论文ICLR 2026 Poster2026 年clinical prediction 基于脉冲的数字大脑:脑活动分析的新型基础模型
ICLR 2026 Poster accepted paper at ICLR 2026. Modeling the temporal dynamics of the human brain remains a core challenge in computational neuroscience and artificial intelligence. Traditional methods often ignore the biological spike characteristics of brain activity and find it difficult to reveal the dynamic dependencies and causal interactions between brain regions, limiting their effectiveness in brain function research and clinical applications. To address this issue, we propose a Spike-based Digital Brain (Spike-DB), a novel fundamental model that introduces the spike computing paradigm into brain time series modeling. Spike-DB encodes fMRI signals as spike trains and learns the temporal driving relationships between anchor and target regions to achieve high-precision prediction of brain activity and reveal underlying causal dependencies and dynamic relationship characteristics. Code/project link: https://github.com/UAIBC-Brain/Spike-DB
论文ICLR 2026 Poster2026 年医学影像 超越网格锁定体素:连续脑编码的神经响应函数
ICLR 2026 Poster accepted paper at ICLR 2026. Neural encoding models aim to predict fMRI-measured brain responses to natural images. fMRI data is acquired as a 3D volume of voxels, where each voxel has a defined spatial location in the brain. However, conventional encoding models often flatten this volume into a 1D vector and treat voxel responses as independent outputs. This removes spatial context, discards anatomical information, and ties each model to a subject-specific voxel grid. We introduce the NRF Neural Response Function, a framework that models fMRI activity as a continuous function over anatomical space rather than a flat vector of voxels. NRF represents brain activity as a continuous implicit function: given an image and a spatial coordinate (x, y, z) in standardized MNI space, the model predicts the response at that location.
论文ICLR 2026 Poster2026 年trustworthy medical AI 超越分类准确率:Neural-MedBench 与深层推理基准的必要性
ICLR 2026 Poster accepted paper at ICLR 2026. Epilepsy affects over 50 million people worldwide, and one-third of patients suffer drug-resistant seizures where surgery offers the best chance of seizure freedom. Accurate localization of the epileptogenic zone (EZ) relies on intracranial EEG (iEEG). Clinical workflows, however, remain constrained by labor-intensive manual review. At the same time, existing data-driven approaches are typically developed on single-center datasets that are inconsistent in format and metadata, lack standardized benchmarks, and rarely release pathological event annotations, creating barriers to reproducibility, cross-center validation, and clinical relevance. Code/project link: https://omni-ieeg.github.io/omni-ieeg/; https://github.com/Omni-iEEG/Omni-iEEG