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Fall 2008

The Challenge of the Neocortex for Information Technology

Reception
Wednesday, Oct. 1
4:30 p.m.
0115 Chemistry and Nuclear Engineering Building

Lecture | PDF flyer |
Wednesday, Oct. 1
5:00 p.m.
0115 Chemistry Building (NOTE: NOT the Chem/Nuclear Engineering Bldg.)

Roundtable discussion
Thursday, Oct. 2
11:00 a.m.
1146 AV Williams Building

DLSRodney Douglas
Professor of Neuroinformatics
Institute of Neuroinformatics (INI)
ETH/UZH, Zurich

 


Abstract
Brains solve in real-time a variety of difficult computational problems that cannot yet be solved by computers using very much faster hardware. Their superior performance is likely due to a fundamentally different style of computational that nature has evolved. The differences lie in the basic processing components, their system architecture, methods of information encoding and transformation, and processes of self-construction, -configuration and -calibration. More than any other part of the vertebrate brain, it is the neocortex that is crucial in the ability of animals to behave intelligently, and so the analysis of its organization and operation is likely to reveal the principles of computation that nature has gained over eons of evolution. In this lecture I will briefly describe four lines of research at INI that pursue these principles: quantitative studies of the adult neuronal circuits; simulation of their developmental self-construction; exploration of an interesting primitive processing operation that is likely embedded in these circuits; and the implementation of this operation in neuromorphic electronic circuits.

Biography
Rodney Douglas is Professor of Neuroinformatics, and Co-Director at the Institute of Neuroinformatics of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) and the the University of Zurich. He graduated in Science and Medicine at the University of Cape Town. After obtaining a Doctorate in Neuroscience, he moved to the Anatomical Neuropharmacology Unit in Oxford, where he continued his research on the anatomy and biophysics of the microcircuitry of the neocortex together with Kevan Martin. Concurrently, as Visiting Associate and then Visiting Professor at Caltech, he extended his research interests in neuronal computation to the modeling of cortical circuits using digital methods (together with Christof Koch), and also by the fabrication of neuromorphic analog VLSI circuits (together with Misha Mahowald). In 1996 he and Kevan Martin moved to Zurich to establish the Institute of Neuroinformatics. In 2000, Douglas was awarded the Koerber Foundation Prize for European Science. His research interests include experimental anatomy and physiology of visual cortex; theoretical analysis and simulation of neocortical neuronal circuits; design and fabrication of neuromorphic systems that exploit analog Very Large Scale Integration methods to construct electronic circuits that perform analogous signal processing and computational functions to biological neuronal networks; and the principles of network self-construction.

Previous Distinguished Lecturers

2008

Friday, May 2
Applications of Formal Methods in Model-Based Development of Embedded Control Systems
Bruce Krogh
Professor, Electrical and Computer Engineering
Carnegie Mellon University
| PDF flyer |

Wednesday, April 16
4G Wireless Technology Vision
Siavash M. Alamouti
Intel Fellow, Mobility Group
Chief Technology Officer
Mobility Wireless Group
Intel Corporation
| PDF flyer |

2007

Tuesday, Dec. 4, 2007
Microsystems engineering at the interface of physics, biology and chemistry: Where are we now and where are we heading?
Andreas G. Andreou
Professor, Electrical and Computer Engineering and Computer Science
Whitaker Biomedical Engineering Institute
Center for Language and Speech Processing
Johns Hopkins University
| video |PDF flyer |

Monday, Oct. 15, 2007
Systems Biology: How Can Control Engineers Help to Understand Biology?
Frank Allgöwer
Director, Institute for Systems Theory and Automatic Control
Professor, Mechanical Engineering Department
University of Stuttgart, Germany
| no video available | PDF flyer |

Monday, March 26, 2007
Feedback Fundamentals: Old and New
Petar V. Kokotovic
Professor, Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering
University of California Santa Barbara
| video | PDF flyer |

Tuesday, February 13
Understanding the Simulation of Mobility Models
Jean-Yves Le Boudec
Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL)
Lausanne, Switzerland
| PDF flyer |

2006

Tuesday, November 7, 2006
Listening in a cocktail party with acoustic and electric hearing

Bob Carlyon
Medical Research Council
Cognition & Brain Sciences Unit
University of Cambridge
Cambridge, England
| video | PDF flyer |

Tuesday, September 19      
The Emerging Science of Spontaneous Order

Steven Strogatz
Professor, Theoretical and Applied Mathematics
Cornell University
| video |PDF flyer |

Tuesday, May 2
Control Systems Theory and a Qualitative/Quantitative Approach to Systems Biology
Eduardo Sontag
Department of Mathematics
BioMaPS Institute for Quantitative Biology, Computer Science and Electrical and Computer Engineering Rutgers University
| PDF flyer |

Tuesday, March 7
Hybrid Systems and Control
S. Shankar Sastry
Director, Center for Information Technology in the Interest of Society
NEC Distinguished Professor of EECS and Professor of Bioengineering
University of California, Berkeley
| video | PDF flyer |

2005

Tuesday, November 15
Signal Processing and Wireless Networks
H. Vincent Poor
George Van Ness Lothrop Professor in Engineering
Department of Electrical Engineering, Princeton University
| PDF flyer |

Tuesday, October 11
Robust and Adaptive Optimization:
A Tractable Approach to Optimization under Uncertainty

Dimitris Bertsimas, Ph.D.
Boeing Professor of Operations Research
Sloan School of Management; Operations Research Center
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
| video | PDF flyer |

Tuesday, April 12
The Operational Semantics of Hybrid Systems
Edward A. Lee
Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences, University of California at Berkeley
| video | PDF flyer |

Wednesday, March 9
Decoding the Human Genome by Multi-Species Sequence Comparisons
Eric D. Green, M.D., Ph.D.
National Human Genome Research Institute, National Institutes of Health
| video | PDF flyer |

2004

Tuesday and Wednesday, November 16 and 17
Cell Talk
Bhubaneswar “Bud” Mishra
Professor of Computer Science, Mathematics & Cell Biology (Courant Institute & NYU School of Medicine) New York University
| video | PDF flyer |

Wednesday, October 13
A Unified View of Temporal Difference Methods for Neuro-Dynamic Programming
Dimitri P. Bertsekas
McAfee Professor of Engineering, Laboratory for Information and Decision Systems
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
| video | PDF flyer |

Friday, April 16
From Hierarchies to Polyarchies: Visualizing Multiple Relationships
George G. Robertson, ACM Fellow and Senior Researcher, Microsoft Research
| video | PDF flyer |

Friday, Feb. 20
Dynamics in Genetic Networks
Leon Glass, FRSC, Isadore Rosenfeld Chair in Cardiology and Professor of Physiology, McGill University, Montreal, Canada
| video | PDF flyer |

2003

Thursday, Dec. 18
New Perspective on Wolfram’s ‘New Kind of Science’
Leon O. Chua; University of California, Berkeley; Berkeley, Calif.
| video | PDF flyer |

Monday, Oct. 20 and Tuesday, Oct. 21
Automated Synthesis of High-Performance Planners and Schedulers
Douglas Smith, Kestrel Institute, Palo Alto, Calif.
| PDF flyer |

Friday, April 18
Scientific Discovery through Advanced Computing
Alan J. Laub, Office of Science, U.S. Department of Energy
| PDF flyer |

Friday, March 14
Swarm Intelligence
Eric Bonabeau, Icosystem Corp., Cambridge, Mass.
| PDF flyer |

2002

December 6
Algorithmic Aspects of the Internet
Christos Papadimitriou, University of California, Berkeley
| PDF flyer |

October 25
Video Re-Coding
Bede Liu, Princeton University
| PDF flyer |

 

 

   
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