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  3. Cognitive maps for navigation in the brain: Simultaneous rigidity and flexibility through modularity
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Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences (BCS)
Special Seminar

Cognitive maps for navigation in the brain: Simultaneous rigidity and flexibility through modularity

Speaker(s)
Ila Fiete, PhD
Add to CalendarAmerica/New_YorkCognitive maps for navigation in the brain: Simultaneous rigidity and flexibility through modularity11/08/2019 6:00 pm11/08/2019 7:00 pmSingleton Auditorium (46-3002)
November 8, 2019
6:00 pm - 7:00 pm
Location
Singleton Auditorium (46-3002)
Contact
Matthew Regan
    Description

    Generalizably solving complex problems involves decomposing them into simpler components and combining these parts in effective ways to solve new instances. The hippocampal complex has been a rich playground for understanding how the brain constructs and combines modular structures for flexible computation. This is because the hippocampus and associated areas generate strikingly explicit emergent representations of abstract (latent) low-dimensional variables in the domain of spatial navigation that form the elements of spatial inference but are not directly specified by the world. I will summarize mechanistic models of these circuits; describe recent progress in characterizing the rigid nature of these representations through unsupervised discovery of latent low-dimensional structure from population data; and show how these rigid and simple low-dimensional circuits can generate, in a highly flexible way, represenations and memory of different (spatial and non-spatial) variables, as seen in recent experiments. I will conclude with an overview of how understanding these circuits in the realm of navigation gives insights into their potential use in higher-dimensional non-spatial cognitive representations as well.

    Speaker Bio

    Ila Fiete builds theoretical models and tools that are elucidating computations performed by the brain as it interacts with the world. Her focus includes describing how plasticity and development shape networks to perform computation and how the brain represents and manipulates information. She works closely with collaborators to design experiments that allow analysis of how the brain solves complex tasks, such as spatial navigation. By combining theoretical insights with predictions and designs for experiment, Fiete aims to better understand how the brain constructs and uses memory for spatial and non-spatial reasoning, the mechanisms for error control in neural codes, and rules for synaptic plasticity that enable neural circuit organization. Through these avenues, she hopes to better understand the circuits underlying phenomena including short-term memory, integration, and inference, navigation, and reasoning in the brain.

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