BI 134 Mandyam Srinivasan: Bee Flight and Cognition

BI 134 Mandyam Srinivasan: Bee Flight and Cognition

Brain Inspired
Brain Inspired
BI 134 Mandyam Srinivasan: Bee Flight and Cognition
Loading
/

Srini is Emeritus Professor at Queensland Brain Institute in Australia. In this episode, he shares his wide range of behavioral experiments elucidating the principles of flight and navigation in insects. We discuss how bees use optic flow signals to determine their speed, distance, proximity to objects, and to gracefully land. These abilities are largely governed via control systems, balancing incoming perceptual signals with internal reference signals. We also talk about a few of the aerial robotics projects his research has inspired, many of the other cognitive skills bees can learn, the possibility of their feeling pain , and the nature of their possible subjective conscious experience.

BI 133 Ken Paller: Lucid Dreaming, Memory, and Sleep

BI 133 Ken Paller: Lucid Dreaming, Memory, and Sleep

Brain Inspired
Brain Inspired
BI 133 Ken Paller: Lucid Dreaming, Memory, and Sleep
Loading
/

communication with subjects while they experience lucid dreams. This new paradigm opens many avenues to study the neuroscience and psychology of sleep, dreams, memory, and learning, and to the improvement and optimization of sleep for cognition. Ken and his team are developing a Lucid Dreaming App which is freely available via his lab. We also discuss much of his work on memory and learning in general and specifically related to sleep, like reactivating specific memories during sleep to improve learning.

BI 132 Ila Fiete: A Grid Scaffold for Memory

BI 132 Ila Fiete: A Grid Scaffold for Memory

Brain Inspired
Brain Inspired
BI 132 Ila Fiete: A Grid Scaffold for Memory
Loading
/

Ila discusses her theoretical neuroscience work suggesting how our memories are formed within the cognitive maps we use to navigate the world and navigate our thoughts. The main idea is that grid cell networks in the entorhinal cortex internally generate a structured scaffold, which gets sent to the hippocampus. Neurons in the hippocampus, like the well-known place cells, receive that scaffolding and also receive external signals from the neocortex- signals about what’s happening in the world and in our thoughts. Thus, the place cells act to “pin” what’s happening in our neocortex to the scaffold, forming a memory. We also discuss her background as a physicist and her approach as a “neurophysicist”, and a review she’s publishing all about the many brain areas and cognitive functions being explained as attractor landscapes within a dynamical systems framework.

BI 131 Sri Ramaswamy and Jie Mei: Neuromodulation-aware DNNs

BI 131 Sri Ramaswamy and Jie Mei: Neuromodulation-aware DNNs

Brain Inspired
Brain Inspired
BI 131 Sri Ramaswamy and Jie Mei: Neuromodulation-aware DNNs
Loading
/

Sri and Mei join me to discuss how including principles of neuromodulation in deep learning networks may improve network performance. It’s an ever-present question how much detail to include in models, and we are in the early stages of learning how neuromodulators and their interactions shape biological brain function. But as we continue to learn more, Sri and Mei are interested in building “neuromodulation-aware DNNs”.

BI 130 Eve Marder: Modulation of Networks

BI 130 Eve Marder: Modulation of Networks

Brain Inspired
Brain Inspired
BI 130 Eve Marder: Modulation of Networks
Loading
/

Eve discusses many of the lessons she has learned studying a small nervous system, the crustacean stomatogastric nervous system (STG). The STG has only about 30 neurons and its connections and neurophysiology are well-understood. Yet Eve’s work has shown it functions under a remarkable diversity of conditions, and does so is a remarkable variety of ways. We discuss her work on the STG specifically, and what her work implies about trying to study much larger nervous systems, like our human brains.