Ilya Nemenman
Ilya Mark Nemenman (born January 8, 1975, in Minsk, Belarus) is a theoretical physicist at Emory University, where he is a Winship Distinguished Research Professor of Physics and Biology. He is known for his studies of information processing in biological systems and for developing coarse-grained models of these systems. He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society for "his contributions to theoretical biological physics, especially information processing in a variety of living systems, and for the development of coarse-grained modeling methods of such systems". He is a Simons Investigator and James S. McDonnell Foundation Complex Systems Scholar. He also served in the Chair Line of the Division of Biological Physics of the American Physical Society, from 2013 to 2018. Nemenman also was a founder of the q-bio conference, and is a general member of the Aspen Center for Physics. Provided by Wikipedia
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Coincidences and Estimation of Entropies of Random Variables with Large Cardinalities by Ilya Nemenman
Published 2011-12-01
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Genotype to phenotype mapping and the fitness landscape of the E. coli lac promoter. by Jakub Otwinowski, Ilya Nemenman
Published 2013-01-01
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Simple biochemical networks allow accurate sensing of multiple ligands with a single receptor. by Vijay Singh, Ilya Nemenman
Published 2017-04-01
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Inferring phenomenological models of first passage processes. by Catalina Rivera, David Hofmann, Ilya Nemenman
Published 2021-03-01
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Neural criticality from effective latent variables by Mia C Morrell, Ilya Nemenman, Audrey Sederberg
Published 2024-03-01
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Millisecond-scale motor encoding in a cortical vocal area. by Claire Tang, Diala Chehayeb, Kyle Srivastava, Ilya Nemenman, Samuel J Sober
Published 2014-12-01
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Correction: Model Cortical Association Fields Account for the Time Course and Dependence on Target Complexity of Human Contour Perception. by Vadas Gintautas, Michael I. Ham, Benjamin Kunsberg, Shawn Barr, Steven P. Brumby, Craig Rasmussen, John S. George, Ilya Nemenman, Luís M. A. Bettencourt, Garrett T. Kenyon
Published 2011-10-01
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Model cortical association fields account for the time course and dependence on target complexity of human contour perception. by Vadas Gintautas, Michael I Ham, Benjamin Kunsberg, Shawn Barr, Steven P Brumby, Craig Rasmussen, John S George, Ilya Nemenman, Luís M A Bettencourt, Garrett T Kenyon
Published 2011-10-01
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