I am faculty
at the new UCSD MRI Center. Currently, my main interest is getting
to the bottom of the relationship between BOLD fMRI signal, neuronal
responses to sensory stimuli, and modulatory influences (such as
attention) on these neuronal responses. To this end I’m using novel MRI
pulse sequences developed at the Center. More generally, I intend to use
these new techniques for continued explorations of how we choose to attend
to some objects at expense of others and how information processing in the
visual system becomes a content of conscious perception.
In
addition, I am interested in:
The codes that the brain
uses to represent the world. I have used Shannon's information theory to quantify those
representations in visual cortex. I have also explored how these codes can
help understand the relationship between perceptual discrimination
performance and fMRI responses.
Developing new approaches
to functional brain imaging. I have been studying how to make event
related fMRI really efficient. I have recently noticed that using
m-sequences instead of randomized event sequences can dramatically improve
efficiency. I have also been looking into functional imaging methods not
based on blood flow.
Can the brain be understood
by evoking certain fundamental principles like optimal wiring and
information maximization? I believe that the answer is yes, otherwise
there would be no hope to ever understanding how the brain
works…
What neuro-scientific and
information-theoretic principles govern conscious perception? Recently I
have proposed that perceptual awareness is an outcome of the predictive
mode of operation of the thalamo-cortical system, the phenomenal awareness
being a subjective experience of a meta-cognitive signal validating a
currently activated cortical model.
I
am also interested in my own brain. The following picture confirms that,
unremarkably, it is in the right place (if
the image appears scrambled, click refresh).