Emerging models in the evolution of neural systems and circuits

Organizers

Fred Wolf | Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization / University of Göttingen, Germany
Claudia Fichtel | German Primate Center, Germany

Abstract

Brains are among the most complex systems constructed by biological evolution. Understanding the principles of their design as versatile and efficient computational devices, reconstructing the paths through which the enormous diversity of animal nervous systems has emerged and uncovering how the evolution of brains impacts animal behaviour are ultimate goals of research into biological intelligence. Recent years have witnessed spectacular advances in our ability to uncover these fundamental evolutionary processes and principles. The question, however, of how selection and genetic drift, key innovations and ecological niches shape the design of neural systems has remained notoriously hard to address. The Bernstein Conference satellite workshop “Emerging models in the evolution of neural systems and circuits” will provide a stage to critically assess key challenges and discuss novel approaches to dissect the evolutionary transformation of behaviour, cognition and neural circuit function. Lightfoot, Fichtel and Huber, and Martelli will present study designs that bridge the gap between adaptive behaviour in natural habitats and neural circuit laboratory studies. They offer research approaches, spanning the whole range of nervous system complexity in bilateria, from nematodes to primates, that promise to directly link Darwinian fitness to the evolutionary modification of circuits and behaviour. Sachse, Vogel and Engelken will present novel models, ranging from new model species to in-vitro and computational models, designed to address key questions in neural circuit evolution. As a whole, the symposium is set up to provide an inspiring and comprehensive landscape for discussing opportunities and challenges for decisive progress at the frontier of evolutionary biology and computational neuroscience.

Schedule (CEST)

Sunday, Sep 29

14:00

Claudia Fichtel | German Primate Center, Germany
Welcome

14:05

Fred Wolf | Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization / University of Göttingen, Germany
Introduction

14:20

Silke Sachse | Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology, Germany
Unraveling the Evolution of Olfactory Processing with Transgenic Locusts

14:45

James Lightfoot | Max Planck Institute for Neurobiology of Behavior, Germany
One worm, two minds: divergent neuronal architecture in the evolution of a behavioural trait

15:10

Carlotta Martelli | University of Mainz, Germany
The evolution of non-canonical olfactory systems in ants and other insects

15:35

Discussion 1

16:00

Coffee break

16:30

Claudia Fichtel and Daniel Huber | German Primate Center, Germany, and Geneva University, Switzerland
Interrogating the link between Darwinian fitness and cognitive function in a wild miniature primate

16:55

Julian Vogel | University of Göttingen / Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-organization, Germany
A synthetic neurobiology approach to neural circuit divergence near the origin of rodents and primates

17:45

Rainer Engelken | Columbia University, USA
Optimizing big brain circuits: information flow in large multi-area cortical networks

17:45

Discussion 2

18:15

Claudia Fichtel and Fred Wolf | Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization / University of Göttingen, Germany, and German Primate Center, Germany
Concluding remarks

18:30

End

This workshop is supported by funds from