May 1-3, 2003

Cambridge, England

Organizers: Ed Bullmore, Lee Harison, Lucy Lee, and Andrea Mechelli

Novel cortical clustering and network participation indices, measured in neuroanatomical connectivity matrices derived from tract-tracing studies of non-human primates

Speaker : Rolf Kötter and Claus Hilgetag

Artificial networks or graphs and linked explicitly the “small world” topology of such graphs to the complexity of their dynamical behavior.

Speaker : Olaf Sporns

Shapley value analysis to identify from data on pathological or reversible experimental lesions

Speaker : Eytan Ruppin

The theoretical development and early application to fMRI of dynamic causality

Speaker : Christian Büchel

Rehearse the conceptual tension between specialized and distributed accounts of brain function

Speaker : Randy McIntosh

The use of generating series for nonlinear dynamical systems identification in human EEG and MEG data

Speaker : Gary Green

The results of EEG and MEG experiments on visual and auditory perception

Speaker : Viktor Jirsa

The tendency of distributed neural regions to become synchronized and the capacity of the brain as a whole rapidly to switch between alternate possible modes of synchronization

Speaker : Michael Breakspear

A stochastic phase resetting analysis as a novel and more sensitive method to detect transient (de)synchronization in neuronal populations measured using MEG in visual stimulation experiments.

Speaker : Peter Tass

Brain’s internal representation of reality

Speaker : Amos Arieli

Two new multivariate methods, multiway partial least squares and multivariate autoregressive models to infer Granger causality

Speaker : Pedro Valdes-Sosa

A multiscale model of brain electrical activity that incorporated biologically constrained microscopic parameters

Speaker : Peter Robinson

A largescale, biologically principled computational model to investigate how changes in hemodynamic measures of brain activation or functional connectivity could be related to underlying changes in neuronal activity

Speaker : Barry Horwitz

A model of neuronal interaction based on the Morris-Lecar equations

Speaker : Ben-Jacob

Simulated neural networks to refute the hypothesis that distinct hippocampal fields, CA3 and CA1

Speaker : Alessandro Treves

Bayesian models of inference and adaptation to the modulatory effects of specific neurotransmitters on neurocognitive systems for spatial attention

Speaker : Peter Dayan
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2002: Düsseldorf, GE

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2004: Havana, CU