Participants: Prof. Tomaso Poggio (MIT), Prof. Jim DiCarlo (MIT), Prof. Thomas Serre (Brown U.), Prof. Gabriel Kreiman (Harvard Medical School, BCH), Prof. Josh McDermott (MIT), Michael Lee (MIT) and Martin Schrimpf (MIT)
Moderator: Dr. Kenneth Blum (Harvard)
Abstract: Deep Learning architectures designed by engineers and optimized with stochastic gradient descent on large image databases have become de facto models of the cortex. A prominent example is vision. What sorts of insights are derived from these models? Do the performance metrics reveal the inner workings of cortical circuits or are they a dangerous mirage? What are the critical tests that models of cortex should pass?
We plan to discuss the promises and pitfalls of deep learning models contrasting them with earlier models (VisNet, HMAX,…) which were developed from the ground up following neuroscience data to account for critical properties of scale+position invariance and selectivity of primate vision.
This panel discussion will be hosted via Zoom, see details below.
Zoom link: https://mit.zoom.us/j/99175709426
https://cbmm.mit.edu/news-events/events/cbmm-panel-discussion-should-mod…