Breakthrough Technologies

Queens, NY – The New York Hall of Science (NYSCI), the AI Institute for Artificial and Natural Intelligence (ARNI), and the Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science at Columbia University will feature an engaging panel discussion exploring recent developments in quantum computing and AI. The goal of the discussion is to provide an…

Continual Learning Working Group

CEPSR 620 Schapiro 530 W. 120th St

Weekly Meeting Group Discussion: Saket Navlakha, Associate Professor at Cold Spring Harbor Labs (Available via Zoom) Saket Navlakha, Associate Professor at Cold Spring Harbor Labs, will present his work, "Reducing Catastrophic Forgetting With Associative Learning: A Lesson From Fruit Flies". In this work, the authors identified a two-layer neural circuit in the fruit fly olfactory…

Shihab Shamma

Zuckerman Institute - L5-084 3227 Broadway, New York, NY, United States

Title: The auditory cortex: A sensorimotor fulcrum for speech and music perception Abstract: The Auditory cortex sits at the center of all auditory-motor tasks and percepts, from listening to our voice as we speak, to the music that we play, and to the complex sound mixtures that we seek to perceive. The auditory cortex orchestrates…

Roberta Raileanu

Zuckerman Institute - L5-084 3227 Broadway, New York, NY, United States

Title: Teaching Large Language Models to Reason with Reinforcement Learning Abstract: In this talk, I will discuss how we can use Reinforcement Learning (RL) to improve reasoning in Large Language Models (LLM), as well as when, where, and how to refine LLM reasoning. First, we study how different RL-like algorithms can improve LLM reasoning. We investigate both…

Lenka Zdeborova (Seminar Speaker)

Zuckerman Institute - L5-084 3227 Broadway, New York, NY, United States

Title: Phase transition in learning with neural networks  Abstract: Statistical physics has studied exactly solvable models of neural networks for more than four decades. In this talk, we will put this line of work in perspective of recent questions stemming from deep learning. We will describe several types of phase transition that appear in the…

Postponed Continual Learning Working Group

CEPSR 620 Schapiro 530 W. 120th St

Weekly Meeting Group Discussion: Lifelong and Human-like Learning in Foundation Models Speaker: Mengye Ren (New York University) Assistant Professor Department of Computer Science Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences Center for Data Science (joint) New York University Abstract: Real-world agents, including humans, learn from online, lifelong experiences. However, today’s foundation models primarily acquire knowledge through offline, iid…

CTN: Adam Hantman

Zuckerman Institute - L5-084 3227 Broadway, New York, NY, United States

Title: Neural basis for skilled movements Abstract: Generating behavior is an incredible achievement of the nervous system, considering the range of possible actions and the complexity of musculoskeletal arrangements. Motor control involves understanding the surrounding environment, selecting appropriate plans, converting those plans into motor commands, and adaptively reacting to feedback. This seminar will review efforts…

Multi-resource-cost Optimization for Neural Networks Models Working Group (NNMS)

Zuckerman Institute - L5-084 3227 Broadway, New York, NY, United States

Title: Scope of the working group, example project, and literature Short Description: From Nikolaus Kriegeskorte's (Professor of Psychology and of Neuroscience (in the Mortimer B. Zuckerman Mind Brain Behavior Institute) lab, Eivinas Butkus (grad student) will show an example of a modeling project optimizing energetic demands along with accuracy in a vision task, and Josh…

CTN: Wei Ji Ma

Zuckerman Institute - L5-084 3227 Broadway, New York, NY, United States

Title: Efficient coding in reward neurons Abstract: Two of the greatest triumphs of computational neuroscience have been efficient coding accounts of tuning properties of sensory neurons and reinforcement learning accounts of dopaminergic neurons in the midbrain. At first glance, these theories seem to have no connection, but I will argue that they do. One can…

CTN: Quentin Huys (Seminar Speaker)

To Be Determined

Title: Translating computational mechanisms to clinical applications Computational psychiatry is a rapidly growing field attempting to translate advances in computational neuroscience and machine learning into improved outcomes for patients suffering from mental illness. In this lecture, I will provide an overview over recent approaches for translating computational research into an understanding of symptoms, and mechanisms…

CTN: Guillaume Hennequin

Zuckerman Institute - L5-084 3227 Broadway, New York, NY, United States

Title: A recurrent network model of planning explains hippocampal replay and human behaviour Abstract:  When faced with a novel situation, humans often spend substantial periods of time contemplating possible futures. For such planning to be rational, the benefits to behaviour must compensate for the time spent thinking. I will show how we recently captured these features…