| I encourage all Auditory PhD students and postdocs to apply for the 2026 Telluride Neuromorphic AI Workshop. Please forward. For three weeks in July, we gather an amazing set of faculty and participants to pioneer new ideas at the intersection of auditory perception, neuroscience, engineering and of course AI. We generally have about 10 faculty members (over the course of three weeks), and about 10 participants (for all three weeks). We have EEG (and hopefully fNIRS) on site, plenty of brain power (modulated by the high altitude), lots of good ideas, and we aim to create new science experiments and engineering demos. This year the auditory group is emphasizing understanding brain signals that drive intention. In Telluride we pioneered some of the first work on decoding auditory attention using EEG. But it’s intention and other high-level goals that drive our attention. How does that work? What can you bring to Telluride and what would you like to learn? Come to Telluride to help us explore the science, create some cool demos, all at the intersection of auditory perception, neurophysiology and AI. For details and to apply go to Topic leaders Malcolm Slaney (Stanford CCRMA & ICSI@Berkeley) Shihab Shamma (UMd) Confirmed Faculty (so far) Mounya Elhilali (JHU) Claire Pelofi (NYU) Michael Casey (Dartmouth) Christine Evers (Southamption) Heather Bortfeld (UC Merced) Let me know if you have any questions. - Malcolm |