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Cyber-Workstation for Computational Neuroscience

A Cyber-Workstation (CW) to study in vivo, real-time interactions between computational models and large-scale brain subsystems during behavioral experiments has been designed and implemented. The design philosophy seeks to directly link the in vivo neurophysiology laboratory with scalable computing...

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Autores principales: DiGiovanna, Jack, Rattanatamrong, Prapaporn, Zhao, Ming, Mahmoudi, Babak, Hermer, Linda, Figueiredo, Renato, Principe, Jose C., Fortes, Jose, Sanchez, Justin C.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Research Foundation 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2814557/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20126436
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/neuro.16.017.2009
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author DiGiovanna, Jack
Rattanatamrong, Prapaporn
Zhao, Ming
Mahmoudi, Babak
Hermer, Linda
Figueiredo, Renato
Principe, Jose C.
Fortes, Jose
Sanchez, Justin C.
author_facet DiGiovanna, Jack
Rattanatamrong, Prapaporn
Zhao, Ming
Mahmoudi, Babak
Hermer, Linda
Figueiredo, Renato
Principe, Jose C.
Fortes, Jose
Sanchez, Justin C.
author_sort DiGiovanna, Jack
collection PubMed
description A Cyber-Workstation (CW) to study in vivo, real-time interactions between computational models and large-scale brain subsystems during behavioral experiments has been designed and implemented. The design philosophy seeks to directly link the in vivo neurophysiology laboratory with scalable computing resources to enable more sophisticated computational neuroscience investigation. The architecture designed here allows scientists to develop new models and integrate them with existing models (e.g. recursive least-squares regressor) by specifying appropriate connections in a block-diagram. Then, adaptive middleware transparently implements these user specifications using the full power of remote grid-computing hardware. In effect, the middleware deploys an on-demand and flexible neuroscience research test-bed to provide the neurophysiology laboratory extensive computational power from an outside source. The CW consolidates distributed software and hardware resources to support time-critical and/or resource-demanding computing during data collection from behaving animals. This power and flexibility is important as experimental and theoretical neuroscience evolves based on insights gained from data-intensive experiments, new technologies and engineering methodologies. This paper describes briefly the computational infrastructure and its most relevant components. Each component is discussed within a systematic process of setting up an in vivo, neuroscience experiment. Furthermore, a co-adaptive brain machine interface is implemented on the CW to illustrate how this integrated computational and experimental platform can be used to study systems neurophysiology and learning in a behavior task. We believe this implementation is also the first remote execution and adaptation of a brain-machine interface.
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spelling pubmed-28145572010-02-02 Cyber-Workstation for Computational Neuroscience DiGiovanna, Jack Rattanatamrong, Prapaporn Zhao, Ming Mahmoudi, Babak Hermer, Linda Figueiredo, Renato Principe, Jose C. Fortes, Jose Sanchez, Justin C. Front Neuroengineering Neuroscience A Cyber-Workstation (CW) to study in vivo, real-time interactions between computational models and large-scale brain subsystems during behavioral experiments has been designed and implemented. The design philosophy seeks to directly link the in vivo neurophysiology laboratory with scalable computing resources to enable more sophisticated computational neuroscience investigation. The architecture designed here allows scientists to develop new models and integrate them with existing models (e.g. recursive least-squares regressor) by specifying appropriate connections in a block-diagram. Then, adaptive middleware transparently implements these user specifications using the full power of remote grid-computing hardware. In effect, the middleware deploys an on-demand and flexible neuroscience research test-bed to provide the neurophysiology laboratory extensive computational power from an outside source. The CW consolidates distributed software and hardware resources to support time-critical and/or resource-demanding computing during data collection from behaving animals. This power and flexibility is important as experimental and theoretical neuroscience evolves based on insights gained from data-intensive experiments, new technologies and engineering methodologies. This paper describes briefly the computational infrastructure and its most relevant components. Each component is discussed within a systematic process of setting up an in vivo, neuroscience experiment. Furthermore, a co-adaptive brain machine interface is implemented on the CW to illustrate how this integrated computational and experimental platform can be used to study systems neurophysiology and learning in a behavior task. We believe this implementation is also the first remote execution and adaptation of a brain-machine interface. Frontiers Research Foundation 2010-01-20 /pmc/articles/PMC2814557/ /pubmed/20126436 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/neuro.16.017.2009 Text en Copyright © 2010 DiGiovanna, Rattanatamrong, Zhao, Mahmoudi, Hermer, Figueiredo, Principe, Fortes and Sanchez. http://www.frontiersin.org/licenseagreement This is an open-access article subject to an exclusive license agreement between the authors and the Frontiers Research Foundation, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are credited.
spellingShingle Neuroscience
DiGiovanna, Jack
Rattanatamrong, Prapaporn
Zhao, Ming
Mahmoudi, Babak
Hermer, Linda
Figueiredo, Renato
Principe, Jose C.
Fortes, Jose
Sanchez, Justin C.
Cyber-Workstation for Computational Neuroscience
title Cyber-Workstation for Computational Neuroscience
title_full Cyber-Workstation for Computational Neuroscience
title_fullStr Cyber-Workstation for Computational Neuroscience
title_full_unstemmed Cyber-Workstation for Computational Neuroscience
title_short Cyber-Workstation for Computational Neuroscience
title_sort cyber-workstation for computational neuroscience
topic Neuroscience
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2814557/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20126436
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/neuro.16.017.2009
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