Alumni

Tal Golan

Ph.D.

During my Ph.D., co-advised by Rafael Malach (Weizmann Institute) and Leon Deouell (ELSC), I studied how eye movements and eye blinks modulate visual representations in the human cortex. In my work, I combined intracranial recordings from patients undergoing epilepsy surgery, eye-tracking, fMRI, and statistical modeling. I found that whereas the early visual cortex represents oculomotor disruptions to vision in the same fashion as external disruptions, higher-order visual regions selectively inhibit eye-blink- and saccade-related visual activations, resulting in a robust neural population code.
After completing my Ph.D. at ELSC, I moved to New York for a postdoc at Columbia University, where I was advised by Nikolaus Kriegeskorte. With his guidance, I developed "controversial stimuli", a method for comparing neural network models of human perception by testing humans with inputs synthesized to cause disagreement among alternative neural network models.

Today, I am a senior lecturer at the Department of Cognitive and Brain Sciences at Ben-Gurion University, where I head a lab working at the interface between human visual perception and artificial neural network modeling.
 
lab website: brainsandmachines.org
golan.neuro@bgu.ac.il
ELSC-Faculty-Leon-Deouell
Leon Deouell
Professor

“Working memory”