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NeuroTech: Neuroscience at NSF

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Title: NeuroTech: Neuroscience at NSF


1
NeuroTechNeuroscience at NSF
  • D. H. Whalen
  • Program Director, Cognitive Neuroscience

2
Current NSF Neuroscience
  • Across virtually all directorates.
  • About 60 million in FY06.
  • Difficult to assess, because neuroscience is not
    coded directly.
  • Depends on your definition as well, of course.
  • Even this number does not include centers.
  • Still not seen as a priority despite this rather
    large outlay.

3
Current Reassessment
  • Neuroscience at NSF is being examined
    Foundation-wide.
  • Objective Redefine NSFs mission in this area.
  • Takes NIH into account.
  • Input from most directorates.
  • Primary tools three workshops.

4
Workshop 1 July 2006
  • Grand Challenges of Mind and Brain.
  • Four member Steering Committee.
  • Sheila Blumstein (chair).
  • Thomas Carew.
  • Nancy Kanwisher.
  • Terry Sejnowski.
  • Twelve more in Workshop Panel.
  • Report available on CogNeuro web page.

5
Grand Challenge Areas
  • Adaptive Plasticity.
  • Conflict and Cooperation.
  • Spatial Knowledge.
  • Time.
  • Language.
  • Causal Understanding.

6
Grand Challenge Tools
  • Human Brain Circuitry.
  • Imaging, of course.
  • Also specifically mentions nonhuman species.
  • Mathematical Innovations.
  • Non-linear varieties in particular.
  • Information Databases.
  • Molecular Tools.
  • Cyberinfrastructure.

7
Workshop 2 August 2006
  • Primarily MPS.
  • Brain Science as a Mutual Opportunity for the
    Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Computer
    Science, and Engineering.
  • Somewhat less grand.
  • Chaired by Chris Wood (Santa Fe Inst.).
  • Thirteen other participants.
  • Report available on CogNeuro website.

8
Three Broad Areas
  • A Shift in the Scope and Scale of Experimental
    Investigations.
  • Recordings from multiple events and sites.
  • A Shift in the Character of Theoretical
    Understanding.
  • Simultaneously bottom-up and top-down.
  • A Shift in How Knowledge Can Be Used.
  • Greater ability to model complex systems.
  • More potential for direct brain/machine links.

9
Instrumentation and Measurement
  • Functional measurements in neurons and circuits.
  • Labeling in neurons and circuits.
  • Controlling activity in neurons and circuits.
  • The importance of model organisms.

10
Data Analysis, Statistical Modeling and
Informatics.
  • Multidisciplinary input to new measurement
    techniques.
  • Methods to integrate Diverse Data Sources.
  • Statistics, Signal Processing and Machine
    Learning.
  • New Tools for Control Theory.
  • Analyzing Multiple Levels and Time Scales.
  • Inferring Causality in Neural Systems.
  • New Approaches to Data Management/Sharing.

11
Conceptual and Theoretical Approaches
  • Fundamental Role of Mathematics.
  • Dynamical Systems.
  • Statistical Physics/Large Degrees of Freedom.
  • Engineering Approaches.
  • Machine Learning Tools.
  • Large-Scale Simulations.

12
Brain-Like Devices and Systems
  • Analog Approaches.
  • Stochastic Semiconductor Circuits.
  • Neural Coding and Functional Biomimetic Systems.
  • Brain-Like Robots.
  • Biocompatible Neural Interfaces.

13
Now, Four Broad Areas
  • Instrumentation and Measurement.
  • Data Analysis, Statistical Modeling, and
    Informatics.
  • Conceptual and Theoretical Approaches.
  • Building Brain-Like Devices and Systems.

14
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15
Workshop 3 March 2007
  • The workshop was organized around seven
    interdisciplinary themes, and led by
  • Chris Wood, Vice President, Santa Fe Institute.
  • Ted Berger, Dept of Biomedical Engineering, USC.
  • Emery Brown, Dept of Brain/Cognitive Sciences,
    MIT.
  • Eve Marder, Dept of Biology, Brandeis
    University.
  • Tom Mitchell, Machine Learning, Carnegie Mellon
    U.
  • Partha Mitra, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory.
  • Marcus Raichle, Dept of Radiology, Washington U.
  • Jonathan Sweedler, Dept of Chemistry, U. of
    Illinois.

16
Workshop 3 March 2007
  • The workshop was organized around seven
    interdisciplinary themes, and led by
  • Chris Wood, Vice President, Santa Fe Institute.
  • Ted Berger, Dept of Biomedical Engineering, USC.
  • Emery Brown, Dept of Brain/Cognitive Sciences,
    MIT.
  • Eve Marder, Dept of Biology, Brandeis
    University.
  • Tom Mitchell, Machine Learning, Carnegie Mellon
    U.
  • Partha Mitra, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory.
  • Sheila Blumstein, Dept of Linguistics, Brown U.
  • Jonathan Sweedler, Dept of Chemistry, U. of
    Illinois.

17
SBE in this Workshop
  • Main working group of interest to SBE is
    Raichles/Blumsteins
  • Cognitive Systems Neural Bases of Thought and
    Behavior.
  • Meant to convey the extensive interaction of
    systems seen in every cognitive domain.
  • Many other relevant topics in other working
    groups.

18
Various Promising Topics
  • Navigation and Spatial Cognition.
  • Speech Perception.
  • Face Recognition.
  • Reading.
  • Perception and Action.
  • Number Skills.
  • Tools for the Future.

19
The Big Question
  • How does the brain create thought and behavior?
  • Despite many interesting findings, the
    fundamentals are still not known.
  • Converging techniques, in imaging and in theory
    (e.g., complexity), are making new advances
    possible.

20
The Specific Big Question
  • As Dr. Bement asked at the workshop, how does
    consciousness arise?
  • Nancy Kanwisher, our presenter, pointed out that
    this is still too difficult a question to answer
    directly.
  • However, we have interesting components that have
    been located, such as face perception with and
    without awareness.

21
SBE Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Most of the SBE-specific topics were in cognitive
    neuroscience, but not necessarily the Cognitive
    Neuroscience program
  • Perception, Action and Cognition
  • Linguistics
  • Social Psychology
  • Economics
  • Decision, Risk and Management Sciences
  • Developmental and Learning Sciences
  • Cultural Anthropology
  • Physical Anthropology
  • Human Origins (HOMINID)

22
Other Potential Areas
  • Neural imaging of voting decisions.
  • Culturally-specific patterns of perception.
  • MRI lie detectors?
  • New statistical tools.
  • Neural study of ethics decisions.
  • Basic questions posed by diseases (natures
    knock-out experiments).

23
Support from Other Programs
  • Cyber-enabled Discovery and Innovation
  • Data-Net
  • Community-based Data Interoperability Networks
    (INTEROP)
  • Collaborative Research in Computational
    Neuroscience (CRCNS) (soon)

24
Challenges
  • Enormous area, dominated by biology.
  • Differentiating NSF from NIH.
  • Choosing right level of problem within SBE
    parameters.
  • International collaboration (at least, getting
    the word out, if not providing new mechanisms).

25
Opportunities
  • Additional funds may be forthcoming.
  • Partnering with European funders.
  • New tools and techniques may truly make future
    advances happen at a currently unimaginable pace.
  • 2010s Decade of the Mind.

26
Thank you.
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