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CCN 2018 - Annual Conference on Cognitive Computational Neuroscience

Date2018-09-05 - 2018-09-08

Deadline2018-05-20

VenuePhiladelphia, USA - United States USA - United States

Keywords

Websitehttps://ccneuro.org

Topics/Call fo Papers

Cognitive science has developed computational models at the cognitive level to explain aspects of complex behavior. Computational neuroscience has developed neurobiologically plausible computational models to explain neuronal responses to sensory stimuli and certain low-dimensional decision, memory, and control processes. Cognitive neuroscience has mapped a broad range of cognitive processes onto brain regions. Artificial intelligence has developed models that perform feats of intelligence. Building on these advances, we now need to put the pieces of the puzzle together. CCN is unique in its focus on the intersection between these fields, where comprehensive brain-computational models are beginning to explain high-level neural representations and dynamics, and complex feats of intelligent behavior that involve rich world knowledge.
What topics are appropriate for this conference?
We encourage participation from experimentalists and theoreticians investigating complex brain computations in humans and animals. CCN will draw researchers that address challenges including:
Understanding brain information processing underlying real-world tasks that involve natural stimuli, rich knowledge, complex inferences, and behavior
Revealing principles of brain connectivity and dynamics at multiple scales
Developing cognitive- or neural-level models of perception, cognition, emotion, and action
Using brain and behavioral data to test such models
Understanding commonalities and differences between biological and artificial intelligent systems
Using techniques from machine learning and artificial intelligence to model brain information processing, and, conversely, incorporating neurobiological principles in machine learning and artificial intelligence
Measuring brain activity at multiple spatial scales in humans, nonhuman primates, and other animals
Using psychophysical techniques to relate sensory inputs to behavioral responses

Last modified: 2018-03-13 13:41:34