Robin Gutzen

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754 Following
55 Posts
Attacking the brain's mysteries with statistics and open-source tools; also dabbling in data visualizations, neuroart, and fermenting food.
websitehttps://rgutzen.github.io
linkedinhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/robin-gutzen/
orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-7373-5962
gravatarhttps://gravatar.com/rgutzen
Tonight tonight tonight!
We are hosting the second Berlin Permacomputing Meetup!
Please join us for a convivial discussion of Platform Detox, e-waste redemption and design for de-growth.
🚲 https://offline.place/events/2024/03/25/permacomputing-meetup/
🚲 https://permacomputing.net/
offline ~ Permacomputing Meetup

A community space in Berlin

offline

New OpenAccess book published: *The Brain Abstracted*, by philosopher of science Mazviita Chirimuuta

https://direct.mit.edu/books/oa-monograph/5741/The-Brain-AbstractedSimplification-in-the-History

I highly recommend it, it's a brilliant work in the history and philosophy of neuroscience.

#philosophyofscience #philosophyofCogSci #neuroscience #cogsci

The Brain Abstracted: Simplification in the History and Philosophy of Neuroscience

An exciting, new framework for interpreting the philosophical significance of neuroscience.All science needs to simplify, but when the object of research i

MIT Press
https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.1609793113
"Science in the age of selfies" --> very thought provoking read

"[A]ny factual AI systems created in the short-run are at best decoys. When we think these systems capture something deep about ourselves and our thinking, we induce distorted and impoverished images of ourselves and our cognition."

Preprint: https://psyarxiv.com/4cbuv

"We have taken on the biggest question facing humanity — how the brain works — and we need as many brains as possible to answer it. If we keep writing inscrutable papers, we silo knowledge away from those who can help."

Words of wisdom from my friend @KanakaRajanPhD - she's using comics to demystify computational neuroscience 👏

https://hms.harvard.edu/news/building-models-brain-take-them-apart

#scicomm #neuroscience #accessibility

Building Models of the Brain to Take Them Apart

Computational neuroscientist probes how the brain learns, remembers, and decides

Have you wondered whether fast spatiotemporal brain dynamics like traveling waves are local, confined to just one region, or whether they are shared across many regions simultaneously? The latest work from @ZhiwenNeuron in my lab has the answer! Thread -
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.12.07.570517
📜 There is also a preprint showcasing the application of Cobrawap for a meta-analysis across 60 open-access ECoG and calcium-imaging recordings from anesthetized mice:
https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2211.08527
... a peer-reviewed publication is following very soon, but the code for replicating the results/figures is already available: https://gin.g-node.org/INM-6/cobrawap_publication_code
Comparing apples to apples -- Using a modular and adaptable analysis pipeline to compare slow cerebral rhythms across heterogeneous datasets

Neuroscience is moving towards a more integrative discipline, where understanding brain function requires consolidating the accumulated evidence seen across experiments, species, and measurement techniques. A remaining challenge on that path is integrating such heterogeneous data into analysis workflows such that consistent and comparable conclusions can be distilled as an experimental basis for models and theories. Here, we propose a solution in the context of slow wave activity ($<1$ Hz), which occurs during unconscious brain states like sleep and general anesthesia, and is observed across diverse experimental approaches. We address the issue of integrating and comparing heterogeneous data by conceptualizing a general pipeline design that is adaptable to a variety of inputs and applications. Furthermore, we present the Collaborative Brain Wave Analysis Pipeline (Cobrawap) as a concrete, reusable software implementation to perform broad, detailed, and rigorous comparisons of slow wave characteristics across multiple, openly available ECoG and calcium imaging datasets.

arXiv.org

Did you ever wish constructing a neural data analysis was more like a choose-your-own-adventure story? 👨‍💻

We just released version 0.1. of the "Collaborative Brain Wave Analysis Pipeline (Cobrawap)" 🐍
https://cobrawap.readthedocs.io

Simply pick and combine reusable method blocks and parameter configurations to build a reproducible #AnalysisWorkflow that is adaptable to heterogenous data sources of cortical wave activity 🌊🧠
#Neuroscience #ResearchSoftware #BrainWaves

Collaborative Brain Wave Analysis Pipeline (Cobrawap) — Collaborative Brain Wave Analysis Pipeline (Cobrawap) 0.1.0 documentation

The European Commission wants to start eavesdropping on all our private messages, photos/videos and conversations(!) via apps. To pressure the Netherlands and other countries to vote in favour, it posted illegal, misleading ads on Twitter/X. At election time. This is unheard of:

I just gave a talk at #eScience23, on Research Software Engineering in 2030, where Simon Hettrick and I make some predictions about where #RSEng is going

slides: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8431560
preprint: https://arxiv.org/abs/2308.07796
paper: https://doi.org/10.1109/e-Science58273.2023.10254813

Research Software Engineering in 2030

This position paper for an invited talk on the “Future of eScience” discusses the Research Software Engineering Movement and where it might be in 2030. Because of the authors’ experiences, it is aimed globally but with examples that focus on the United States and United Kingdom.

Zenodo