COSYNE 2013 I Sunday, 3 March 7:30 Am Breakfast 8:30 Am Session 10: Learning/Decision Making Invited Speaker: P
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10th Annual Meeting COSYNEComputational and Systems Neuroscience 2013 www.cosyne.org MAIN MEETING Feb 28 - Mar 3, 2013 Salt Lake City, UT Program Summary Thursday, 28 February 4:00 pm Registration opens 5:30 pm Welcome reception 6:20 pm Opening remarks 6:30 pm Session 1: Keynote Invited speaker: W. Bialek 7:30 pm Poster Session I Friday, 1 March 7:30 am Breakfast 8:30 am Session 2: Circuits Invited speaker: E. Marder; 3 accepted talks 10:30 am Session 3: Vision 6 accepted talks 12:00 pm Lunch break 2:00 pm Session 4: Audition Invited speaker: B. Shinn-Cunningham; 3 accepted talks 4:00 pm Session 5: Sensory Processing Invited speaker: Y. Fregnac; 2 accepted talks 5:15 pm Dinner break 7:30 pm Poster Session II Saturday, 2 March 7:30 am Breakfast 8:30 am Session 6: Coding/Computation Invited speaker: I. Fiete; 3 accepted talks 10:30 am Session 7: Coding/Computation Invited speaker: T. Sejnowski; 3 accepted talks 12:00 pm Lunch break 2:00 pm Session 8: Decision making Invited speaker: C. Brody; 3 accepted talks 4:00 pm Session 9: Networks Invited speaker: K. Boahen; 2 accepted talks 5:15 pm Dinner break 7:30 pm Poster Session III COSYNE 2013 i Sunday, 3 March 7:30 am Breakfast 8:30 am Session 10: Learning/Decision making Invited speaker: P. Schrater; 3 accepted talks 10:30 am Session 11: Behavior/Motor Invited speaker: D. Gordon; 3 accepted talks 12:00 pm Lunch break 2:00 pm Session 12: Neurons, Stimuli and Perception Invited speaker: A. Movshon; 1 accepted talk ii COSYNE 2013 Poster Session Topics Session I Session II Session III Thursday Friday Saturday Topic Area Cognition: attention, memory 1–3 1–3 1–2 Bayesian, optimality 4–10 4–8 3–9 Neural correlations, population coding 11–14 9–13 10–13 Cognition: decision making, reward, confidence 15–26 14–24 14–25 Neural encoding, decoding 27–33 25–31 26–32 Circuits 34–45 32–42 33–43 Basal ganglia, bird song, grid cells, hippocampus, 46–50 43–48 44–47 navigation Sensory: hearing 51–53 49–50 48–49 Cognition: objects, categories 54–55 51–53 50–52 Learning / plasticity 56–61 54–59 53–57 Motor systems 62–66 60–65 58–63 Oscillations 67–68 66–68 64–67 Sensory: adaptation, statistics, perception 69–71 69–70 68–70 Sensory: chemical, multisensory, somatosensory 72–76 71–74 71–75 Sensory: vision 77–89 75–88 76–88 Networks theory, modeling, computational 90–100 89–100 89–100 COSYNE 2013 iii The MIT Press The Neural Basis How We Remember of Free Will BRAIN MECHANISMS OF CRITERIAL CAUSATION EPISODIC MEMORY Peter Ulric Tse Michael E. Hasselmo A neuroscientific perspective on the A novel perspective on the biologi- mind–body problem that focuses on cal mechanisms of episodic memory, how the brain actually accomplishes focusing on the encoding and retrieval mental causation. of spatiotemporal trajectories. 384 pp., 28 illus., $38 cloth 336 pp., 8 color plates, 111 b&w illus., $40 cloth Brain and the Gaze Visual Population Codes ON THE ACTIVE BOUNDARIES TOWARD A COMMON MULTIVARIATE OF VISION FRAMEWORK FOR CELL RECORDING AND FUNCTIONAL IMAGING Jan Lauwereyns edited by Nikolaus Kriegeskorte A radically integrative account of visual and Gabriel Kreiman perception, grounded in neuroscience How visual content is represented in but drawing on insights from philoso- neuronal population codes and how to phy and psychology. analyze such codes with multivariate 312 pp., 49 illus., $40 cloth techniques. Computational Neuroscience series Discovering the Human 632 pp., 14 color plates, 151 b&w illus., $55 cloth Connectome Olaf Sporns Biological Learning A pioneer in the field outlines new em- and Control pirical and computational approaches HOW THE BRAIN BUILDS to mapping the neural connections of REPRESENTATIONS, PREDICTS the human brain. EVENTS, AND MAKES DECISIONS 224 pp., 17 color plates, 55 b&w illus., $35 cloth Reza Shadmehr and Sandro Mussa-Ivaldi Principles of Brain A novel theoretical framework that de- scribes a possible rationale for the regu- Dynamics larity in how we move, how we learn, GLOBAL STATE INTERACTIONS and how our brain predicts events. edited by Mikhail I. Rabinovich, Computational Neuroscience series • 400 pp., 133 illus., $40 cloth Karl J. Friston, and Pablo Varona Experimental and theoretical approaches back in print to global brain dynamics that draw on the latest research Sensory Communication in the field. edited by Walter A. Rosenblith Computational Available again: a landmark collec- Neuroscience series tion on sensation and perception that 360 pp., 36 color Visit our remains influential. plates, 94 b&w illus., BOOTH $65 cloth for a 30% 860 pp., $50 paper DISCOUNT The MIT Press mitpress.mit.edu is the new centre Empowered by imec, KU Leuven and VIB for Neuro-Electronics Research Flanders. NERF is a joint basic research initiative, Currently, NERF hosts four research set up by VIB, imec and KU Leuven to laboratories: understand the function of brain circuits. • chemosensory processing in zebrafish NERF labs are located in the heart of (Yaksi Lab) Europe in Leuven Belgium on imec’s • visual processing in mice (Bonin Lab) nanotechnology campus. At NERF, world- • memory processing and spatial class neuroscientists perform innovative, navigation in rodents (Kloosterman Lab) collaborative, interdisciplinary • learning and decision-making (Haesler lab) research, combining • neural circuitry of vision (Farrow Lab) nanoelectronics with and two visiting groups: neurobiology. • Optical control of neural activity in behaving animals (Battaglia Group) • Novel neural probes and large-scale anatomy (McNaughton Group) NERF is looking for enthusiastic, energetic early career researchers (at the PhD and postdoc level) with strong interests in systems neuroscience to join our laboratories. PhD students will have the opportunity to enroll in KU Leuven international PhD programs. For more information, visit our website (www.nerf.be). For applications, please contact individual PIs directly. Imec - NERF, Also visit us during Kapeldreef 75, the upcoming NERF 2013 3001 Leuven Belgium Neurotechnology Symposium on April 22-23 (www.nerf.be/symposium). Subscribe to Active Zone The Cell Press Neuroscience Newsletter Featuring: Cutting-edge neuroscience from Cell Press and beyond Interviews with leading neuroscientists Special features: Podcasts, Webinars and Review Issues Neural Currents - cultural events, exhibits and new books And much more Read now at bit.ly/activezone SEEKING C OMPUTATIONAL S CIENTIST IN S ENSORIMOTOR C ONTROL We are currently hiring to fill multiple full-time positions in engineering, and computational modeling of sensorimotor control at Brain Corporation, San Diego, CA. We are seeking exceptional candidates with practical experience in sensorimotor processing, reinforcement learning or action selection and who have excellent programming skills in C/C++, Python or MATLAB. TEN REASONS TO J OIN Do you have substantial experience in BRAIN C ORPORATION any of the following: constructing internal models and motor primitives; Work on the most exciting scientific challenge of the century. modeling locomotion, reaching and grasping; vision for navigation and Outstanding team of computational scientists, programmers, and control; oculomotor systems, engineers. proprioceptive systems, spinal cord, cerebellum, basal ganglia, or motor Industry-level salary, stock option grant, matching 401K, end of year cortex; or computational or theoretical bonus. research in spike coding, spiking network dynamics and plasticity? Health, dental, and vision insurance. Free breakfast and lunch at work; Please submit your CV/resume and relevant lots of healthly choices. papers to Dr. Eugene M. Izhikevich, CEO at [email protected] Free iPhone5 for new employees; free gadgets twice per year. Live 5 minutes from the Pacific WE APPLY NEUROSCIENCE TO ROBOTICS. WE Ocean. Surf or dive any day of the year. Bike to work. ARE INTRIGUED BY THE SECRETS OF THE BRAIN AND WE USE SIMULATIONS TO Bring your family to sunny San UNDERSTAND NEURAL COMPUTATIONS. WE Diego: beaches, zoo, Sea World, Legoland, Wild Animal Park. ARE PASSIONATE ABOUT CHANGING THE WORLD WITH SMARTER ROBOTS THAT HAVE Family-friendly events, all-expense- ARTIFICIAL NERVOUS SYSTEMS. paid holiday retreats, deep-sea fishing. Attend conferences. We even stay an extra day at the Cliff Lodge just to ski. 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Contact us for a demonstration in your lab. toll free (866) 324-5197 local (801) 413-0139 fax (801) 413-2874 ® email [email protected] © 2013 ripple LLC, patents pending About Cosyne About Cosyne The annual Cosyne meeting provides an inclusive forum for the exchange of experimental and