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CIAN Seminar (Dr. Arash Afraz) & Reception

The next Centre for Integrative and Applied Neuroscience (CIAN) Seminar will be held Friday, Dec. 1,  2:00- 3:30 pm in Paul Delaney Gallery (Bethune College Room 320).  We are delighted to have Dr. Arash Afraz (from National Institutes of Health, USA) as our speaker (please see bio and abstract below). His talk is titled “Navigating perceptual space with neural perturbations.”

 

We also want to announce that, following Dr. Afraz’s talk, we will host an opening reception for the newly established Centre for Integrative and Applied Neuroscience (CIAN)! The reception will run from 3:30-5:00 pm. Light refreshments will be served, and we hope to see many of you there for an opportunity to officially welcome the new research unit! Please feel free to share with your networks, or anyone who might be interested in joining. 

 Please RSVP using the following link: https://forms.gle/hcYnKMmvWxmArFLe8. We look forward to seeing you there!

 

Dr. Arash Afraz

Navigating perceptual space with neural perturbations.

Abstract

Local perturbation of neural activity in high-level visual cortical areas alters visual perception. Quantitative characterization of these perceptual alterations holds the key to understanding the mapping between patterns of neuronal activity and elements of perception. The complexity and subjectivity of these perceptual alterations makes them difficult to study. I introduce a new experimental approach, “Perceptography”, to develop “pictures” of the subjective experience induced by optogenetic cortical stimulation in the inferior temporal cortex of macaque monkeys.

Biography

Dr. Arash Afraz received his MD from Tehran University of Medical Sciences in 2003. In 2005 he joined the Vision Science Laboratory at Harvard and studied spatial constraints of face recognition under the mentorship of Dr. Patrick Cavanagh. Dr. Afraz received his PhD in Psychology from Harvard University in 2009. Right after, he joined Dr. James DiCarlo’s group at MIT as a postdoctoral fellow to study the neural underpinnings of face and object recognition. Dr. Afraz started at NIMH as a principal investigator in 2017 to lead the unit on Neurons, Circuits and Behavior (Afraz group). Dr. Afraz’s group, Unit on Neurons, Circuits and Behavior, studies the neural mechanisms of visual object recognition. The research team is particularly interested in establishing causal links between the neural activity in the ventral stream of visual processing in the brain and object recognition behavior. The group combines visual psychophysics with conventional methods of single unit recording as well as microstimulation, drug microinjection and optogenetics to bridge the gap between the neural activity and visual perception.

Date

Dec 01 2023
Expired!

Time

2:00 pm - 3:30 pm
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