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Theoretical Neuroscience: what tools are in your mathematical toolkit?

Psychology & Neuroscience Asked by oolveea on September 28, 2021

I believe that the following courses are a minimum math/engineering/(+cs) requirement for theoretical neuroscience research, specifically, Eliasmith’s NEF/SPA approach. I wonder what other tools might be useful. Concretely, I am trying to workout the marginal utility of "learning more math just in case you’ll need to apply it in some new context + improved mathematical maturity" versus "learning more neuroscience". Can you please list some math/engineering/(+cs) courses you found integral to your research and provide context?

Math:
Precalculus,
Calculus 1,
Calculus 2,
Multivariable Calculus,
Ordinary Differential Equations,
Linear Algebra (to Eigenvalues),
Discrete Mathematics and Logic,
Optimization and Numerical Methods

Engineering:
Systems and Signals,
Control Systems,
Pattern Recognition,
Information Theory and Applications,
Machine Learning (Neural Networks in particular)

CS:
Data Structures and Algorithms,
Object-Oriented Software Development,
Neuromorphic Computing

One Answer

Luckily, I think your list of requirements is already too long.

Your primary toolkit is going to be:

  • Linear Algebra
  • Probability and statistics
  • python

If you want, you can add:

  • Signal processing (filtering)
  • Machine Learning (mostly just applications of linear algebra)

I am currently TAing at an online summer school called Neuromatch Academy. Check out their syllabus (3 week course) for an overview of tools useful in theoretical neuroscience. homepage: https://neuromatch.io/academy/ syllabus, tutorials: https://github.com/NeuromatchAcademy/course-content

Out of interest, why NEF? There are a wealth of frameworks out there, and NEF is relatively limited in its application.

Answered by honi on September 28, 2021

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