Schedule of Presentations

All times below are U.S. West Coast/Pacific Daylight Time (PDT) using 24-hour format. Talks are 15 minutes, with 5 minutes for brief questions directly afterwards. We have also reserved 30 minutes for discussions after each group of presentations, during which we will have Zoom breakout rooms for each speaker to meet with colleagues; the main Zoom session will remain open during that time for general discussion. All registered participants will receive Zoom URLs and related information prior to the start of the meeting.

City Start Time End Time (Monday) End Time (Tue/Thu) End Time (Wednesday)
Seattle 5:00 9:35 9:00 9:30
New York 8:00 12:35 12:00 12:30
Montevideo 9:00 13:35 13:00 13:30
London 13:00 17:35 17:00 17:30
Tokyo 21:00 1:35 1:00 1:30

Monday

Time (PDT) Paper # Author(s) Title
5:00 Welcome
5:05 20 Tomasz M. Rutkowski, Masato S. Abe, Seiki Tokunaga, Tomasz Komendzinski and Mihoko Otake-Matsuura Classifying Mild Cognitive Impairment from EEG Patterns for Dementia Onset Prediction
5:25 28 Michael DePass, Ali Falaki, Stephan Quessy, Numa Dancause and Ignasi Cos A Mesoscopic Characterization of Sequential Movement related Neuro-motor States in Premotor and Motor Cortices: A Machine Learning Approach
5:45 34 Qinyue Zheng, Sihao Liu, Alessandro Villa and Alessandra Lintas Brain activity associated with personality traits and behavioral strategies revealed by unsupervised analysis of EEG Signal
6:05 Discussion in breakout rooms
6:35 6 Viacheslav Osaulenko and Danylo Ulianych Model of cell assemblies formation with iterative winners-take-all computation and excitation–inhibition balance
6:55 12 Rimjhim Tomar and Lubomir Kostal Instantaneous Firing Rate Dispersion Can Decrease With Increasing Inter-spike Interval Variability
7:15 18 Irene Tubikanec, Massimiliano Tamborrino, Petr Lansky and Evelyn Buckwar Qualitative properties of numerical methods for the inhomogeneous geometric Brownian motion
7:35 Discussion in breakout rooms
8:05 21 Charles Smith Origins and consequences of serial dependence in vestibular neural models
8:25 1 Cesar Ceballos, Rodrigo Pena and Antonio Roque Impact of the activation rate of the Ih current influences the neuronal membrane time constant and synaptic potential duration
9:05 Discussion in breakout rooms
9:35 end

 

Tuesday

Time (PDT) Paper # Author(s) Title
5:00 11 Akari Matsuki, Ryota Kobayashi and Hiroshi Kori Bias in the estimation of coupling strength between oscillators
5:20 32 Takeshi Abe, Yoshiyuki Asai and Alessandro E.P. Villa Phase coupling in interaction networks of neural mass models of cortical columns
5:40 10 Arun Neru Balachandar, Alexander Khibnik, Joël Tabak and Roman Borisyuk Duration of the synaptic influence determines phase difference between asymmetrically coupled oscillators
6:00 Discussion in breakout rooms
6:30 31 Isabella Silkis Mechanisms of functioning of connectomes each of which includes the neocortex, hippocampus, basal ganglia, cerebellum, and thalamus
6:50 13 Angel Caputi, Alejo Rodiguez-Cattáneo, Ana-Carolina Pereira and Pedro Aguilera Image processing in a cerebellum like structure
7:10 24 Robin Gutzen, Sonja Grün and Michael Denker Eigenangles: evaluating the statistical similarity of neural network simulations via eigenvector angles
7:30 Discussion in breakout rooms
8:00 7 Snigdha Singh, Natalie Gonzales and Michael Stiber Refining connections in developing neural networks
8:20 27 Lawrence Ward and Priscilla Greenwood Building stochastic dynamical neural circuits
8:40 Discussion in breakout rooms
9:00 end

 

Wednesday

Time (PDT) Paper # Author(s) Title
5:00 23 Tsai-Rong Chang, Dominik Sorek, Petr Marsalek and Tzai-Wen Chiu Strong energy component is more important than spectral selectivity in modeling responses of midbrain auditory neurons to wide-band environmental sounds
5:20 25 George Hadjiantonis, Guido Bugmann and Chris Christodoulou Characterization of inputs from filtered intracellular recordings
5:40 22 Alessandra Stella, Peter Bouss, Günther Palm, Alexa Riehle, Sonja Grün and Thomas Brochier Significant Spatio-Temporal Spike Patterns in Macaque Monkey Motor Cortex
6:00 Discussion in breakout rooms
6:30 26 Jacob Kanev, Achilleas Koutsou, Chris Christodoulou and Klaus Obermayer The Difference Neuron: A versatile abstract spiking neuron model
6:50 33 Alessandra Lintas, Raudel Sánchez-Campusano, Agnes Gruart, José María Delgado-García and Alessandro E.P. Villa Dynamics of brain activity in multisite recordings from behaving parvalbumin deficient mice (PVKO)
7:10 8 Mauricio Girardi-Schappo, Emilio F. Galera, Tawan T. A. Carvalho, Ludmila Brochini, Nilton L. Kamiji, Antonio C. Roque and Osame Kinouchi Asynchronous irregular activity coexists with power-law distributed neuronal avalanches
7:30 Discussion in breakout rooms
8:00 29 Irina Sinakevitch and Wulfila Gronenberg Olfactory neuropil in Amblypygids
8:20 15 Tomas Barta and Lubomir Kostal Inhibitory noise decreases membrane potential fluctuations and may lead to increased firing regularity
8:40 35 Henrik Ekström and Tatyana Turova
A non-monotone bootstrap percolation model of neuronal activity
9:00 Discussion in breakout rooms
9:30 end

 

Thursday

Time (PDT) Paper # Author(s) Title
5:00 14 Ryota Kobayashi, Daisuke Endo and Shigeru Shinomoto Estimating synaptic connectivity from parallel spike trains
5:20 17 Makoto Ozawa, Yasuyuki Suzuki and Taishin Nomura Gaze-evoked nystagmus with centripetal drifts and centrifugal microsaccades during gaze fixation and its minimal neuromechanical model
5:40 3 Olha Shchur and Alexander Vidybida Firing statistics of a neuron with delayed feedback inhibition stimulated with a renewal point process
6:00 Discussion in breakout rooms
6:30 5 Massimiliano Tamborrino and Petr Lansky Shot noise, weak convergence and diffusion approximations
6:50 9 Petr Lansky, Federico Polito and Laura Sacerdote Input-output consistency in integrate and fire networks with application to neuronal spiking activity
7:10 16 Marie Levakova and Susanne Ditlevsen Cointegration analysis of EEG signals
7:30 Discussion in breakout rooms
8:00 2 Alexander Vidybida, Olha Shchur and Victoria Mochulska From chaos to clock in reverberating neural net. Case study
8:20 19 Helena Bordini de Lucas, Steven L. Bressler, Fernanda Selingardi Matias and Osvaldo Anibal Rosso Using causal information theory to characterize cortical signals during a Go/No-Go task
8:40 Discussion in breakout rooms
9:00 end