Speaker name
Luca Mazzucato, PhD
Speaker title
Assistant Professor
Speaker institution
University of Oregon
Host
Biology
Event date
Location
Willamette 110, Remote on Zoom
Event image
Image Portrait of Luca Mazzucato.
Description
How do cognition and behavior emerge from the collective activity of large networks of neurons in our brain? Can we simulate these neural circuits in silico to build artificial neural networks that share our complex cognitive abilities? Leveraging a vast network of collaborations with experimental colleagues, our lab aims to explain the neural underpinnings of natural and artificial intelligence, with the belief that we can only understand cognitive function once we can build it from the bottom up in biologically plausible neural network models. We study how our cognitive abilities change depending on context, our mental state, and varying levels of neuromodulators (such as serotonin). This contextual modulation occurs for example when we make more mistakes while distracted, or perform really well while attentive. We design brain-machine interfaces to read and write neural activity in real time with the long-term goal of rescuing cognitive deficits for therapeutic interventions in the human brain.
  • What neural mechanisms underlie the temporal organization of behavior?
  • How does the nervous system generate flexible behavior to survive in dynamics environments?
  • Can we alter behavior through manipulations of neural circuits as a way to ameliorate cognitive dysfunction?
We blend methods from physics, machine learning, and dynamical systems, to build models of behavior, cognition and brain activity.
Event type
Event types
Display title
Promotion Talk - "Neural mechanisms of optimal performance"
Event subject matter