Is being presented now (1-5 pm). By yours truly.
This is a live blogging/poster presenting experiment. The first of this kind, to my knowledge.
Comment below.
Is being presented now (1-5 pm). By yours truly.
This is a live blogging/poster presenting experiment. The first of this kind, to my knowledge.
Comment below.
The decorrelated neural circuits are on the other side of my poster board, wow.
I like the idea of looking at changes in neural variability in a different setting than the original interacted delay task. Keep going with that.
Very interesting. I’m looking forward to seeing the results from your low contrast manipulation.
Best,
Jamie
Good job!
Pascal’s presentation was performance art!!!
Why are you so keen on showing pictures of people in your presentations?
Nice finding!
Gruesse aus tut!
Pascal’s voice is sounding pretty hoarse after what I’m sure is the umpteenth run-through of his poster. Someone is on their way to bring him water. I’m about to ask him a question, so hopefully I won’t make it worse.
Suggested you look at changes in uncertainty, instead of just contrast, in relation to reduction of variability.
coefficient of variation in persistent activity during delay match to sample tasks does not change substantially before w.r.t. Spontaneous activity levels (gold man-rakic et al)
Amazing – science as an interactive performance.
And that concludes this presentation and live blogging experiment. I learned a lot. Scientists are shy. A felt 5 percent (if that) of visitors left a comment.
@Michael: Because research is a human enterprise and I feel it important to never forget that. On a more practical level, around 200 people now know who Fano was, and they did not know before. Given what we know about memory for faces, they are unlikely to ever forget it.
reprint request!