Lehrgebiet: Theoretische Informatik und künstliche Intelligenz
Büro: 01.214
Labor: 04.105
Telefon: +49 208 88254-806
E-Mail:
Ioannis Iossifidis studierte Physik (Schwerpunkt: theoretische Teilchenphysik) an der Universität Dortmund und promovierte 2006 an der Fakultät für Physik und Astronomie der Ruhr-Universität Bochum.
Am Institut für Neuroinformatik leitete Prof. Dr. Iossifidis die Arbeitsgruppe Autonome Robotik und nahm mit seiner Forschungsgruppe erfolgreich an zahlreichen, vom BmBF und der EU, geförderten Forschungsprojekten aus dem Bereich der künstlichen Intelligenz teil. Seit dem 1. Oktober 2010 arbeitet er an der HRW am Institut Informatik und hält den Lehrstuhl für Theoretische Informatik – Künstliche Intelligenz.
Prof. Dr. Ioannis Iossifidis entwickelt seit über 20 Jahren biologisch inspirierte anthropomorphe, autonome Robotersysteme, die zugleich Teil und Ergebnis seiner Forschung im Bereich der rechnergestützten Neurowissenschaften sind. In diesem Rahmen entwickelte er Modelle zur Informationsverarbeitung im menschlichen Gehirn und wendete diese auf technische Systeme an.
Ausgewiesene Schwerpunkte seiner wissenschaftlichen Arbeit der letzten Jahre sind die Modellierung menschlicher Armbewegungen, der Entwurf von sogenannten «Simulierten Realitäten» zur Simulation und Evaluation der Interaktionen zwischen Mensch, Maschine und Umwelt sowie die Entwicklung von kortikalen exoprothetischen Komponenten. Entwicklung der Theorie und Anwendung von Algorithmen des maschinellen Lernens auf Basis tiefer neuronaler Architekturen bilden das Querschnittsthema seiner Forschung.
Ioannis Iossifidis’ Forschung wurde u.a. mit Fördermitteln im Rahmen großer Förderprojekte des BmBF (NEUROS, MORPHA, LOKI, DESIRE, Bernstein Fokus: Neuronale Grundlagen des Lernens etc.), der DFG («Motor‐parietal cortical neuroprosthesis with somatosensory feedback for restoring hand and arm functions in tetraplegic patients») und der EU (Neural Dynamics – EU (STREP), EUCogII, EUCogIII ) honoriert und gehört zu den Gewinnern der Leitmarktwettbewerbe Gesundheit.NRW und IKT.NRW 2019.
ARBEITS- UND FORSCHUNGSSCHWERPUNKTE
- Computational Neuroscience
- Brain Computer Interfaces
- Entwicklung kortikaler exoprothetischer Komponenten
- Theorie neuronaler Netze
- Modellierung menschlicher Armbewegungen
- Simulierte Realität
WISSENSCHAFTLICHE EINRICHTUNGEN
- Labor mit Verlinkung
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LEHRVERANSTALTUNGEN
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PROJEKTE
- Projekt mit Verlinkung
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WISSENSCHAFTLICHE MITARBEITER*INNEN
Felix Grün
Büro: 02.216 (Campus Bottrop)
Marie Schmidt
Büro: 02.216 (Campus Bottrop)
Aline Xavier Fidencio
Gastwissenschaftlerin
Muhammad Ayaz Hussain
Doktorand
Tim Sziburis
Doktorand
Farhad Rahmat
studentische Hilfskraft
AUSGEWÄHLTE PUBLIKATIONEN
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2019
1.Saif-ur-Rehman, Muhammad; Lienkämper, Robin; Dyck, Susanne; Rayana, A; Parpaley, Y; Wllner, J; Liu, Charles; Lee, Brian; Kellis, Spencer; Manahan-Vaughn, D; Güntürkün, O; Andersen, Richard; Iossifidis, Ioannis; Glasmachers, Tobias; Klaes, Christian
Universal SpikeDeeptector Sonstige
2019.
Abstract | BibTeX | Schlagwörter: BCI, CNN, Machine Learning, Spike Detection, Spike Sorting
@misc{ur-reimann2019a,
title = {Universal SpikeDeeptector},
author = {Muhammad Saif-ur-Rehman and Robin Lienkämper and Susanne Dyck and A Rayana and Y Parpaley and J Wllner and Charles Liu and Brian Lee and Spencer Kellis and D Manahan-Vaughn and O Güntürkün and Richard Andersen and Ioannis Iossifidis and Tobias Glasmachers and Christian Klaes},
year = {2019},
date = {2019-01-01},
urldate = {2019-01-01},
publisher = {SfN 2019},
abstract = {State-of-the-art microelectrode array technology enables simultaneous, large-scale single unit recordings from hundreds of channels. Identification of channels recording neural data as compared to noise is the first step for all further analyses. Automatizing this process aims at minimizing the human involvement and time for manual curation. In our previous study, we introduced the “SpikeDeeptector” (SD), which enables us to automatically detect and track channels containing neural data from different human patients implanted with different types of microelectrodes across different brain areas. SD works on human data and to some extent on the data of non-human primates (NHPs). However, to make SD more versatile we proposed a more generalized method called “Universal SpikeDeeptector (USD)”, which is an extended version of SD. USD intends to detect and track the channels containing neural data recorded from four different species (rats, ravens, NHPs and humans) using different kinds of microelectrodes and different recording sites. To our knowledge, there is no method that can simultaneously detect and track neural data of multiple species. To enable contextual learning, USD constructs a feature vector from a batch of waveforms. The constructed feature vectors are then fed into a deep-learning algorithm, which learns contextualized, temporal and spatial patterns. USD is a supervised learning method. Therefore, it requires labeled data for training. It is mainly trained on data from a single human tetraplegic patient, and a small but equal portion of data from the remaining three species. The trained model is then evaluated on a test dataset collected from several humans, NHPs, rats, and birds. The results show that the USD performed consistently well across data collected from each species.},
keywords = {BCI, CNN, Machine Learning, Spike Detection, Spike Sorting},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}
State-of-the-art microelectrode array technology enables simultaneous, large-scale single unit recordings from hundreds of channels. Identification of channels recording neural data as compared to noise is the first step for all further analyses. Automatizing this process aims at minimizing the human involvement and time for manual curation. In our previous study, we introduced the “SpikeDeeptector” (SD), which enables us to automatically detect and track channels containing neural data from different human patients implanted with different types of microelectrodes across different brain areas. SD works on human data and to some extent on the data of non-human primates (NHPs). However, to make SD more versatile we proposed a more generalized method called “Universal SpikeDeeptector (USD)”, which is an extended version of SD. USD intends to detect and track the channels containing neural data recorded from four different species (rats, ravens, NHPs and humans) using different kinds of microelectrodes and different recording sites. To our knowledge, there is no method that can simultaneously detect and track neural data of multiple species. To enable contextual learning, USD constructs a feature vector from a batch of waveforms. The constructed feature vectors are then fed into a deep-learning algorithm, which learns contextualized, temporal and spatial patterns. USD is a supervised learning method. Therefore, it requires labeled data for training. It is mainly trained on data from a single human tetraplegic patient, and a small but equal portion of data from the remaining three species. The trained model is then evaluated on a test dataset collected from several humans, NHPs, rats, and birds. The results show that the USD performed consistently well across data collected from each species.