Majus 10-en, szerdan delutan 4 orakor Budapesten az Irok Boltjaban
(Liszt Ferenc ter sarok) lesz Kollar Jozsef
HATTYU A KOMPUTER VIZEN
c. uj konyvenek (Pazmany Kiado) bemutatoja.
A Kollartol megszokot fanyar, neha abszurd konyv bemutatasat hozza nem
melto stilusban Pleh Csaba probalja meg.
Mindenkit szeretettel varunk
Csaba
Kedves kollegak es Diakok !
Kovacs Ilona es Kaldy Zsuzsa korabban mar reszletes tematikaval
meghirdetett (lasd lentebb) szegedi "Ket latorendszer egy fejben"
kuzusanak idoi rendje es szegedi szakmai programjuk
A kurzus 2000. mjus 15 es majus 20 kozott lesz.
Eloadas: Kovacs Ilona, E
Szeminarium: Kaldy Zsuzsanna, Sz
Hetfo 10-11.30 E, 13-14.30 E
Kedd 10-11.30 E, 16-18.00 Sz.
14-15.30 Kovacs Ilona nyilvanos eloadas a SzAB-ban
Szerda 10-12 Sz., 13-15 Sz.
Csutortok 10-11h30 E, 13-14.30 E
Pentek 9-13 (szunettel) Sz.
Orak helye: Pszichologia Tanszek Kognitiv Csoport
Irinyi tanterem, Boldogasszony sugarut 4
Kerem, aakik tenylegesen jarnak majd az orara a szeminariumokra keszules
erdekeben vegyek fel a a kapcsolatot Kaldy Zsuzsaval (email fent).
Mindenkit szeretettel varunk
A KETFEJU LATAS Kovacs Ilona es Kaldy Zsuzsa kurzusa 2000, majus 15-19
Eloadas
Nem anatomiai abnormalitas, hanem normalis allapot: agyankent ket
latorendszer! A specialkollegium a latas ket alrendszererol
(koztudottan: "Mi az" ill "Hol van"; anatomiailag: ventralis illetve
dorzalis kergi latoteruletek) szol. Anatomiai, fiziologiai,
neuropszichologiai, pszichofizikai es fejlodesi adatokat fogunk
targyalni. Kozelebbrol megvizsgaljuk azt a hipotezist mely szerint a
ventralis teruletek az un. tudatos erzekelesben vesznek reszt, s a
dorzalis teruletek inkabb a cselekves iranyitasaban (lasd Goodale
konyvet). Pszichologusok, biologusok, medikusok, s meg nyelveszek is
erdekeltek lehetnek.
1. Bevezetes: Latas biologiai szemszogbol irodalom: A. D. Milner & M. A.
Goodale "The visual brain in action" (Oxford University Press, 1997) 1.
fejezet
2. Parhuzamos feldolgozas a retinatol az agykeregig irodalom: A. D.
Milner & M. A. Goodale "The visual brain in action" (Oxford University
Press, 1997) 2. fejezet
3. Mi is a latas funkcioja? Neuropszichologiai adatok irodalom: A. D.
Milner & M. A. Goodale "The visual brain in action" (Oxford University
Press, 1997) 4., 5. fejezet
4. Percepcio vs. cselekvesiranyitas: pszichofizikai adatok irodalom: A.
D. Milner & M. A. Goodale "The visual brain in action" (Oxford
University Press, 1997) 6. fejezet
5. Mit latnak a gyerekek? irodalom: Bachevalier J, Hagger C, Mishkin M
Functional maturation of the occipitotemporal pathway in infant rhesus
monkeys. In: Lassen NA, Raichle ME & Friberg L (eds) Brain work and
mental activity, Alfred Benzon Symposium 31: 231-240 (Copenhagen:
Munksgaard) 1991 I. Kovacs, P. Kozma, A. Feher, G. Benedek "Late
maturation of visual spatial integration in humans" Proc Natl Acad Sci,
96(21) 12204-12209, 1999. P. M Thompson, J. N. Gledd, R. P. Woods, D.
MacDonald, A. E. Evans & A. W. Toga "Growth patterns in the developing
brain detected by using continuum mechanical tensor maps" Nature, 404,
190-193, 2000. Kovacs " Human development of perceptual organization"
Vision Research, in press.
Szeminarium
Az eloadashoz kapcsolodo tovabbi irodalom feldolgozasa. A Goodale-Milner
hipotezis urugyen nehany alapveto modszertani tema es problema
megvitatesa (kuszobmeres, pszichometriai gorbe, "staircase" eljaras).
Miert erdekes az Ebbinghaus-illuzio? A ket vizualis agy elkepzeles
fejlodespszichologiai szempontbol.
Irodalom: M.A. Goodale and A. Haffenden: Frames of Reference for
Perception and Action in the Human Visual System. Neurosci and Behav
Reviews, 1998, 22, 161-172. V. H. Franz, K.R. Gegenfurtner, H.H.
Bulthoff & M.Fahle: Grasping Visual Illusions, in press in Psychological
Science A.M. Haffenden & M.A. Goodale: The effect of a pictorial
illusion on prehension and perception. J. Cognitive Neuroscience, 10(1),
122-136, 1998. I. Faillenot, I.Toni, J.Decety, M.C. Gregorie & M
Jeannerod " Visual pathways for object-oriented action and object
recognition: functional anatomy with PET" Cerebral Cortex, 7, 77-85,
1997
Udv Pleh Csaba
Pleh Csaba egyetemi tanar Professor Csaba Pleh
Megismerestudomanyi Csoport Cognitive Science Group
Pszichologia Tanszek Department of Psychology
Szegedi Tudomanyegyetem University of Szeged
Magyar Pszichologiai Szemle Hungarian Review of Psychology
foszerkeszto editor
Szeged
Petofi sgt. 30, H-6722
Hungary
Phone: (36(62)544691
Home: Budakeszi, Zichy P. u 4, 2092
Phone: (36)(23)453933,06203278922
Mobile: (0620)3278922
Fax: (36)(23)453932
email: pleh(a)edpsy.u-szeged.hu
Homepage: www.jate.u-szeged.hu/~pleh
Kedves Kollegak !
Akit esetleg erdekel, kedden eset 20h30kor kezdik vetiteni s ot hetig
mindig ez idoben lesz az M2 (allami masodik csatornan) Forgacs Peter
mashol nem lathato dokumentum- illetve riport filmjet a pszichanalizis
torteneterol. Benne pl. eredeti Freud filmek mellett Andre Haynal, Vikar
Gyorgy, Eros Ferenc, Hidas Gyorgy, Buda bela beszel a pszichoanalizisrol.
Udvozlettel Pleh csaba
Csaba Pleh
Pleh Csaba Cognitive Science Group Megismerestudomanyi Csoport
Department of Psychology Pszichologiai Tanszek
University of Szeged Szegedi Tudomanyegyetem
Szeged
Petofi sgt 30-34, 6722 Hungary
Telefon/Phone: (36)(62) 544691
Lakas/Home: Budakeszi Zichy P. u. 4 2092 Hungary
(36)(23) 453932 or 933
Fax: (36(23)453932
Mobile: (0620) 3278922
WEB: http//www.jate.u-szeged.hu/~pleh
www.cogsciszeged.deltav.hu
Hungarian Review of Psychology Magyar Pszichologiai Szemle
editor foszerkeszto
Csaba Pleh Pleh Csaba
Cognitive Science Group Megismerestudomanyi Csoport
Department of Psychology Pszichologiai Tanszek
University of Szeged Szegedi Tudomanyegyetem
Szeged
Petofi sgt 30-34, 6722 Hungary
Telefon/Phone: (36)(62) 544691
Lakas/Home: Budakeszi Zichy P. u. 4 2092 Hungary
(36)(23) 453932 or 933
Fax: (36(23)453932
Mobile: (0620) 3278922
WEB: http//www.jate.u-szeged.hu/~pleh
www.cogsciszeged.deltav.hu
Hungarian Review of Psychology Magyar Pszichologiai Szemle
editor foszerkeszto
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Tue, 2 May 2000 13:43:08 +0100
From: Ian Pitchford <ian.pitchford(a)scientist.com>
To: evolutionary-psychology(a)egroups.com
Subject: [evol-psych] The Convergence of Natural and Human Science
UNITY OF KNOWLEDGE: The Convergence of Natural and Human Science
http://www.nyas.org/scitech/contents/poster1.pdf
A New York Academy of Sciences Conference
June 23-25, 2000
The Rockefeller University
New York City
CO N F E R E N C E TH E M E
Scientists are rapidly mapping the chemical and physical pathways that
constitute biological systems, making the complexity of processes like
inheritance, development, evolution, and even the origin of life increasingly
tractable. Through genetics and neuroscience this is now being extended
deeply into the human sciences and has begun to transform our understanding
of behavior, mind, culture, and values. The idea of a science-driven unity of
knowledge has re-emerged in several forms and in both reductionist and
non-reductionist frameworks. This conference looks at some of the
extraordinary empirical discoveries that have revived this idea and presents
the reflections of some who have thought deeply about the implications.
CO N F E R E N C E OR G A N I Z E R S
Antonio R. Damasio, M.D., Ph.D.
University of Iowa College of Medicine
Iowa City, Iowa Anne Harrington, Ph.D.
Harvard University
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Jerome Kagan, Ph.D.
Harvard University
Cambridge, Massachusetts Bruce McEwen, Ph.D.
The Rockefeller University
New York, New York
PR O G R A M
Friday Evening, June 23, 2000
The General Session will be held in Caspary Auditorium.
6:00-7:00 PM
Registration
Caspary Auditorium Foyer
7:00-9:00 PM Session I. OPENING SESSION
7:00 Welcoming Remarks
Rodney W. Nichols
7:15 Keynote Address: Relation Between Science and the Humanities
Edward O. Wilson, Ph.D.
8:00 Investigations: On the Nature of Autonomous Agents
Stuart A. Kauffman, M.D.
8:30 Commentary
Joshua Lederberg, Ph.D.
8:45 General Discussion
Saturday, June 24, 2000
General Sessions will be held in Caspary Auditorium. Each paper includes 20
minutes for presentation followed by 10 minutes for discussion.
8:30-9:00 AM
Registration & Continental Breakfast
Caspary Auditorium Foyer
9:00 AM-12:00 PM Session II. BEYOND NATURE - NURTURE: GENES, BRAIN, BEHAVIOR
Chair and Opening Presenter: Bruce McEwen, Ph.D.
Biology involves the study of genes, regulation of the expression of those
genes, and cellular and systemic physiology, including behavior. Studies in
genetics, cell and molecular biology, evolutionary biology, neurobiology,
endocrinology and psychology are converging to produce a new view of the
interaction between genetic constitution and environmental influences. Work
in sociology, anthropology, epidemiology and economics have also contributed
to a broader understanding of human beings as social creatures, who create
situations in which nature and nurture interact to influence physical and
mental health. This panel will use anxiety and stress as a focus. Each
discipline provides a glimpse of the whole story, and now is the time to put
these separate views together.
9:00 Allostasis and Allostatic Load: Dialog Between Nature and Nurture
Bruce McEwen, Ph.D.
9:30 Genes, Development, and Behavior
Michael Meaney, Ph.D.
10:00 Do People Make Environments or Do Environments Make People?
David C. Rowe, Ph.D.
10:30-11:00 AM: Intermission
11:00 How Natural Selection Shapes Mechanisms that Regulate Stress and
Anxiety
Randolph M. Nesse, M.D.
11:30 A Psychological Analysis of the Immune System
Shlomo Breznitz, Ph.D.
12:00-1:00 PM Conference Luncheon
Abby Lounge and Dining Room
1:00-3:00 PM
Session III. EMOTION, COGNITION, AND THE HUMAN BRAIN
Chair and Opening Presenter: Antonio R. Damasio, M.D., Ph.D.
Research is showing deep connections between higher cognitive function,
including language, and the structure and function of the brain. Reasoning is
also being systematically tied to emotion, instinct, the sensorimotor system,
and information processing mechanisms in the brain, and may go on, in large
measure, unconsciously and with no clear center of control. How are we to
understand man, the rational animal
1:00 Emotion, Feeling, and Knowing
Antonio R. Damasio, M.D., Ph.D.
1:30 The Perspective From Brain Evolution
John M. Allman, Ph.D.
2:00 Genes, Synapses, and Long-Term Memory
Eric Kandel, M.D.
2:30 Language, Emotion, and the Human Brain
Patricia K. Kuhl, Ph.D.
3:00-3:30 PM Intermission
3:30-5:30 PM Session IV. FUTURE DIRECTIONS FOR THE SOCIAL SCIENCES
Chair and Opening Presenter: Jerome Kagan, Ph.D.
Social sciences from psychology to economics are undergoing constructive
ferment in response to new insights provided by the natural sciences, and to
the new analytical tools provided by imaging technologies, population
modeling, information science, and genetic testing. Can a
biologically-defined human nature do justice to the rich and often subtle
notions of history, society and culture that are at issue in modern social
science? How are social scientists responding to new developments in human
biology?
3:30 The Significance of Transformations on Knowledge
Jerome Kagan, Ph.D.
4:00 Toward a Biology of Personality and Emotion
Richard Davidson, Ph.D.
4:30 Exploring the Biology of Socialization
Michael I. Posner, M.D.
5:00 A Polytheistic Conception of the Sciences and the Virtues of Deep
Variety
Richard A. Shweder, Ph.D.
5:30-6:30 PM Wine & Cheese Reception
Abby Lounge and Dining Room
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Sunday, June 25, 2000
General Sessions will be held in Caspary Auditorium.
9:30-10:00 AM
Registration & Continental Breakfast
Caspary Auditorium Foyer
Session V. SCIENCE, CULTURE, MEANING, VALUES - A DIALOGUE
Chair and Opening Presenter: Anne Harrington, Ph.D.
As human science increasingly converges with natural science, human beings
retain deeply-held values and ideas that resist scientific interpretation: a
sense of free will, historical contingency, purpose, notions of beauty,
meaning, faith, hope. Can this gap be closed?
Panelists:
Anne Harrington, Ph.D.
Terrence Deacon, Ph.D.
Stephen M. Kosslyn, Ph.D.
Elaine Scarry, Ph.D.
12:00-1:00 PM: Conference Luncheon
Abby Lounge and Dining Room
1:00-3:00 PM Session VI. SCIENCE IN THE LIBERAL ARTS CURRICULUM - A
ROUNDTABLE
Chair: Rodney W. Nichols
To the extent that natural science contributes to our understanding of social
science, humanities, and the arts, how can such knowledge be integrated in
the institutional and educational process most committed to critical inquiry
and extension of knowledge: the undergraduate liberal arts and sciences
curriculum?
1:00 K-12 Science Education as the Road to Consilient Curricula
Leon M. Lederman, Ph.D.
1:30 Integrative Learning: Passing Fad or Foundation for the Future
Thomas R. Tritton, Ph.D.
2:00 Consilience, Evolution and Theodicy: Three Difficulties in Teaching
Science to Non-Scientists.
Robert Pollack
2:30 Roundtable Discussion
(discussants will include selected speakers from prior sessions)
3:00-3:15 PM Closing Remarks
3:15 PM Adjourn
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CO N F E R E N C E SP E C I F I C S
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Conference Location
The Rockefeller University
Caspary Auditorium
1230 York Avenue (at 66th Street)
New York, NY 10021
Accommodation Information
Hotel accommodations have been arranged with the Barbizon New York Hotel, 140
East 63rd Street (at Lexington Avenue), tel. 1.212.838.5700. The Barbizon
Hotel is located within a 10 minute walk of the Rockefeller University. A
discounted room rate of $200 is available for a single (1 queen bed) or
double (2 twin beds) occupancy. Rates are subject to 13.25% tax plus a $2.00
occupancy tax per room per night. To ensure receiving these special rates,
indicate that you are attending the "NYAS Meeting - Unity of Knowledge" and
reserve with a major credit card. Reservation deadline is May 12, 2000.
Reservation requests received after this date will be accepted on a space and
rate availability basis. Check-in time: 3:00 P.M. Check-out time: 12:00 Noon.
To avoid a charge of one night's room and tax, cancellation of reservations
requires a 48 hour notice prior to arrival at the Barbizon.
Ground Transportation
SuperShuttle (blue and yellow van) operates service to the Barbizon Hotel
from LaGuardia (Domestic) and JFK (Domestic and International) Airports in
New York City and Newark (Domestic and International) Airport in New Jersey.
The current charge is $14.00 one way from LaGuardia, $15.00 one way from JFK
and $17.00 one way from Newark. Proceed to the Ground Transportation counter
located on the lower level near the baggage claim area. The Shuttle operates
service daily, 24 hours.
Air Travel Discounts
Special discounts for travel to Academy conferences are available for all
attendees and accompanying persons. For information, contact the Academy's
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Roslyn Chelouche, New York, NY 10111. Corresponding by e-mail will ensure a
prompt quote, providing the best fare. E: rchelouche(a)mswtravelny.com; F:
212.332.8950.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Registration Fees
Registration Fees Include
Admission to all Sessions
Registration Materials
Wine and Cheese Reception (June 24)
Daily Continental Breakfast
Daily Conference Luncheons
Refreshment Service - During Intermissions
Proceedings Published as a Volume of the Annals of the New York Academy of
Sciences; Estimated Value $120
To register, print out a copy of the registration form available on this site
and fax or mail it to the Academy, as per the instructions on the form.
Registration Fees Before
May 12 After
May 12
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Emeritus Member/Student* $100 $125
*Students are required to obtain a Department Supervisor/Chair Signature.
You are not officially registered until fees are received. You will be sent
written confirmation. Conference registration fees are waived only for
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registration fee.
Refunds
Written requests for refunds postmarked by May 12 will be issued minus an
administrative fee of $25. Absolutely no refunds will be honored after that
date.
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