SSP Forum (VIRTUAL EVENT): Brian Wandell on Reading and Vision

Monday, March 9, 2020
Due to the University's cancellation of in-person classes for the remainder of Winter Quarter, this event will be happening online only. Go to https://stanford.zoom.us/j/477643353 at event time.
Photo of Brian Wandell

The
Symbolic Systems Forum
presents

Neural circuitry for vision and reading
Brian A. Wandell
Psychology Department

Monday, March 9, 2020
12:30-1:20 pm
VIRTUAL EVENT ONLY
Join at https://stanford.zoom.us/j/477643353

ABSTRACT:

In the last twenty-five years there has been extraordinary progress in our ability to measure and model the tissue properties and activity in the living human brain using magnetic resonance imaging. Reliable measurements can be made at the millimeter scale in individual subjects, significantly enhancing the value of these techniques for both scientific and clinical applications. 

We have been applying these methods to understand the brain circuitry that is essential for seeing words.  I will summarize certain findings to understand the development this portion of the neural reading circuitry.  I will describe examples that combine functional MRI measurements with computational models to characterize the position, size and stimulus selectivity within the many different regions of visual cortex.  I will also describe the principles of diffusion MRI and quantitative MRI, and how these methods are used to model the active, biological wires that carry this information throughout the human brain.

I am hopeful that combining quantitative measurements and computational models in individual participants, supported by reproducible research tools, can provide a strong foundation for a human neuroscience that benefits society.

Brian A. Wandell is the Director of the Stanford’s Center for Neurobiological Imagin and the Deputy Director of the Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute.