The University of Queensland Homepage
School of ITEE ITEE Main Website

Thinking Systems Project: Navigating through real and conceptual spaces

ARC Special Research Initiative jointly funded by the Australian Research Council and the National Health and Medical Research Council.

Summary of Project

This project brings together a cross-disciplinary, collaborative and cross-institutional team to study fundamental issues in how information is transmitted, received, processed and understood in biological and artificial systems. The core of the project is studying how brains understand spatial systems, both physical and conceptual. This integrated approach will lead to an increased understanding of neural, behavioural and information processing bases of thinking systems. Insights from neurocognitive systems will be used to develop computational models, autonomous robots and intelligent software agents which in turn will lead to deeper understanding of the relationship between neurocognitive mechanisms and their behaviour in whole systems.

Thinking Systems Investigators

The research team brings a wide range of biological, behavioural and technological experience.

Chief Investigators (CIs)

Professor Janet Wiles, the project leader, is from the School of Information Technology and Electrical Engineering (ITEE, UQ). She has developed models across all three areas of neural, cognitive and robotic systems.

Professor Perry Bartlett is an international expert in the functional importance of neurogenesis, a Federation Fellow and Director of the Queensland Brain Institute. (QBI, UQ)

Professor Kevin Burrage’s leading role will be the integration of both stochastic and deterministic dynamical models in both time and space and he will be involved in modelling in all Themes. He is a Federation Fellow (Maths, UQ).

A/Prof Geoffrey Goodhill is a computational neuroscientist with expertise in modelling neural systems, a key bridging role in this project. He is Editor-in-Chief of Network: Computation in Neural Systems (QBI/Maths)

Professor Pankaj Sah is an international expert in neurophysiology. He will direct the empirical research on mushroom bodies in Theme 1 and hippocampus and amygdala in Theme 2. (QBI)

Dr Andrew Smith has developed commercial Leximancer software for dynamically and automatically extracting conceptual schemata from text. He is with the Key Centre for Human Factors and Applied Cognitive Psychology (HFACP) in the Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences at The University of Queensland.

Dr Gordon Wyeth is the Director of the UQ Robotics Laboratory (ITEE, UQ) and has gained an international reputation in developing working robot systems based on hippocampal models and other biologically-inspired robots.

Professor Jason Mattingley is the Director of the University of Melbourne Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory. His research is internationally recognised in the neural mechanisms of attention and spatial cognition.

Professor Srinivasan is an expert in insect vision, navigation and neuroethology and application of these principles to the design of autonomously navigating robots. He is an Inaugural Federation Fellow and a Fellow of the Royal Society of London (ANU).

International Partner Investigators (PIs)

Professor Michael Arbib has led international research in computational neuroscience for three decades. He is Professor of Computer Science, as well as a Professor of Biological Sciences, Biomedical Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Neuroscience and Psychology at the University of Southern California (USC)

Professor Jeffery Elman is a cognitive scientist with expertise in linguistics. He is Foundational Co-Director of the Kavli Institute for Brain and Mind and Acting Dean of Social Sciences at UC San Diego.

Professor John O’Keefe is a neurophysiologist and Fellow of the Royal Society who has extensive experience in all aspects of rodent navigation and its neural bases. His seminal book The Hippocampus as a Cognitive Map  (O’Keefe and Nadel, 1978) underpins the empirical directions for the conceptual mapping research. He is at University College London.

Positions available (applications will be accepted at any time)

No postdoc positions are available at present.

PhD Students

PhD students: Students with an Australian Postgraduate Award (APA) or another scholarship will be able to apply for top up funding for related projects starting in 2008-2010.

Further information: contact Helen Weir on +61 7 3346 7383 or email h.weir@uq.edu.au.
Send applications to the Human Resources Advisor, Queensland Brain Institute, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Qld 4072, or email applications@qbi.uq.edu.au

Summer Research Students

Summer students: 8 week summer projects will be offered in 2008-2010. Summer scholarships

Application Process

Applications will continue to be considered until the positions are filled.

                                                 

The University of Queensland

According to http://www.thes.co.uk/worldrankings the University of Queensland is one of the top 50 universities in the world. It provides an excellent environment for interdisciplinary research, and is currently investing AU$200M in the general area of Biotechnology. This includes AU$50M for the new Queensland Brain Institute, http://www.qbi.uq.edu.au.

UQ is in Brisbane, the capital of Queensland, a cosmopolitan city of 1.5 million people with excellent facilities, a vibrant cultural environment, and a subtropical climate. Queensland is also home to attractions such as tropical rainforests and the Great Barrier Reef.

Last updated 21st Oct 2008.