Date
Tue, 29 Oct 2019
Time
15:30 - 16:30
Location
L6
Speaker
Georgia Christodoulou
Organisation
University of Oxford

This talk will be a survey on the applications of random matrix theory in neuroscience. We will explain why and how we use random matrices to model networks of neurons in the brain. We are mainly interested in the study of neuronal dynamics, and we will present results that cover two parallel directions taken by the field of theoretical neuroscience. First, we will talk about the critical point of transitioning to chaos in cases of random matrices that aim to be more "biologically plausible". And secondly, we will see how a deterministic and a random matrix (corresponding to learned structure and noise in a neuronal network) can interact in a dynamical system.

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