Workshop:
Philosophical Issues in Neural Computation
Join us for our workshop on Neural Computation at Ruhr-Uni Bochum, June 2-3, 2026. It will take place on Campus at Beckmannshof.
The idea that the brain performs computations is widely accepted in cognitive science and computational neuroscience. However, it is becoming increasingly clear that neural computation differs fundamentally from classical computation. Key aspects of what it means to compute in a neural context are under debate. For example, to what extent is neural computation medium-independent, or is it tied to the biological substrate of the brain? What is the status of deep learning models in computational neuroscience? What kind of models are they—engineering or scientific—and how do they explain neural phenomena? How does neural computation relate to, or differ from, analog and digital computation as understood in traditional computer science? This workshop brings together philosophers and researchers from other fields to address these questions and develop a clearer understanding of computation in neural systems.
Speakers:
Johannes Brinz (University of Osnabrück)
Adrien Doerig (FU Berlin)
Frances Egan (Rutgers University)
Olivia Guest (Radboud University)
Gualtiero Piccinini (University of Missouri)
Katja Seeliger (Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg)
Oron Shagrir (University of Jerusalem)
Organization:
Johannes Brinz & Nikola Kompa (University of Osnabrück)
Tobias Schlicht (Ruhr-University Bochum)
Further details: https://www.pe.ruhr-uni-bochum.de/philosophie/ii/bewusstsein/workshop.html.en