Time, Timing and Neural Dynamics

26 octobre 2022
Durée : 01:30:34
Nombre de vues 10
Nombre d’ajouts dans une liste de lecture 0
Nombre de favoris 0

Conference by Dean Buonomano,

Invitation by ITI NeuroStra

The ability to tell time, represent and encode temporal information, and use past experiences to predict the future, are among the most fundamental computations the brain performs. But how do networks of neurons tell time and encode temporal information in a flexible manner? Precisely because of the importance of time, we argue that most neural circuits are capable of temporal computations. But in contrast to the clocks on our wrists that rely on the same mechanism to tell time across a wide range of scales, the brain engages many different mechanisms and circuits to tell time. We and others have proposed that on the scale of seconds timing relies on neural population clocks: time-varying patterns of neural activity that emerge from the dynamics of recurrent neural circuits. More generally, we propose that such dynamic regimes represent a fundamental computational strategy in the brain.

Mots clés : neural dynamics neuroscience time perception

 Informations

Commentaire(s)

Chargement en cours…