Brain Inspired

Neuroscience and artificial intelligence work better together. Brain inspired is a celebration and exploration of the ideas driving our progress to understand intelligence. I interview experts about their work at the interface of neuroscience, artificial intelligence, cognitive science, philosophy, psychology, and more: the symbiosis of these overlapping fields, how they inform each other, where they differ, what the past brought us, and what the future brings. Topics include computational neuroscience, supervised machine learning, unsupervised learning, reinforcement learning, deep learning, convolutional and recurrent neural networks, decision-making science, AI agents, backpropagation, credit assignment, neuroengineering, neuromorphics, emergence, philosophy of mind, consciousness, general AI, spiking neural networks, data science, and a lot more. The podcast is not produced for a general audience. Instead, it aims to educate, challenge, inspire, and hopefully entertain those interested in learning more about neuroscience and AI.

https://braininspired.co/series/brain-inspired/

subscribe
share






BI 073 Megan Peters: Consciousness and Metacognition


Megan and I discuss her work using metacognition as a way to study subjective awareness, or confidence. We talk about using computational and neural network models to probe how decisions are related to our confidence, the current state of the science of consciousness, and her newest project using fMRI decoded neurofeedback to induce particular brain states in subjects so we can learn about conscious and unconscious brain processing.

Notes:

  • Visit Megan's cognitive & neural computation lab.
  • Twitter: @meganakpeters
  • The papers we discuss or mention:
    • Human intracranial electrophysiology suggests suboptimal calculations underlie perceptual confidence
    • Tuned normalization in perceptual decision-making circuits can explain seemingly suboptimal confidence behavior.


fyyd: Podcast Search Engine
share








 June 11, 2020  1h25m