Excellent talk at #ccn2023 by Leslie Pack Kaelbling (https://lis.csail.mit.edu) on their work designing abstractions for robots to perform motor tasks like "pick up each of these objects and put it into the bowl that is closest to it in colour".

Really makes all this AI/cognitive neuroscience fretting about "what are LLMs really doing?" and deferential vibe of "how should us mere mortals prompt these all-powerful machines" seem very atheoretical.

Feels like ML could learn a lot from roboticists

Learning and Intelligent Systems Group

If you're at #CCN2023 and interested in multimodal processing, come and chat with us at our poster P-3B.68 with @marcusghosh from 1-3pm today in the Marquee.

https://2023.ccneuro.org/view_paper.php?PaperNum=1062

If you're not at CCN, check our thread/preprint and we'd be happy to discuss!

https://neuromatch.social/@neuralreckoning/110785811144218374

Technical Program: Paper Detail || CCN 2023 || 2023 Conference on Cognitive Computational Neuroscience || Oxford, UK || August 24 - 27, 2023

If you're at #ccn2023 and interested in neural modularity, come see our poster P-2A.46 at 1pm today.

https://2023.ccneuro.org/view_paper.php?PaperNum=1175

If you're not at CCN check out the preprint and thread below. We'd love to hear what you think and answer any questions.

https://neuromatch.social/@neuralreckoning/110792288348408416

Technical Program: Paper Detail || CCN 2023 || 2023 Conference on Cognitive Computational Neuroscience || Oxford, UK || August 24 - 27, 2023

In preparation for our #CCN2023 @CogCompNeuro GAC next week, I’m going to do some polls here this week to take the temperature of the room. 🌡️

Very curious to see the range of answers so please pass it on 🔁🙏 and feel free to elaborate - we'll try to take any discussion into account at the workshop

📊🧵 #neuroscience #neurobuzz

https://gac.ccneuro.org/gacs-by-year/2023-gacs/2023-1

GACs - 2023-1

Reconciling the dichotomy between Sherringtonian and Hopfieldian views on neural computations Organizers & Speakers at CCN 2023: Dongyan Lin, McGill University Arna Ghosh, McGill University Jonathan Cornford, McGill University James Whittington, Stanford University Tatiana Engel, Princeton

@neuralreckoning @elduvelle I am interested in computational theories of vision and of brain function as a whole. I have been looking through the #ccn2023 abstracts for examples but not found any yet. Lots of computational modelling, of course, but that is different. Marr’s computational theory has not survived well, but he made a compelling case for one. What are our best attempts today? https://www.cell.com/current-biology/pdf/S0960-9822(02)01204-6.pdf
In a virtual poster VP-Z-637-1719 Andria Smith and Simon Heuschkel present agent-based models showing how bias can arise from rational learning due historic privilege, but can be undone through an intervention. 👉preprint to be presented at
#CCN2023 https://t.co/4spDtEw1kj
Constructing and deconstructing bias: modeling privilege and mentorship in agent-based simulations

Bias exists in how we pick leaders, who we perceive as being influential, and who we interact with, not only in society, but in organizational contexts. Drawing from leadership emergence and social influence theories, we investigate potential interventions that support diverse leaders. Using agent-based simulations, we model a collective search process on a fitness landscape. Agents combine individual and social learning, and are represented as a feature vector blending relevant (e.g., individual learning characteristics) and irrelevant (e.g., race or gender) features. Agents use rational principles of learning to estimate feature weights on the basis of performance predictions, which are used to dynamically define social influence in their network. We show how biases arise based on historic privilege, but can be drastically reduced through the use of an intervention (e.g. mentorship). This work provides important insights into the cognitive mechanisms underlying bias construction and deconstruction, while pointing towards real-world interventions to be tested in future empirical work.

arXiv.org
Looking forward to having #CCN2023 so close by!
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RT @CogCompNeuro
We are excited to announce that Cognitive Computational Neuroscience (CCN) 2023 will take place this year in Oxford from August 24 - 27, 2023! The conference will take place at the Examination Schools – more information can be found here:
https://www.venues.ox.ac.uk/our-venues/examination-schools/.
https://twitter.com/CogCompNeuro/status/1612565583228293120
Examination Schools | Oxford University Event Venues

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