2:14
Megan deBettencourt - Applied Mathematics
Megan deBettencourt started participating in faculty research projects at Columbia since h...
published: 20 Oct 2010
author: ColumbiaSEAS
Megan deBettencourt - Applied Mathematics
Megan deBettencourt - Applied Mathematics
Megan deBettencourt started participating in faculty research projects at Columbia since her second year at SEAS. Her senior year, she worked on neuroscience...- published: 20 Oct 2010
- views: 2579
- author: ColumbiaSEAS
4:00
Neuroscience of Intelligence
Intelligence is a significantly broad topic, and can thus be approached from different ang...
published: 22 Nov 2012
author: Eli Bab
Neuroscience of Intelligence
Neuroscience of Intelligence
Intelligence is a significantly broad topic, and can thus be approached from different angles. On the one hand, Lefebvre (2011) maintains that innovation con...- published: 22 Nov 2012
- views: 42
- author: Eli Bab
5:06
Vietnam Veterans Help Neuroscientists Map Emotional Intelligence in the Brain
Cognitive neuroscientist Aron Barbey explores the link between general and emotional intel...
published: 18 Jan 2013
author: BeckmanInstitute
Vietnam Veterans Help Neuroscientists Map Emotional Intelligence in the Brain
Vietnam Veterans Help Neuroscientists Map Emotional Intelligence in the Brain
Cognitive neuroscientist Aron Barbey explores the link between general and emotional intelligence by studying Vietnam veterans with focal brain injuries. Usi...- published: 18 Jan 2013
- views: 1528
- author: BeckmanInstitute
2:28
Investigating Intelligence - A conversation with John Duncan (Preview)
[You can watch the full conversation on our website (www.ideasroadshow.com) or iPad app on...
published: 15 Aug 2013
Investigating Intelligence - A conversation with John Duncan (Preview)
Investigating Intelligence - A conversation with John Duncan (Preview)
[You can watch the full conversation on our website (www.ideasroadshow.com) or iPad app on Apple Newsstand] What is intelligence? Surely it's not just one thing: one can have a high IQ but that doesn't mean they're street smart nor does that include being emotionally intelligent. And what about wit? John Duncan, Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience at Cambridge University, is convinced these are all related and measurable by the General or G factor. Howard sat down with John in Cambridge to talk about the nature of G as explained through Duncan's book How Intelligence Happens, G's history and the tests involved in it's proof, as well as the behaviour of neurons, brain imaging technology and the future of the lucrative field of neuroscience.- published: 15 Aug 2013
- views: 6
54:56
Purdue BME seminar Feb 15th 2012: "Scaling up neuroscience: optogenetic neural recording"
Purdue BME seminar Feb 15th 2012: "Scaling up neuroscience: optogenetic neural recording" ...
published: 21 Feb 2012
author: Eugenio Culurciello
Purdue BME seminar Feb 15th 2012: "Scaling up neuroscience: optogenetic neural recording"
Purdue BME seminar Feb 15th 2012: "Scaling up neuroscience: optogenetic neural recording"
Purdue BME seminar Feb 15th 2012: "Scaling up neuroscience: optogenetic neural recording" Abstract: I will present our work on optogenetic imaging systems fo...- published: 21 Feb 2012
- views: 375
- author: Eugenio Culurciello
51:52
Challenges of Neuroscience - Who are we and if so, why?
http://facebook.com/ScienceReason ... Meeting Einstein Lecture: "Challenges of Neuroscienc...
published: 11 May 2012
author: RationalHumanism
Challenges of Neuroscience - Who are we and if so, why?
Challenges of Neuroscience - Who are we and if so, why?
http://facebook.com/ScienceReason ... Meeting Einstein Lecture: "Challenges of Neuroscience - Who are we and if so, why?" - Roger D. Traub, State University ...- published: 11 May 2012
- views: 4172
- author: RationalHumanism
21:47
Russell Foster: Why do we sleep?
Russell Foster is a circadian neuroscientist: He studies the sleep cycles of the brain. An...
published: 14 Aug 2013
author: TEDtalksDirector
Russell Foster: Why do we sleep?
Russell Foster: Why do we sleep?
Russell Foster is a circadian neuroscientist: He studies the sleep cycles of the brain. And he asks: What do we know about sleep? Not a lot, it turns out, fo...- published: 14 Aug 2013
- views: 105198
- author: TEDtalksDirector
28:22
Natalie Phillips - MSU - Literary Neuroscience: An fMRI Study of Attention and Jane Austen
New Frontiers in Cognitive, Evolutionary, and Computational Models of the Mind: Part 2 Nat...
published: 22 Jan 2013
author: DECSMSU
Natalie Phillips - MSU - Literary Neuroscience: An fMRI Study of Attention and Jane Austen
Natalie Phillips - MSU - Literary Neuroscience: An fMRI Study of Attention and Jane Austen
New Frontiers in Cognitive, Evolutionary, and Computational Models of the Mind: Part 2 Natalie Phillips - MSU - Literary Neuroscience: An fMRI Study of Atten...- published: 22 Jan 2013
- views: 89
- author: DECSMSU
16:32
In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence [Part 1]
This video is part 1 of 2 In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence Part 2 -http://...
published: 21 Feb 2013
author: Tom Hickson
In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence [Part 1]
In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence [Part 1]
This video is part 1 of 2 In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence Part 2 -http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XZGnxi9jOFk How does an animal/machine beco...- published: 21 Feb 2013
- views: 1450
- author: Tom Hickson
74:00
Intelligence and Learning in Brains and Machines
Speaker begins at 3:26 The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Heller Lectures Series in Comput...
published: 07 Jan 2010
author: HebrewUniversity
Intelligence and Learning in Brains and Machines
Intelligence and Learning in Brains and Machines
Speaker begins at 3:26 The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Heller Lectures Series in Computational Neuroscience The Interdisciplinary Center for Neural Comput...- published: 07 Jan 2010
- views: 7823
- author: HebrewUniversity
38:53
"What is neuro-nonsense?" a talk by Anthony Jack about over-hyped neuroscience research.
Talk given to the department of Organization Behavior at CWRU about how brain imaging can ...
published: 09 Jan 2014
"What is neuro-nonsense?" a talk by Anthony Jack about over-hyped neuroscience research.
"What is neuro-nonsense?" a talk by Anthony Jack about over-hyped neuroscience research.
Talk given to the department of Organization Behavior at CWRU about how brain imaging can be used and misused to inform our understanding of cognition, particularly in the context of applied fields such as management and education. The talk addresses the hype and overstatement that often surrounds neuroscience research, and argues that the problems are not just limited to popular coverage but also to academic work. The talk focuses on a critical review of the Harvard Business Review article "Your brain at work" by Adam Waytz and Malia Mason. Speaker is Prof. Anthony Jack, Dept. Cognitive Science, Case Western Reserve University.- published: 09 Jan 2014
- views: 97
59:29
Intelligence and the Brain: Recent Advances in Understanding How the Brain Works with Jeff Hawkins
Visit: http://www.uctv.tv/) How the brain creates intelligence is viewed by many as the gr...
published: 15 Nov 2012
Intelligence and the Brain: Recent Advances in Understanding How the Brain Works with Jeff Hawkins
Intelligence and the Brain: Recent Advances in Understanding How the Brain Works with Jeff Hawkins
Visit: http://www.uctv.tv/) How the brain creates intelligence is viewed by many as the greatest scientific quest of all time. We are living at the time whe...- published: 15 Nov 2012
- views: 7149
- author: University of California Television (UCTV)
4:54
1st International Congress "Advances in Clinical Neurosciences and Psychiatry: Brain and Mind"
1st International Congress "Advances in Clinical Neurosciences and Psychiatry: Brain and M...
published: 26 Jan 2014
1st International Congress "Advances in Clinical Neurosciences and Psychiatry: Brain and Mind"
1st International Congress "Advances in Clinical Neurosciences and Psychiatry: Brain and Mind"
1st International Congress "Advances in Clinical Neurosciences and Psychiatry: Brain and Mind" La Habana, Cuba, November 18th-20th, 2013- published: 26 Jan 2014
- views: 9
23:26
Making Friends With Artificial Intelligence: Eric Horvitz at TEDxAustin
Distinguished Scientist and co-director at Microsoft Research, Eric Horvitz, shares the hu...
published: 19 Feb 2013
author: TEDx Talks
Making Friends With Artificial Intelligence: Eric Horvitz at TEDxAustin
Making Friends With Artificial Intelligence: Eric Horvitz at TEDxAustin
Distinguished Scientist and co-director at Microsoft Research, Eric Horvitz, shares the human side of advancing machine intelligence. An admitted advocate fo...- published: 19 Feb 2013
- views: 34130
- author: TEDx Talks
Youtube results:
4:59
Intelligent Content & Communication Research Theme at Trinity
Embedding intelligence into content and communications means enabling that content and com...
published: 29 Jan 2014
Intelligent Content & Communication Research Theme at Trinity
Intelligent Content & Communication Research Theme at Trinity
Embedding intelligence into content and communications means enabling that content and communications to be more easily discovered, analysed and understood. Content can be transformed between different languages, easily delivered through different modalities and adapted to address the needs, situation and preferences of the communicating parties. This puts the user back in control, where the content delivered to the user is based on their profile, their interaction with their peers, and their preferences. Read more about the theme at http://www.tcd.ie/research/themes/intelligent-content-communication/ http://www.tcd.ie/- published: 29 Jan 2014
- views: 29
22:36
In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence Part [2]
This video is part 2 of 2 In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence Part 1 - http:/...
published: 21 Feb 2013
author: Tom Hickson
In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence Part [2]
In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence Part [2]
This video is part 2 of 2 In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence Part 1 - http://youtu.be/vTrMs8dtWAY How does an animal/machine become intelligent...- published: 21 Feb 2013
- views: 414
- author: Tom Hickson
0:00
RI Seminar: Stefan Schaal : From Movement Primitives to Associative Skill Memories
Stefan Schaal
Professor of Computer Science, Neuroscience, and Biomedical Engineering, Uni...
published: 24 Mar 2014
RI Seminar: Stefan Schaal : From Movement Primitives to Associative Skill Memories
RI Seminar: Stefan Schaal : From Movement Primitives to Associative Skill Memories
Stefan Schaal Professor of Computer Science, Neuroscience, and Biomedical Engineering, University of Southern California March 28, 2014 Abstract Controlling a complex movement system requires making perceptual and control decisions at every moment of time, and learning and adaptation to improve the system's performance. High dimensional continuous state-action spaces still pose significant scaling problems for learning algorithms to find (approximately) optimal solutions, and appropriate task descriptions or cost functions require a large amount of human guidance. In order to address autonomous skillful movement generation in complex robot and task scenarios, we have been working on a variety of subproblems to facilitate robust task achievement. Among these topics are general representations for movement in form of movement primitives, trajectory-based reinforcement learning with path integral reinforcement learning, and inverse reinforcement learning to extract the "intent" of observed behavior. However, this "action centric" view of skill acquisition needs to be extended with a stronger perceptual component, as, in the end, it is the entire perception-action-learning loop that could be considered the key element to address, rather than isolated components of this loop. In some tentative initial research, we have been exploring Associative Skill Memories, i.e., the simple idea to start memorizing all sensory events and their statistics together with each movement skill. This concepts opens a wide spectrum of adding predictive, corrective, and switching behaviors in motor skills, and may create an interesting foundation to automatically generate the graphs underlying complex sequential motor skills. Our research results will be illustrated in various experiments with complex anthropomorphic robot systems. Speaker Biography Stefan Schaal is Professor of Computer Science, Neuroscience, and Biomedical Engineering at the University of Southern California, and a Founding Director of the Max-Planck-Insitute for Intelligent Systems in Tuebingen, Germany. He is also an Invited Researcher at the ATR Computational Neuroscience Laboratory in Japan, where he held an appointment as Head of the Computational Learning Group during an international ERATO project, the Kawato Dynamic Brain Project (ERATO/JST). Dr. Schaal's research interests include topics of statistical and machine learning, neural networks, computational neuroscience, functional brain imaging, nonlinear dynamics, nonlinear control theory, and biomimetic robotics. He applies his research to problems of artificial and biological motor control and motor learning, focusing on both theoretical investigations and experiments with human subjects and anthropomorphic robot equipment.- published: 24 Mar 2014
- views: 1
10:07
High-resolution Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Methods for Human Midbrain
To watch this video on jove.com, click here: http://www.jove.com/video/3746?utm_source=you...
published: 27 Feb 2014
High-resolution Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Methods for Human Midbrain
High-resolution Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Methods for Human Midbrain
To watch this video on jove.com, click here: http://www.jove.com/video/3746?utm_source=youtube This article describes techniques to perform high-resolution functional magnetic resonance imaging with 1.2 mm sampling in human midbrain and subcortical structures using a 3T scanner. Use of these techniques to resolve topographic maps of visual stimulation in the human superior colliculus (SC) is given as an example.- published: 27 Feb 2014
- views: 1