churchlandlab.org
New views on neuroscience and decision-making from Duke, Brandeis and Pittsburgh/Carnegie Mellon | Churchland lab
https://churchlandlab.org/2015/01/28/new-views-on-neuroscience-and-decision-making-from-duke-brandeis-and-pittsburghcarnegie-mellon
Perceptual decision-making at Cold Spring Harbor. New views on neuroscience and decision-making from Duke, Brandeis and Pittsburgh/Carnegie Mellon. January 28, 2015. I started this year off with some travel, giving seminars in 3 places. I started off visiting Duke University where I was hosted by D-CIDES. Well-known for her work on identity. Sed a familiar technique, multivariate classifiers, to predict emotional state from multiple kinds of physiological measurement. About his recent paper in Neuron.
churchlandlab.org
Report from cosyne workshops: How the brain gets unconfused by the sensory consequences of movements | Churchland lab
https://churchlandlab.org/2015/03/11/report-from-cosyne-workshops-how-the-brain-gets-unconfused-by-the-sensory-consequences-of-movements
Perceptual decision-making at Cold Spring Harbor. Report from cosyne workshops: How the brain gets unconfused by the sensory consequences of movements. March 11, 2015. Brains live inside bodies that move around, and this simple fact means a lot of extra work for neural circuits. Imagine you are following a. By Larry Abbott provides some new insights into the neural circuits that make this possible. He did this work with a number of collaborators, including Anne Kennedy. Right) and Nate Sawtell. An exciti...
churchlandlab.org
2014: Scientific highlights from the Churchland Lab | Churchland lab
https://churchlandlab.org/2014/12/22/2014-scientific-highlights-from-the-churchland-lab
Perceptual decision-making at Cold Spring Harbor. 2014: Scientific highlights from the Churchland Lab. December 22, 2014. The above photo shows surest lab members at our holiday skate. It was great to get together and celebrate a year of discovery. Highlights include:. January: Matt Kaufman generating the first images of mouse cortex with our new 2-photon imaging setup. February: Attending, and presenting at, Cosyne. May: Being part of the Symposium on Quantitative Biology at Cold Spring Harbor. It was a...
fairhalllab.com
Publications | Fairhall lab
https://fairhalllab.com/publications
Computational neuroscience at the University of Washington. How does she do it? Abstracts and full text downloads available at my ResearchGate. Pang, R. and A. L. Fairhall, Let music play while she doth make her choice. Preview of Clements et al., Connecting neural codes with behavior in the auditory system of Drosophila. 87 (2015), pp. 1126-1128. Van Breugel, F., J. Riffell, A. L. Fairhall and M. H. Dickinson, Mosquitoes use vision to associate odor plumes with thermal targets. PLoS Comp. Biol. Mease, R...
fairhalllab.com
The deadliest creature in the world | Fairhall lab
https://fairhalllab.com/2014/04/30/the-deadliest-creature-in-the-world
Computational neuroscience at the University of Washington. How does she do it? The deadliest creature in the world. On April 30, 2014. Bill Gates has just declared this week as Mosquito Week,. Pointing out that the mosquito is the cause of the most human deaths per year of any creature on earth, even exceeding us. In our lab, in collaboration with Jeff Riffel. L and Michael Dickinson. Larr; Mike’s cool job. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Address never made public). UW Women in STEM.
fairhalllab.com
Mike’s cool job | Fairhall lab
https://fairhalllab.com/2014/04/12/343
Computational neuroscience at the University of Washington. How does she do it? Mike’s cool job. On April 12, 2014. Former lab member Mike Famulare was recently interviewed by Seattle Times’ NWJobs. After graduating with a PhD in physics in 2012, Mike joined Intellectual Ventures’ research effort on modeling disease propagation and vaccine efficacy– an excellent use of his stochastic-process chops. Larr; Looking forward. The deadliest creature in the world. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. UW Comp Neuro talks.
fairhalllab.com
Swan song | Fairhall lab
https://fairhalllab.com/2014/10/28/swan-song
Computational neuroscience at the University of Washington. How does she do it? On October 28, 2014. Read more about Allison and her remarkable career at UCSF’s memoriam. Larr; Sloan-Swartz meeting open. In support of animal research. One comment on “ Swan song. Stephen Scherba, Jr. October 29, 2014 at 3:19 pm. Very sad. She looks to have been very young. Did you know her well? Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:. UW Comp Neuro talks.
fairhalllab.com
Previous events | Fairhall lab
https://fairhalllab.com/previous-events
Computational neuroscience at the University of Washington. How does she do it? Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:. Address never made public). You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Twitter account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Facebook account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Google account. ( Log Out. Notify me of new comments via email. UW Women in STEM.
fairhalllab.com
NEUBEH 545 | Fairhall lab
https://fairhalllab.com/courses/neubeh-545
Computational neuroscience at the University of Washington. How does she do it? NEUBEH 545, Methods in Computational Neuroscience. See the class website. For the most recent topics and papers. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:. Address never made public). You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Twitter account. ( Log Out. Notify me of new comments via email. UW Comp Neuro talks.
SOCIAL ENGAGEMENT