Theoretical Neuroscience: Understanding Cognition
English
By (author): Xiao-Jing Wang
This textbook is an introduction to systems and computational neuroscience with a special focus on cognition. It consists of three parts: Part I covers basic concepts and mathematical models of computational neuroscience, as well as cutting-edge topics. Part II is dedicated to building blocks of cognition: working memory (how our brain maintains and manipulates information online in the absence of any external input), decision making (how a choice is selected among multiple options under uncertainty and risk) and behavioral flexibility (how we direct our attention and control our actions). In Part III, frontier research is discussed: models of large-scale multi-regional brain systems, computational psychiatry, interface with artificial intelligence. The author emphasizes the viewpoint of neural circuits as dynamical systems, and cross-level (from genes and cell types to collective neural populations to behavior) mechanistic understanding of the brain and the mind. Taken together, a reader is offered the opportunity to become well versed in this highly cross-disciplinary field of the twenty-first century.
Key Features
- Rooted in the most recent advances in experimental studies of basic cognitive functions
- Introduces neurobiological and mathematical concepts so that the book is self-contained
- Heavily illustrated with high-quality figures that help to illuminate neurobiological concepts, present experimental findings and explain mathematical models
- Concludes with a list of core cognitive behavior tasks, ten take-home messages and three open questions for future research
- Computer model codes are available via GitHub for hands-on practice
Will deliver when available. Publication date 21 Jan 2025