2016 Kavli Summer Institute in Cognitive Neuroscience
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v. 03/21/16 2016 Kavli Summer Institute in Cognitive Neuroscience Week 1: Brain Circuits in Behavior and Cognition* Course Directors Robert Knight Josef Parvizi Psychology & Neuroscience Neurology & Neurological Sciences University of California, Berkeley Stanford University During this week of the institute, we bring together neuroscientists using cutting-edge approaches including animal and human electrophysiology and neuroimaging. These methods are being used to address fundamental issues in neuroscience including perception, memory and decision-making. The course will emphasize the integration of data across species and the power of combining different approaches to understanding both local and distributed neural processing. Monday (6/20): PHYSIOLOGY FROM PERCEPT TO CONCEPT 8:00-8:30 Breakfast 8:30-8:45 Introductory Remarks – Robert Knight, Josef Parvizi, Barry Giesbrecht, Mike Miller 8:45-10:15 Josef Parvizi, Stanford University, ‘Localization of Functions in the Human Brain: Insights from Intracranial EEG and Electrical Brain Stimulation’ 10:15-10:30 Break 10:30-11:45 Ueli Rutishauer, Cedars Sinai Medical Center, Cal Tech, ‘Probing the Mechanisms of Human Declarative Memory at the Single-Neuron Level’ 11:45-1:45 Lunch 1:45-5:00 Lab Session: – Neuroanatomy – Skirmantas Janusonis (UCSB) LOCATION: Physical Sciences Building North (PSBN), Rms. 2664 and 2666 http://www.aw.id.ucsb.edu/maps/ucsbmap.html (in D5, next to Chemistry). 5:00 Adjourn Tuesday (6/21): BRAIN CIRCUITS AND CODES 8:00-8:45 Breakfast 8:45-10:15 Mingzhou Ding, University of Florida, ‘Analyzing Brain Networks with Granger Causality’ 10:15-10:30 Break 10:30-11:45 Mark Stokes, Oxford University, ‘Exploring Activity-Silent States in Working Memory’ 11:45-1:45 Lunch 1:45-5:00 Lab Session: – Neuropsychology Videos – Robert Knight and Robert Rafal (Univ. Delaware), Josef Parvizi 5:00 Adjourn Wednesday (6/22): NETWORKS AND AGING 1 v. 03/21/16 8:00-8:45 Breakfast 8:45-10:15 Patricia Reuter-Lorenz, University of Michigan, ‘The Aging Brain and Implications for Maintaining Cognitive Health' 10:15-10:30 Break 10:30-11:45 Steve Petersen, Washington University, ‘Some cool (and not so cool) $Óˆ† about resting state fMRI’ 11:45-1:45 Lunch 1:45-5:00 Lab Session:– Human Neuropathology Knight, Rafal, Parvizi 5:00 Adjourn Thursday (6/23): SINGLE NEURONS TO RECORDING ARRAYS IN COGNITION 8:00-8:45 Breakfast 8:45-10:15 Sharon Thompson-Schill, University of Pennsylvania, ‘Conceptual Integration’ 10:15-10:30 Break 10:30-11:45 Marlene Behrmann, Carnegie Mellon University, ‘Neural Basis of Object Recognition’ 11:45-1:45 Lunch 1:45-5:00 Debate Preparation (no lab) 6:30-8:00 DEBATES: Teams 1 and 2 (fellows will be organized into teams during week 1) Friday (6/24): NETWORKS FOR ATTENTION AND EMOTION 8:00-8:45 Breakfast 8:45-10:15 Joy Geng, UC Davis, ‘The Role of Mental Templates in Distractor Suppression’ 10:15-10:30 Break 10:30-11:45 Ralph Adolphs, Cal Tech, ‘The Social Brain and Autism' 11:45-1:45 Lunch 1:45-3:15 Robert Knight, UC Berkeley, ‘Frontal Cortex Physiology and Human Behavior’ 3:15 Adjourn 5:30 BBQ at Goleta Beach (walking distance from campus – see map) Acknowledgments: We are deeply grateful to the National Institute of Mental Health and the National Institute on Drug Abuse for their support of this training program (NIMH 2R25 MH057541), and to the Kavli Foundation for their support. Thanks also to Jayne Kelly at the Sage Center for the Study of the Mind at UCSB, and to Noelle Reis at the Center for Mind and Brain at UC Davis for their assistance and support. *Note: Speaker times/dates tentative until schedule finalized 2 .