SWC at COSYNE 2024

Researchers from SWC are presenting at the COSYNE 2024 conference in Lisbon and Cascais, Portugal.

Thursday 29 February

Posters 8.30-11.30pm

  • 1-015 Multi-subject neural decoding via relative representations
    Valentino Maiorca, Simone Azeglio, Marco Fumero, Clémentine Dominé, Emanuele Rodolà, Francesco Locatello
     
  • 1-076 Analytical study of learning dynamics in compositional tasks in the teacher-student setup
    Jin Hwa Lee, Stefano Sarao Mannelli, Andrew Saxe
     
  • 1-100 Systems Consolidation of Sequential Dynamics in Model-Based Planning
    Oliver Vikbladh, Neil Burgess, Evan Russek
     
  • 1-123 Reactivation in the human brain connects the past with the present
    Avital Hahamy, Haim Dubossarsky, Timothy Behrens
     
  • 1-134 Distinct cortical mechanisms for egocentric vs. allocentric planning.
    Jingjie Li, Chaofei Bao, Liujunli Li, Ziqian Ariel Xu, Qianbo Grayson Yin, Jeffrey Erlich
     
  • 1-140 The Helmholtz Hippocampus: A biologically plausible generative model of the Hippocampal formation
    Tom George, Caswell Barry, Kimberly Stachenfeld, Claudia Clopath, Tomoki Fukai

Friday 1 March

Posters 12.30-3.30pm

  • 2-015 Efficient coding of a complex goal-directed behaviour in mouse medial-frontal cortex
    Peter Doohan, Beatriz Godinho, Chongyu (Xiao) Qin, Tim Behrens, Thomas Akam
     
  • 2-064 Acetylcholine integrates past reward to guide decision making under uncertainty
    Ella Svahn, Jessica Passlack, Athena Akrami, Andrew MacAskill
     
  • 2-069 Computation with program operations in replay
    Sebastijan Veselic, Timothy Muller, Nour Mohsen, Lennart Luettgau, Steve Kennerley, Tim Behrens, Zeb Kurth-Nelson
     
  • 2-084 Integrating allocentric and egocentric representations for flexible navigation
    Daniel Shani, Peter Dayan
     
  • 2-104 Replay constructs compositional maps in hippocampus
    Jacob Bakermans, James Whittington, Joseph Warren, Timothy Behrens
     
  • 2-106 Cortical representation of economic values independent from actions
    Oliver Gauld, Joseph Tutt, Joseph Warren, Jingjie Li, Jeffrey Erlich, Chunyu A. Duan
     
  • 2-137 Signatures of generalised spatial representations in frontal cortex
    Adam Harris, Mohamady El-Gaby, Ben Pendry, Arya Bhomick, Mark E. Walton, Thomas Akam, Tim Behrens

Saturday 2 March

Posters 12.30-3.30pm

  • 3-036 Hippocampal representations in a complex route planning task
    Beatriz Godinho, Chongyu (Xiao) Qin, Francesca Pozzolo, Peter Doohan, Mark E. Walton, Tim Behrens, Thomas Akam
     
  • 3-042 Hippocampus is necessary for implicit statistical learning: insights from mouse and human pupillometry
    Adedamola Onih, Athena Akrami
     
  • 3-046 More Diffusive Replay Sequences Correlate with Longer Theta Sequences in the Hippocampus
    Zilong Ji
     
  • 3-095 Mice dynamically adapt to opponents in multiplayer games
    Chunyu A. Duan, Ivana Orsolic, Qianbo Yin, Mehul Rastogi, Tom Hagley, Bruno Cruz, Andre Almeida, Jeffrey Erlich
     
  • 3-133 A role for hippocampal CA1 in structural learning in mice
    Svenja Nierwetberg, David Orme, Andrew MacAskill
     
  • 3-135 Actionable Neural Representations: Optimal Representations of Internal Models
    William Dorrell, Peter E Latham, Mohamady El-Gaby, Tim Behrens, James Whittington
     
  • 3-138 RatInABox: A unified Python framework for modelling spatial behaviour and neural data
    Caswell Barry, Mehul Rastogi, William de Cothi, Claudia Clopath, Kimberly Stachenfeld, Tom George

Monday 4 March

Workshop

  • Brain-wide recordings reveal the link between evidence integration and action throughout the premotor brain.
    Michael Lohse
    Part of the Workshop: Brain-wide modeling in the era of large-scale recordings and high resolution multi-omics

Tuesday 5 March

Workshop

  • When is enough? Balancing evidence integration and impulsivity in cortico-striatal circuits during decision making
    Michael Lohse
    Part of the Workshop: What controls evidence accumulation?