Brain Inspired

BI 210 Dean Buonomano: Consciousness, Time, and Organotypic Dynamics


Listen Later

Support the show to get full episodes, full archive, and join the Discord community.

Dean Buonomano runs the Buonomano lab at UCLA. Dean was a guest on Brain Inspired way back on episode 18, where we talked about his book Your Brain is a Time Machine: The Neuroscience and Physics of Time, which details much of his thought and research about how centrally important time is for virtually everything we do, different conceptions of time in philosophy, and how how brains might tell time. That was almost 7 years ago, and his work on time and dynamics in computational neuroscience continues.

One thing we discuss today, later in the episode, is his recent work using organotypic brain slices to test the idea that cortical circuits implement timing as a computational primitive it's something they do by they're very nature. Organotypic brain slices are between what I think of as traditional brain slices and full on organoids. Brain slices are extracted from an organism, and maintained in a brain-like fluid while you perform experiments on them. Organoids start with a small amount of cells that you the culture, and let them divide and grow and specialize, until you have a mass of cells that have grown into an organ of some sort, to then perform experiments on. Organotypic brain slices are extracted from an organism, like brain slices, but then also cultured for some time to let them settle back into some sort of near-homeostatic point - to them as close as you can to what they're like in the intact brain... then perform experiments on them. Dean and his colleagues use optigenetics to train their brain slices to predict the timing of the stimuli, and they find the populations of neurons do indeed learn to predict the timing of the stimuli, and that they exhibit replaying of those sequences similar to the replay seen in brain areas like the hippocampus.

But, we begin our conversation talking about Dean's recent piece in The Transmitter, that I'll point to in the show notes, called The brain holds no exclusive rights on how to create intelligence. There he argues that modern AI is likely to continue its recent successes despite the ongoing divergence between AI and neuroscience. This is in contrast to what folks in NeuroAI believe.

We then talk about his recent chapter with physicist Carlo Rovelli, titled Bridging the neuroscience and physics of time, in which Dean and Carlo examine where neuroscience and physics disagree and where they agree about the nature of time.

Finally, we discuss Dean's thoughts on the integrated information theory of consciousness, or IIT. IIT has see a little controversy lately. Over 100 scientists, a large part of that group calling themselves IIT-Concerned, have expressed concern that IIT is actually unscientific. This has cause backlash and anti-backlash, and all sorts of fun expression from many interested people. Dean explains his own views about why he thinks IIT is not in the purview of science - namely that it doesn't play well with the existing ontology of what physics says about science. What I just said doesn't do justice to his arguments, which he articulates much better.

  • Buonomano lab.
  • Twitter: @DeanBuono.
  • Related papers
    • The brain holds no exclusive rights on how to create intelligence.
    • What makes a theory of consciousness unscientific?
    • Ex vivo cortical circuits learn to predict and spontaneously replay temporal patterns.
    • Bridging the neuroscience and physics of time.
    • BI 204 David Robbe: Your Brain Doesn’t Measure Time
    • Read the transcript.

      0:00 - Intro

      8:49 - AI doesn't need biology
      17:52 - Time in physics and in neuroscience
      34:04 - Integrated information theory
      1:01:34 - Global neuronal workspace theory
      1:07:46 - Organotypic slices and predictive processing
      1:26:07 - Do brains actually measure time? David Robbe

      ...more
      View all episodesView all episodes
      Download on the App Store

      Brain InspiredBy Paul Middlebrooks

      • 4.9
      • 4.9
      • 4.9
      • 4.9
      • 4.9

      4.9

      133 ratings


      More shows like Brain Inspired

      View all
      History of Philosophy Without Any Gaps by Peter Adamson

      History of Philosophy Without Any Gaps

      1,577 Listeners

      Closer To Truth by Closer To Truth

      Closer To Truth

      241 Listeners

      Philosophize This! by Stephen West

      Philosophize This!

      15,031 Listeners

      The Quanta Podcast by Quanta Magazine

      The Quanta Podcast

      482 Listeners

      Philosophy For Our Times by IAI

      Philosophy For Our Times

      306 Listeners

      Into the Impossible With Brian Keating by Big Bang Productions Inc.

      Into the Impossible With Brian Keating

      1,044 Listeners

      The Michael Shermer Show by Michael Shermer

      The Michael Shermer Show

      920 Listeners

      Sean Carroll's Mindscape: Science, Society, Philosophy, Culture, Arts, and Ideas by Sean Carroll | Wondery

      Sean Carroll's Mindscape: Science, Society, Philosophy, Culture, Arts, and Ideas

      4,133 Listeners

      The Origins Podcast with Lawrence Krauss by Lawrence M. Krauss

      The Origins Podcast with Lawrence Krauss

      484 Listeners

      Machine Learning Street Talk (MLST) by Machine Learning Street Talk (MLST)

      Machine Learning Street Talk (MLST)

      88 Listeners

      Dwarkesh Podcast by Dwarkesh Patel

      Dwarkesh Podcast

      379 Listeners

      Theories of Everything with Curt Jaimungal by Theories of Everything

      Theories of Everything with Curt Jaimungal

      460 Listeners

      Clearer Thinking with Spencer Greenberg by Spencer Greenberg

      Clearer Thinking with Spencer Greenberg

      128 Listeners

      The Joy of Why by Steven Strogatz, Janna Levin and Quanta Magazine

      The Joy of Why

      499 Listeners

      Robinson's Podcast by Robinson Erhardt

      Robinson's Podcast

      242 Listeners