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COSYNE2013: Abstract submission closes on Fri Nov 16
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Computational and Systems Neuroscience (Cosyne)
MAIN MEETING WORKSHOPS
Feb 28 - Mar 3, 2013 Mar 4 - 5, 2013
Salt Lake City, Utah Snowbird Ski Resort, Utah
http://www.cosyne.org
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ABSTRACT SUBMISSION DEADLINE:
Fri 16 Nov 2012 (11:59pm PST)
The annual Cosyne meeting provides an inclusive forum for the exchange
of empirical and theoretical approaches to problems in systems
neuroscience, in order to understand how neural systems function.
The MAIN MEETING is single-track. A set of invited talks are selected by
the Executive Committee, and additional talks and posters are selected
by the Program Committee, based on submitted abstracts. The WORKSHOPS
feature in-depth discussion of current topics of interest, in a small
group setting.
Cosyne topics include but are not limited to: neural coding, natural
scene statistics, dendritic computation, neural basis of persistent
activity, nonlinear receptive field mapping, representations of time and
sequence, reward systems, decision-making, synaptic plasticity, map
formation and plasticity, population coding, attention, and computation
with spiking networks.
INVITED SPEAKERS:
William Bialek (Princeton)
Kwabena Boahen (Stanford)
Carlos Brody (Princeton)
Ila Fiete (U Texas, Austin)
Yves Fregnac (CNRS-UNIC)
Deborah Gordon (Stanford)
Eve Marder (Brandeis)
J Anthony Movshon (NYU)
Paul Schrater (U Minnesota)
Terrence Sejnowski (Salk)
Barbara Shinn-Cuningham (Boston U)
When preparing an abstract, authors should be aware that not all
abstracts can be accepted for the meeting, due to space constraints.
Abstracts will be selected based on the clarity with which they convey
the substance, significance, and originality of the work to be presented.
WORKSHOP TITLES:
The awake and anesthetized cortex â similar or different?
Beyond optogenetics: new approaches for systems neuroscience.
Dendritic computation in neural circuits.
Furry statisticians â how rodents infer the meaningful properties of
unreliable environments.
Large-scale neuronal simulations â science, languages and platforms.
Neural mechanisms for orienting decisions across the animal kingdom.
Neural mechanisms of foraging decisions.
A new chapter in the study of functional maps in visual cortex.
Priors in perception, decision-making and physiology.
Reticular microcircuits: from structure to function.
Reward-based decision-making.
Understanding the brain by building one: New neuroscience on VLSI
hardware.
Why does neocortex need six layers and even more cell types?
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE:
General Chairs: Jonathan Pillow (UT Austin) and Nicole Rust (Penn)
Program Chairs: Marlene Cohen (U Pittsburgh) and Peter Latham (UCL)
Workshop Chairs: Jessica Cardin (Yale) and Tatyana Sharpee (Salk)
Communications Chair: Kanaka Rajan (Princeton)
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE:
Anne Churchland (CSHL)
Zachary Mainen (Champalimaud)
Alexandre Pouget (U Geneva)
Anthony Zador (CSHL)