An ongoing journal club for the study of big ideas in neuroscience.
We're reading Gibson, an ecological approach to perception (1968). Notes so far:
- Week 1: Chapters 1, 2, 3
- Week 2: Chapters 3, 4
- Week 3: Chapter 5
- Week 4: Chapter 6
- Week 5: Chapter 7
An idea that tries to unify a bunch of disparate observations about the brain, with a theoretical slant. Preferably with an explanatory bent rather than phenomenological, with an emphasis on theory. We prefer books and articles that have withstood the test of time (i.e. 10 years or older). Sometimes a big idea can just be about asking the right question, not solving it.
- Rao and Ballard (1999), Predictive coding in the visual cortex
- McIntosh and Schenk (2009), two visual streams for perception and action
- 23 problems in systems neuroscience (2005)
- Phylogenetic refinement (2019)
From Josh Vogelstein:
- bayes brain (rao)
- harmonic mind (smolensky)
- rhythyms of the brain (buzsaki)
- free energy principle (friston)
- memory-prediction framework (hawkins)
- sparse distributed memory (kanerva)
- vehicles (braitenberg)
- phylogenic refinement (cisek)
- Efficient coding (many)
- Manifolds, attractor networks (many)