[VSACommunity] Invitation to PhD-exit(-adjacent)-talk

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Christopher Kymn

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May 22, 2025, 5:04:32 PMMay 22
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Dear members of the VSACommunity,

I'm giving a seminar talk in the Redwood Center next week, and since it will also be broadcast via Zoom, I thought it would be a good idea to invite you all, too! It will be partly in the style of an exit talk, since I just finished my PhD, and partly an aspirational perspective on the open scientific problems that I think we as a community can make strong contributions to.

Whether or not you're able to attend, I'm grateful to be a part of this community, and for so many memorable conversations throughout my studies. (Whether online or offline.) So thanks for reading and would love to chat more with any of you about these topics. Cheers!

Sincerely,
Chris

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Title: Neural associative memories and nested compositional structure
Time: May 28, 2025 12:00 PM Pacific Time (US and Canada)

Abstract: A central question in neuroscience is how brains generate efficient yet structured representations of the world that are useful for future inferences. Multiple lines of evidence suggests that this structure is compositional, in the sense that the meaning of these representations are composed of and determined by its parts. What neural mechanisms might mediate these processes, and how can we test such theories? In this talk, I suggest that holographic reduced representations, also known as hyperdimensional computing or vector symbolic architectures, provides promising conceptual tools to answer these questions. That is, we can develop both testable neural predictions for how the system does function, and provide functional explanations for why networks of neurons are organized in that way. I will present my own dissertation work on this topic, with a focus on two chapters* about the hippocampus and entorhinal cortex. I will also share my perspective on some of the exciting advances and frontiers in the interdisciplinary landscape of systems neuroscience, theoretical computer science, and cognitive science more broadly. (Keen observers may notice that the talk title itself pays homage to Tony Plate's dissertation, Distributed Representations and Nested Compositional Structure.)

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