Friday, May 16
Introduction: Ken Aizawa
9:00-9:45 John Morrison, “Using transfer learning to identify a neural network’s intermediate representations”
9:45-10:30 Pierre-Olivier Polack, “Multiplexed perceptual representations in visual cortices”
10:45-11:30 Edvard Avilés-Meza, “The icon of thought hypothesis: the preliminary evidence”
11:30-12:15 Asohan Amarasingham, “Some statistical observations concerning ambiguity and repeatability in the study of neural codes”
12:15-2:00 Lunch
2:00-2:45 Wanqi Chen and Zhibin Chen, “Representations in neuroscience: models and framework based on methodological nominalism”
2:45-3:30 Miriam Rosenberg-Lee, Roberto A. Abreu-Mendoza, Piper L. Rennerfeldt, “From textbook to voxel: exploring the neural representation of educational content”
3:45-5:15 Konrad Körding, “Is neuroscience on the right path?”
Saturday, May 17
9:00-9:45 Caitlin Mace, “Idealizing content determinacy in neuroscience”
9:45-10:30 Andrew Burnside and Emerson Bodde, “Spinoza’s non-disjunctivist representational theory of mind”
10:45-11:30 Ken Aizawa, “Combining behavioral and neural evidence for representations”
11:30-12:15 Kathryn McClain, Mihály Vöröslakos, Yingxi Jin and György Buzsáki, “Physiological and behavioral correlates across the longitudinal axis of the hippocampal CA1 subregion”
12:15-2:00 Lunch
2:00-2:45 Ori Hacohen, “Structural similarity does not ground content”
2:45-3:30 Drew Headley, “Problems that advanced the study of neural encoding”
3:45-5:15 John Krakauer, “There is no such thing as neural representation”