Personal Information
Unternehmen/Arbeitsplatz
Greater Boston Area, MA United States
Beruf
Manning Assistant Professor in Cognitive Linguistic & Psychological Sciences
Branche
Education
Webseite
http://serre-lab.clps.brown.edu
Info
Thomas Serre is the Manning Assistant Professor in the Department of Cognitive Linguistic and Psychological Sciences at Brown University. Originally from France, he received a master degree in EECS from the Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Télécommunications de Bretagne (Brest, France) in 2000 and a PhD in computational neuroscience from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 2006. His research seeks to understand the brain mechanisms underlying the recognition of objects and complex visual scenes using a combination of behavioral, imaging and physiological techniques, which are supported by rigorous computational models.
Tags
computational
neuroscience
vision
computer
biological
mvpa
readout
fmri
imagery
mental
serre
thomas
attention
stream
ventral
recognition
object
model
perception
visual
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Präsentationen
(4)Personal Information
Unternehmen/Arbeitsplatz
Greater Boston Area, MA United States
Beruf
Manning Assistant Professor in Cognitive Linguistic & Psychological Sciences
Branche
Education
Webseite
http://serre-lab.clps.brown.edu
Info
Thomas Serre is the Manning Assistant Professor in the Department of Cognitive Linguistic and Psychological Sciences at Brown University. Originally from France, he received a master degree in EECS from the Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Télécommunications de Bretagne (Brest, France) in 2000 and a PhD in computational neuroscience from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 2006. His research seeks to understand the brain mechanisms underlying the recognition of objects and complex visual scenes using a combination of behavioral, imaging and physiological techniques, which are supported by rigorous computational models.
Tags
computational
neuroscience
vision
computer
biological
mvpa
readout
fmri
imagery
mental
serre
thomas
attention
stream
ventral
recognition
object
model
perception
visual
Mehr anzeigen