This presentation by the OHBM OpenScienceSIG covers common scenarios where Git can be extremely valuable. The essentials covered include cloning a repository and keeping it up to date, how to create and use your own repository, and how to contribute to other projects via forking and pull requests.
DataLad is a versatile data management and data publication multi-tool. In this session, you can learn the basic concepts and commands for version control and reproducible data analysis. You’ll get to see, create, and install DataLad datasets of many shapes and sizes, master local version workflows and provenance-captured analysis-execution, and you will get ideas for your next data analysis project.
This lecture covers the emergence of cognitive science after the Second World War as an interdisciplinary field for studying the mind, with influences from anthropology, cybernetics, and artificial intelligence.
This lecture provides an introduction to Plato’s concept of rationality and Aristotle’s concept of empiricism, and the enduring discussion between rationalism and empiricism to this day.
This lecture covers different perspectives on the study of the mental, focusing on the difference between Mind and Brain.
This lecture goes into further detail about the hard problem of developing a scientific discipline for subjective consciousness.
This lecture outlines various approaches to studying Mind, Brain, and Behavior.
While the previous lesson in the Neuro4ML course dealt with the mechanisms involved in individual synapses, this lesson discusses how synapses and their neurons' firing patterns may change over time.
In this lesson, you will learn about how machine learners and computational neuroscientists design and build models of neuronal synapses.
How does the brain learn? This lecture discusses the roles of development and adult plasticity in shaping functional connectivity.
This lesson goes into the mechanisms behind changes in synaptic function created by learning.