UBC Math Bio Seminar: John Rinzel
Topic
Bistable Dynamics of Perceiving Ambiguous Stimuli
Speakers
Details
When experiencing an ambiguous sensory stimulus (e.g., the vase-faces image), subjects may report random alternations (time scale, seconds) between the possible interpretations. I will describe dynamical models with multiple time scales for neuronal populations that compete (fast time scale) through mutual inhibition for dominance - showing alternations (slow time scale). The models behave as noisy oscillators or as multistable systems subject to noise-driven switching. In highly idealized formulations networks are percept specific without direct representation of stimulus features. Our recent work involves perception of ambiguous auditory stimuli (e.g., http://auditoryneuroscience.com/scene-analysis/streaming-galloping-rhythm slider settings: rate=8, df=3 or 6 or 10). The models explicitly incorporate sound features - perceptual selectivity is emergent rather than built-in.
Additional Information
Location: Online. Contact Katie Faulkner for link
Time: 2pm Pacific
John Rinzel, Courant Institute
This is a Past Event
Event Type
Scientific, Seminar
Date
March 15, 2023
Time
-
Location