Schedule

The Satellite Workshops will happen on-site only. The talks of the Main Conference will be livestreamed via the conference online platform. Recordings of the talks will be available for time-independent viewing in the Conference Repository, given the presenters consent. The posters will also be available in the Conference Repository. Online participants are requested to contact the authors/presenters individually t schedule discussions.

The Conference Repository is available for registered participants only (on-line and on-site participants)!

14:00 -18:30

Satellite Workshops

For detailed program, click here.

19:30 – 21:30

Postdoc Meeting

For details, click here.

20:00 – Open End

PhD Social Meeting

Harp Pub, Giesebrechtstr. 15, 10629 Berlin

08:30 – 12:30

Satellite Workshops
For detailed program, click here.

12:50 – 13:30

Annual General Meeting of the Bernstein Network
TU main building, room 2.036

14:00 – 14:15

Opening
Geraldine Rauch, President of the TU Berlin

Welcome
Raoul Memmesheimer, Conference Chair
Susanne Schreiber, Chair of the Bernstein Network
Christian Machens, Program Chair 2022

14:15 – 15:00

Opening Lecture

Sonja Hofer | University College London, UK
Making sense of what you see: cortical and thalamic circuits for vision

15:00 – 15:15

Contributed talk

Ioannis Pisokas | University of Edinburgh, UK
How ants remember their way home

15:15 – 15:30

Contributed talk

Sigrid Trägenap | Frankfurt Institute of Advanced Studies, Germany
Experience drives the development of novel, reliable cortical sensory representations from endogenous networks

15:30 – 16:15

Keynote 1

Bing BruntonUniversity of Washington, USA
Tracking turbulent plumes with deep reinforcement learning

16:30 – 17:50

Poster Session I

18:10 – 19:30

Poster Session II

09:00 – 09:45

Keynote 2

Liset M de la Prida | Instituto Cajal, Spain
Understanding hippocampal activities using machine learning tools

09:45 – 10:30

Keynote 3

Henning Sprekeler | Technische Universität Berlin, Germany
t.b.a.

10:30 – 11:00

Coffee break

11:00 – 11:45

Keynote 4

Mehrdad Jazayeri | Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
Timing via counting using attractor networks in the entorhinal cortex

11:45 – 12:00

Contributed talk

Hazem Toutounji | University of Nottingham, UK
Selective Attention Aids Rapid Learning in Complex Environments

12:00 – 12:45

Keynote 5

Carina Curto | Pennsylvania State University, USA
t.b.a.

12:45 – 14:05

Poster Session III

14:15 – 15:45

Poster Session IV

15:45 – 16:30

Keynote 6

Carsen StringerJanelia Research Campus, USA
t.b.a.

16:30 – 16:45

Contributed talk

Aviv Ratzon | Technion, Israel Institute of Technology, Israel
Representational Drift As a Result of Implicit Regularization

16:45 – 17:15

Coffee break

17:15 – 17:30

Contributed talk

Paul Haider | University of Bern, Switzerland
Latent Equilibrium: A unified learning theory for arbitrarily fast computation with arbitrarily slow neurons

17:30 – 17:45

Contributed talk

David Dahmen | Forschungszentrum Jülich, Germany
Strong recurrency of cortical networks constrains activity in low-dimensional subspaces

17:45 – 18:30

Keynote 7

Christine ConstantinopleNew York University, USA
Distinct controllers for motivation and deliberation

19:30 – 23:00

Conference Dinner

Registration required. For more information, click here.

09:00 – 09:45

Keynote 8

Andrew Saxe | University College London, UK
Why learn representations? Abstraction and generalization in a nonlinear deep network

09:45 – 10:00

Contributed talk

Kanghoon Jung | Max Planck Florida Institute for Neuroscience, USA
Dopamine-mediated cellular programming of heuristic decisions

10:00 – 10:30

Brains for Brains Young Researcher Award

Simone AzeglioInstitut de l’Audition, Institut Pateur, 75012 Paris, France

Activity-driven deep models for learning sound transformations across the auditory pathway

10:30 – 11:15

Coffee break

11:15 – 12:00

Keynote 9

Gaby Maimon | The Rockefeller University, New York, USA
How brains add vectors

12:00 – 12:15

Contributed talk

Ivan Voitov | Sainsbury Wellcome Centre, UK
Cortical feedback loops bind distributed high-dimensional representations of working memory

12:15 – 12:30

Contributed talk

Katharina Wilmes | University of Bern, Switzerland
Uncertainty-modulated prediction errors in cortical microcircuits

12:30 – 13:15

Keynote 10

Juan Alvaro Gallego | Imperial College London, UK

Understanding the emergence of neural population dynamics underlying behaviour

13:15 – 13:30

Closing Remarks

Tatjana Tchumatchenko, Program Chair Bernstein Conference 2023

13:30

END

14:30 – 19:00


PhD Symposium 2022 – Critical Thinking in (Neuro)Science

For details, click here.

09:00 – 12:30

PhD Symposium – Critical Thinking in (Neuro)Science

For details, click here.