Satpreet (Sat) Singh
satpreetsingh.bsky.social
Satpreet (Sat) Singh
@satpreetsingh.bsky.social
Postdoc @harvard.edu @kempnerinstitute.bsky.social
Homepage: http://satpreetsingh.github.io
Twitter: https://x.com/tweetsatpreet
Reposted by Satpreet (Sat) Singh
Our next paper on comparing dynamical systems (with special interest to artificial and biological neural networks) is out!! Joint work with @annhuang42.bsky.social , as well as @satpreetsingh.bsky.social , @leokoz8.bsky.social , Ila Fiete, and @kanakarajanphd.bsky.social : arxiv.org/pdf/2510.25943
November 10, 2025 at 4:16 PM
Reposted by Satpreet (Sat) Singh
new paper with @robertchisciure.bsky.social

link.springer.com/article/10.1...

"Cognition all the way down 2.0: neuroscience beyond neurons in the diverse intelligence era"

🧪
Cognition all the way down 2.0: neuroscience beyond neurons in the diverse intelligence era - Synthese
This paper formalizes biological intelligence as search efficiency in multi-scale problem spaces, aiming to resolve epistemic deadlocks in the basal “cognition wars” unfolding in the Diverse Intellige...
link.springer.com
November 7, 2025 at 12:31 AM
Reposted by Satpreet (Sat) Singh
Excited to release our new work: Petri Dish Neural Cellular Automata!

pub.sakana.ai/pdnca

We investigate how multi-agent NCAs can develop into artificial life 🦠 exhibiting complex, emergent behaviors like cyclic dynamics, territorial defense, and spontaneous cooperation.
Introducing Petri Dish Neural Cellular Automata (PD-NCA)

pub.sakana.ai/pdnca/

In this work we explore the role of continual adaptation in artificial life, where the cellular automata in our system do not rely on a fixed set of parameters, but rather learn continuously during the simulation itself.
November 5, 2025 at 12:47 AM
Reposted by Satpreet (Sat) Singh
In case you don't know already, the journal Open Mind has a Bluesky account that automatically posts new papers:
@openmindjournal.bsky.social

The journal is diamond open access (free to read, free to publish) thanks to the support of MIT Press, Harvard Library, & MIT Library.
October 24, 2025 at 12:03 PM
Reposted by Satpreet (Sat) Singh
Excited to announce that my first postdoc paper is now online!

Links:
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
rdcu.be/eAcN7

In it, we examine the perennial question: what changes in the brain when learning a new motor skill?

Read more below to find out 👇
Differential kinematic coding in sensorimotor striatum across behavioral domains reflects different contributions to movement - Nature Neuroscience
Hardcastle and Marshall et al. show that striatal function is domain specific, required for task-related but not spontaneously expressed movements. This functional distinction is reflected in starkly ...
www.nature.com
August 12, 2025 at 6:26 PM
Reposted by Satpreet (Sat) Singh
Excited to share a new project spanning cognitive science and AI where we develop a novel deep reinforcement learning model---Multitask Preplay---that explains how people generalize to new tasks that were previously accessible but unpursued.
July 12, 2025 at 4:20 PM
Reposted by Satpreet (Sat) Singh
For the past 3 years, I've taught a course on Machine Learning for Climate Change to undergrads. At times, people have asked if the course lectures could be made available online. While I can't offer that, I have decided to start making "5 Minute Papers on AI for the Planet" videos. Hope its useful!
5 Minute Papers on AI for the Planet
AI is more than just chatbots! Learn about how AI can be used to protect biodiversity, fight climate change, and just better understand our planet through 5-minute explainers covering academic papers ...
www.youtube.com
June 20, 2025 at 1:55 AM
If you're at #RLDM2025, check out our contributed talk at Session 3 (Fri 6/13, 12:10pm), presented by my brilliant co-first-author on this project @sjohnsonyu.bsky.social!

Wasn't able to make it in person, but would love to hear your thoughts

@kempnerinstitute.bsky.social @harvardmed.bsky.social
New work incoming at #RLDM2025 🤖 🐟

While we look forward to sharing our research, I'm mindful that many colleagues, including the authors of our second abstract, can't attend due to funding & travel issues.

Read the extended abstracts: rldm.org/program-2025/ #neuroskyence
June 12, 2025 at 5:51 PM
Reposted by Satpreet (Sat) Singh
Check out our new work on making robots process touch more like brains!

Surprisingly, ConvRNNs best matched mouse cortex—passing the NeuroAI Turing Test. We also developed tactile-specific SSL augmentations and an Encoder-Attender-Decoder framework unifying ConvRNNs, SSMs & Transformers.
1/ What if we make robots that process touch the way our brains do?
We found that Convolutional Recurrent Neural Networks (ConvRNNs) pass the NeuroAI Turing Test in currently available mouse somatosensory cortex data.
New paper by @Yuchen @Nathan @anayebi.bsky.social and me!
May 28, 2025 at 12:31 AM
Reposted by Satpreet (Sat) Singh
It was an honor to speak at the
@kempnerinstitute.bsky.social
on how some of our recent works can be interpreted as an application of rational analysis to language model behaviors — seeing both their successes and failures through the lens of adaptation to the properties of their training data.
New in the Kempner Seminar Series:

Andrew Lampinen of Google DeepMind discusses how the in-context performance of language models can arise from rational adaptation to properties of the training data distribution.

bit.ly/KempnerLampi...

#ML #AI #LLMs
Rational Analysis of Language Models with Andrew Lampinen
Andrew Lampinen from DeepMind visited the Kempner's Seminar Series on May 16, 2025, to discuss "Rational Analysis of Language Models." There has been substantial debate about the capabilities of language models—which aspects of language they can acquire, whether they can be said to ‘reason’, and whether they can truly ‘learn’ in context. In this talk, I will suggest that approaches from cognitive science can provide useful tools for approaching these questions. Specifically, I will focus on rational analysis: analyzing behavior as a rational adaptation to an environment. I’ll first illustrate these ideas by discussing some of our work analyzing how the in-context learning abilities of language models can emerge as a rational adaptation to simple properties of the data distribution they are trained on. I’ll then discuss how this analysis extends to suggest that many of language models broader success and failures can be interpreted as rational responses to the natural data distribution — including cases where language models exhibit some of the same patterns of content entangled reasoning that humans do. Finally, I’ll illustrate how rational analysis implies that the contextual abilities of language models can overcome failures like the “reversal curse” — and how to exploit these insights to improve generalization.
bit.ly
May 19, 2025 at 9:28 PM
Reposted by Satpreet (Sat) Singh
After using electrical stimulation to activate their muscles, patients improved movement in their paralyzed limbs even when the system was turned off. The team leading the clinical trial believes new nerve connections may have begun to grow. https://cbsn.ws/43ocCrA
May 11, 2025 at 11:33 PM
Reposted by Satpreet (Sat) Singh
Big day for the Rajan lab at @harvardmed.bsky.social Friday Seminar Series 🌟

@satpreetsingh.bsky.social & Siyan Zhou gave outstanding talks on collective behaviors in artificial fish schools & disordered attractors in mice. I’m so proud of their work! 🤖🧠
May 2, 2025 at 6:16 PM
📽️Recordings from our
@cosynemeeting.bsky.social
#COSYNE2025 workshop on “Agent-Based Models in Neuroscience: Complex Planning, Embodiment, and Beyond" are now online: neuro-agent-models.github.io
🧠🤖
April 7, 2025 at 8:58 PM
Reposted by Satpreet (Sat) Singh
ML/stats folks!

This might be a stupid question but my brain isn’t working. In control theory, is there a way to directly infer a system’s objective function by just observing its behavior (as opposed to doing model comparison hypothesis tests)?
March 30, 2025 at 8:08 PM
Reposted by Satpreet (Sat) Singh
At @cosynemeeting.bsky.social ? Don't miss the workshop "It's All Connected" or how graph neural networks help us understand the structure-function relationship in the brain🧠

Thanks to the organizers @neurokim.bsky.social @briandepasquale.bsky.social Sam Lewallen 🌟

sites.google.com/bu.edu/gnnwo...
gnnworkshop cosyne2025
It's All Connected!
sites.google.com
March 28, 2025 at 7:56 PM
Reposted by Satpreet (Sat) Singh
Big showing from the Rajan Lab at @cosynemeeting.bsky.social!

We have posters on everything from multi-agent social foraging to neuromodulated neural networks. Catch us in Poster Sessions 2 & 3 🧠🤖

#Cosyne2025 #NeuroAI #CompSci #neuroskyence
March 28, 2025 at 3:33 PM
Attending #COSYNE2025? Check out our workshop on Agent-based models in Neuroscience on Monday March 31st!

Updated schedule here: neuro-agent-models.github.io
March 27, 2025 at 5:04 PM
Reposted by Satpreet (Sat) Singh
If you are attending the #cosyne2025 Workshops, please come join our Navigation under Uncertainty workshop! An exciting topic and a great line-up of speakers - what's more to ask for?

Details below, and at sites.google.com/view/cosyne2...
March 27, 2025 at 3:08 PM
Reposted by Satpreet (Sat) Singh
Countdown to #COSYNE2025!
Leading up to @cosynemeeting.bsky.social GNN workshop w @neurokim.bsky.social and Sam, allow us to introduce our fabulous speakers, starting with @wesleyqian.bsky.social! Wesley is part of osmo.ai foundling team, using GNNs to digitize smell!
March 13, 2025 at 10:36 AM
📣 Excited to announce our workshop "Agent-Based Models in Neuroscience: Complex Planning, Embodiment, and Beyond" at the upcoming @cosynemeeting.bsky.social #CoSyNe2025! 🧠🤖 🪱🪰🐟🐝🐭💪

Schedule: neuro-agent-models.github.io
🗓️ Join us in Mont-Tremblant, Canada, on March 31!
Workshop Title
neuro-agent-models.github.io
February 18, 2025 at 6:11 PM
Reposted by Satpreet (Sat) Singh
Enjoyed sharing our work on electric fish with @dryohanjohn.bsky.social⚡🐟 Their electric "conversations" help us build models to discover neural mechanisms of social cognition. Work led by Sonja Johnson-Yu & @satpreetsingh.bsky.social with Nate Sawtell

kempnerinstitute.harvard.edu/news/what-el...
February 14, 2025 at 9:16 PM