April 15–16, 2005
Boca Raton, United States
Organizers: Viktor Jirsa
Welcome Remarks
Speaker : John Pritchett and Dennis GlanzmanSession I: Principles of spatiotemporal pattern formation
Chair: Randy McIntoshSynchronization and Multistability in Rings of Coupled Oscillators
Speaker : Sue Ann CampbellMotifs in Brain Networks: Building Blocks for a Cognitive Architecture
Speaker : Olaf SpornsCritical branching captures activity in living neural networks and places constraints on local network topology
Speaker : John BeggsSymbiotic Relationship Between Neuronal Dynamics and Architectures
Speaker : Michael Breakspear
Session II: Measuring connectivity and dynamics
Chair: Scott KelsoDynamic Causal models of ERPs
Speaker : Karl Friston
Functional Connectivity and The Hemodynamic Response
Speaker : Peter BandettiniIndependence and Coordination of Macroscopic Brain Dynamics
Speaker : Scott MakeigConnectivity, Distance and Scaling in Whole Brain Functional Networks
Speaker : Ed Bullmore
Session III: Measuring connectivity and dynamics
Chair: Rolf KötterAssessing Directions of Neural Interactions with Granger Causality Spectra
Speaker : Mingzhou DingUsing Large-Scale Neural Models to Help Determine the Neural Substrates of Functional and Effective Connectivity
Speaker : Barry HorwitzInter-hemispheric connectivity: what is the functional role of the corpus callosum?
Speaker : Klaas StephanImaging Oscillatory Activity with MEG
Speaker : Richard Leahy
Session IV: Clinical aspects of anatomical and functional connectivity
Chair: Betty TullerAnatomical and electrophysiological insights into seizure propagation in the human brain
Speaker : John MiltonNeural Signatures of Behavioral Dynamics Revealed Using Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Speaker : Kelly JantzenNeural Connectivity in the Lesioned Brain
Speaker : Tomáš PausWave Formation and Control in Brain
Speaker : Steven Schiff