16 March 2026

From spikes to meaning – and back?

How the brain encodes and decodes information

Fleur Zeldenrust

Michael Tangermann

8pm · Fleur Zeldenrust (RU) and Michael Tangermann (RU)
 
7.30pm · Trio In Dubio  live
 
moderator · Ronald Kleiss
 
 
* * * * *
 
March 16th · 7.30/8 - 10 pm
 
The Shamrock · Smetiusstr. 17
 
free admission (no reservation)
 
in English

Your brain

is constantly encoding the world into electrical signals. But how does meaning emerge from this neural activity? From the firing of individual neurons to the rich patterns underlying perception, memory, and imagination, the brain processes information across many levels of organization. On March 16th, the Science Café explores what 'information' means in the brain, how it is encoded and transmitted, and how scientists - with the help of artificial intelligence - are attempting to decode these signals. By bridging biology and computation, we ask how meaning arises from neural activity and what this reveals about both natural and artificial cognition.
 
Two researchers offer complementary perspectives on how the brain computes. Fleur Zeldenrust (Radboud University) explains how neural coding and network dynamics shape information processing in the brain. Michael Tangermann (Radboud University) focuses on decoding brain signals and brain–computer interfaces, where algorithms translate neural activity into action, communication, and insight. Alongside thought-provoking science, the evening will tickle your neurons with live jazz by Trio in Dubio, featuring piano, alto saxophone, and bass.

Ronald Kleiss

Trio In Dubio