CVNet - 22nd CVS Symposium 2000 Neural Coding

From: Color and Vision Network (cvnet@lawton.ewind.com)
Date: Fri Mar 03 2000 - 10:32:46 PST

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    To: hchan@kirkham.ewind.com
    From: Barbara Arnold <barba@cvs.rochester.edu>
    Subject: Please post

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    22nd CVS Symposium 2000

    NEURAL CODING

    June 1 - 3, 2000

    For more information or an application, see our website:
    www.cvs.rochester.edu or contact Barbara Arnold at 716-275-8659 or
    barba@cvs.rochester.edu

    One of the fundamental difficulties in understanding the neural basis of
    perception/cognition is understanding the computational or informational
    significance of neural activity. This is true at all levels: from
    individual synapses and neurons, to local circuits and large-scale
    organization. The enormous complexity of the brain and the behavior it
    generates demands more sophisticated development of theories of neural
    coding and communication on a large scale.

    In the tradition of past CVS Symposia, our goal is to bring recent
    developments in this fundamentally important topic to a broader audience
    than that captured by more specialized meetings. We have designed the
    symposium to bring together leading scientists with diverse perspectives to
    provide an opportunity for cross-fertilization and interaction that is not
    usually available.

    PROGRAM FOR THE MEETING

    Thursday, June 1

    I. Information Coding in Spike Trains
    II. Early Circuits

    Friday, June 2

    III. Coding Experience: development and plasticity
    IV. Functional specialization and distributed codes

    Saturday, June 3

    V. Large Scale information flow.

    SPEAKERS FOR MEETING(updated)

         MOSHE ABELES, Hebrew University
           AD AERTSEN, Albert-Ludwigs.University, Germany
           DANA BALLARD, University of Rochester
           KEN BRITTEN, UC Davis
           CAROL COLBY, University of Pittsburgh
           MAURIZIO CORBETTA, Washington University
           DAVID J. FIELD, Cornell University
           ZACHARY F. MAINEN, Cold Spring Harbor Lab
           KEN MILLER, University of California-San Francisco
           ALEXANDRE POUGET, University of Rochester
           R. CLAY REID, Harvard Medical School
           JEFFREY D. SCHALL, Vanderbilt University
           TERRENCE J. SEJNOWSKI, Salk Institute for Biological Studies
           ADAM SILLITO, University College London
           HANS SUPER, IOI, The Netherlands
           MICHAEL WELIKY, University of Rochester
           RAFAEL MARCOS YUSTE, Columbia University
           ANTHONY M. ZADOR, Salk Institute
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    Barbara N. Arnold
    Administrator email: barba@cvs.rochester.edu
    Center for Visual Science phone: 716 275 8659
    University of Rochester fax: 716 271 3043
    Meliora Hall 274
    Rochester NY 14627-0270
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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    <bold><fontfamily><param>Times</param><bigger><bigger>22nd CVS
    Symposium 2000

    NEURAL CODING

    June 1 - 3, 2000

    </bigger></bigger></fontfamily></bold><fontfamily><param>Times</param><bigge=
    r><bigger>For
    more information or an application, see our website:
    www.cvs.rochester.edu or contact Barbara Arnold at 716-275-8659 or
    barba@cvs.rochester.edu

    One of the fundamental difficulties in understanding the neural basis
    of perception/cognition is understanding the computational or
    informational significance of neural activity. This is true at all
    levels: from individual synapses and neurons, to local circuits and
    large-scale organization. The enormous complexity of the brain and the
    behavior it generates demands more sophisticated development of
    theories of neural coding and communication on a large scale.

    In the tradition of past CVS Symposia, our goal is to bring recent
    developments in this fundamentally important topic to a broader
    audience than that captured by more specialized meetings. We have
    designed the symposium to bring together leading scientists with
    diverse perspectives to provide an opportunity for cross-fertilization
    and interaction that is not usually available.

    <bold>PROGRAM FOR THE MEETING

    Thursday, June 1

    </bold>I. Information Coding in Spike Trains=20

    II. Early Circuits=20

    <bold>Friday, June 2

    </bold>III. Coding Experience: development and plasticity=20

    IV. Functional specialization and distributed codes=20

    <bold>Saturday, June 3

    </bold>V. Large Scale information flow.

    <bold>SPEAKERS FOR MEETING(updated)

         </bold>MOSHE ABELES, Hebrew University=20

           AD AERTSEN, Albert-Ludwigs.University, Germany=20

           DANA BALLARD, University of Rochester=20

           KEN BRITTEN, UC Davis=20

           CAROL COLBY, University of Pittsburgh=20

           MAURIZIO CORBETTA, Washington University=20

           DAVID J. FIELD, Cornell University=20

           ZACHARY F. MAINEN, Cold Spring Harbor Lab=20

           KEN MILLER, University of California-San Francisco=20

           ALEXANDRE POUGET, University of Rochester=20

           R. CLAY REID, Harvard Medical School=20

           JEFFREY D. SCHALL, Vanderbilt University=20

           TERRENCE J. SEJNOWSKI, Salk Institute for Biological Studies=20

           ADAM SILLITO, University College London=20

           HANS SUPER, IOI, The Netherlands=20

           MICHAEL WELIKY, University of Rochester=20

           RAFAEL MARCOS YUSTE, Columbia University=20

           ANTHONY M. ZADOR, Salk Institute
    </bigger></bigger></fontfamily>

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    Barbara N. Arnold

    Administrator email: barba@cvs.rochester.edu

    Center for Visual Science phone: 716 275 8659

    University of Rochester fax: 716 271 3043

    Meliora Hall 274

    Rochester NY 14627-0270

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

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