Konrad Paul Kording
Black-box methodInterpretability
in Black box
Konrad Paul Kording, computational neuroscientist. At Northwestern University and the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago when the microprocessor paper appeared, later at the University of Pennsylvania. He is known for Bayesian models of the brain and for sharp methodological critique of his own field.
Stake§
Reputational and methodological — a critique from inside neuroscience, using a system with a known answer to expose where standard methods fail. The value to the authors is the credibility a well-aimed self-critique earns.
Kording's contribution to this topic, with Eric Jonas, is to turn the black-box method into a test of the analyst rather than the artefact. Applying lesion studies, tuning curves, connectomics, and dimensionality reduction to a chip whose wiring is known, they find the methods do not reconstruct its logic — which bears directly on whether machine interpretability can be trusted where there is no answer key, as there is none for a brain or a deployed model.