CAREER: CompCog: Reverse-engineering neural mechanisms of object cognition with multilevel computational modeling

NSF Award Search · 01002526DB NSF RESEARCH & RELATED ACTIVIT · $603,800 · view on nsf.gov ↗

Abstract

Imagine pointing a camera at a child building a tower with blocks to take a picture of that scene. In a split second, both the camera and your retina will register the light bouncing off of the surfaces within the view, but there is a great difference between these raw sensory measurements of light and what you experience as perceptions and thoughts --- what the child’s face might look like in a different viewing angle, the shape and posture of the body, the configuration of the tower they are building and whether it’s a stable tower, and which piece they are about to place next. This project studies algorithms by which the light that arrives at our retinas is transformed into these perceptions and thoughts, including objects’ 3D shapes and physical properties, predictions and mental simulations of what will or could happen next in the scene, and our plans to realize those futures. This project examines these “object cognition” abilities by creating new computational models of how we see and think and compares the internal structure and performance of these models to high-resolution brain activity and task performance in both humans and non-human primates. The overarching hypothesis of this project is that the brain implements object cognition by building and manipulating generative models of how physical scenes form, dynamically unfold, and project onto sensory inputs. To test this hypothesis, the research team aims to build novel multilevel computational theories and mo

Key facts

NSF award ID
2441520
Awardee
Yale University (CT)
SAM.gov UEI
FL6GV84CKN57
PI
Ilker Yildirim
Primary program
01002526DB NSF RESEARCH & RELATED ACTIVIT
All programs
Artificial Intelligence (AI), CAREER-Faculty Erly Career Dev, COGNEURO, Understanding the Brain/Cognitive Scienc
Estimated total
$603,800
Funds obligated
$603,800
Transaction type
Continuing Grant
Period
09/01/2025 → 08/31/2030