When:
Monday, May 12, 2025
4:00 PM - 5:00 PM CT
Where: Ford Motor Company Engineering Design Center, Hive Room 2350, 2133 Sheridan Road, Evanston, IL 60208 map it
Audience: Faculty/Staff - Student - Post Docs/Docs - Graduate Students
Cost: Free
Contact:
Ted Shaeffer
(847) 491-3345
Group: McCormick-Engineering Sciences and Applied Mathematics (ESAM)
Category: Lectures & Meetings
Title: In Search of Internal Mental Models - Reiss Lecture
Speaker: Adrienne Fairhall, University of Washington
Abstract: How do we build the mental models that we use to perceive, navigate and reason about the world? How might these models be inferred from neural activity? I will describe experiments and analysis in collaboration with Beth Buffalo's lab to explore these questions in our closest relatives, nonhuman primates. In one example, we compare monkey and human behavior in a decision task, and analyze how subjects make use of visual information and feedback to infer a hidden rule, where the rule switches in an uncued fashion. We fit a suite of behavioral models and learn that while humans are close to optimal Bayesian agents, monkey behavior is better fit as reinforcement learning. This allows us to seek neural implementations of this internal belief update. Further, while rodent hippocampus famously encodes the animal's spatial location, we find evidence that hippocampus in the primate serves a more cognitive role.
Zoom: TBA
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