normative computation, e.g., Bayesian (causal) inference. 2). Dynamical analysis of recurrent neural circuit models. 3). Modern deep learning methods to solve neuroscience problems. Successful candidates are expected to play an active and independent role in one of our research topics. All projects are strongly encouraged to collaborate with experimental neuroscientists both in UT Southwestern as well as abroad. The initial appointment is for one year with the expectation of extension given satisfactory performance. UT Southwestern provides competitive salary and benefits packages.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Combined electrophysiological and optical recording of multi-scale neural circuit dynamics

Chris Lewis
University of Zurich
Apr 29, 2024

This webinar will showcase new approaches for electrophysiological recordings using our silicon neural probes and surface arrays combined with diverse optical methods such as wide-field or 2-photon imaging, fiber photometry, and optogenetic perturbations in awake, behaving mice. Multi-modal recording of single units and local field potentials across cortex, hippocampus and thalamus alongside calcium activity via GCaMP6F in cortical neurons in triple-transgenic animals or in hippocampal astrocytes via viral transduction are brought to bear to reveal hitherto inaccessible and under-appreciated aspects of coordinated dynamics in the brain.

SeminarNeuroscience

Optimal information loading into working memory in prefrontal cortex

Maté Lengyel
University of Cambridge, UK
Jun 21, 2022

Working memory involves the short-term maintenance of information and is critical in many tasks. The neural circuit dynamics underlying working memory remain poorly understood, with different aspects of prefrontal cortical (PFC) responses explained by different putative mechanisms. By mathematical analysis, numerical simulations, and using recordings from monkey PFC, we investigate a critical but hitherto ignored aspect of working memory dynamics: information loading. We find that, contrary to common assumptions, optimal information loading involves inputs that are largely orthogonal, rather than similar, to the persistent activities observed during memory maintenance. Using a novel, theoretically principled metric, we show that PFC exhibits the hallmarks of optimal information loading and we find that such dynamics emerge naturally as a dynamical strategy in task-optimized recurrent neural networks. Our theory unifies previous, seemingly conflicting theories of memory maintenance based on attractor or purely sequential dynamics, and reveals a normative principle underlying the widely observed phenomenon of dynamic coding in PFC.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

The emergence and modulation of time in neural circuits and behavior

Luca Mazzucato
University of Oregon
Jan 21, 2021

Spontaneous behavior in animals and humans shows a striking amount of variability both in the spatial domain (which actions to choose) and temporal domain (when to act). Concatenating actions into sequences and behavioral plans reveals the existence of a hierarchy of timescales ranging from hundreds of milliseconds to minutes. How do multiple timescales emerge from neural circuit dynamics? How do circuits modulate temporal responses to flexibly adapt to changing demands? In this talk, we will present recent results from experiments and theory suggesting a new computational mechanism generating the temporal variability underlying naturalistic behavior and cortical activity. We will show how neural activity from premotor areas unfolds through temporal sequences of attractors, which predict the intention to act. These sequences naturally emerge from recurrent cortical networks, where correlated neural variability plays a crucial role in explaining the observed variability in action timing. We will then discuss how reaction times can be accelerated or slowed down via gain modulation, flexibly induced by neuromodulation or perturbations; and how gain modulation may control response timing in the visual cortex. Finally, we will present a new biologically plausible way to generate a reservoir of multiple timescales in cortical circuits.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

The emergence and modulation of time in neural circuits and behavior

Luca Mazzucato
University of Oregon
Nov 24, 2020

Spontaneous behavior in animals and humans shows a striking amount of variability both in the spatial domain (which actions to choose) and temporal domain (when to act). Concatenating actions into sequences and behavioral plans reveals the existence of a hierarchy of timescales ranging from hundreds of milliseconds to minutes. How do multiple timescales emerge from neural circuit dynamics? How do circuits modulate temporal responses to flexibly adapt to changing demands? In this talk, we will present recent results from experiments and theory suggesting a new computational mechanism generating the temporal variability underlying naturalistic behavior. We will show how neural activity from premotor areas unfolds through temporal sequences of attractors, which predict the intention to act. These sequences naturally emerge from recurrent cortical networks, where correlated neural variability plays a crucial role in explaining the observed variability in action timing. We will then discuss how reaction times in these recurrent circuits can be accelerated or slowed down via gain modulation, induced by neuromodulation or perturbations. Finally, we will present a general mechanism producing a reservoir of multiple timescales in recurrent networks.