Csaba Pl�h
professor of psychology
presently: Collegium de Lyon
15 parvis Rene Descartes
ENS Recherche R 147
69007 Lyon France
T: 33437376596 Fax: 33437376273
Mobile: 36303493735, csaba.pleh(a)ens-lyon.fr
Eszterhazy Karoly College
Eger H-3300
editor in chief, Hungarian Review of Psychology
member, Academia Europaea and the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
----- Original Message -----
From: JAM Organizers
To: JAM5in2013(a)gmail.com
Sent: Monday, January 14, 2013 2:36 PM
Subject: [Cogsci-Dept] 2ND CALL FOR ABSTRACTS: JOINT ACTION MEETING (JAM),Deadline February 1st
**Apologies for multiple postings**
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2nd call for abstracts: 5th Joint Action Meeting (JAM)
Berlin, July 27- 29 2013
Deadline for submissions February 1, 2013
Website: http://somby.info/page4/page4.html
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5th Joint Action Meeting
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Berlin, July 27- 29 2013 (preceding the Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society)
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It´s time to JAM again! The bi-annual Joint Action Meeting (JAM) brings together cognitive scientists and researchers from related disciplines sharing an interest in individuals’ ability to act together.
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Human life is full of joint actions, ranging from a handshake to the performance of a symphony. We are highly skilled at coordinating our actions with those of others to reach common goals, and rely on this ability throughout our daily lives. What are the processes underlying this ability? How does joint action develop? What are the basic principles needed to build robotic systems that can interact with humans? What might differentiate joint action from individual action, both conceptually and in terms of experience? The scientific program will comprise oral presentations and posters addressing these questions. Contributions will present the latest research and thinking on a range of different topics, including language as a form of joint action, the interplay of perception and action in joint action, and the phylogenetic, ontogenetic, and cultural foundations of joint action.
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http://somby.info/page4/page4.html
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SUBMISSIONS
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We invite submissions for talks (about 20 minutes) or posters on joint action. Please e-mail an abstract with the subject “JAM submission” to JAM5in2013(a)gmail.com. The abstract should be no longer than 200 words. The email should contain your name, affiliation, and contact address. Please indicate whether you prefer a talk or a poster. Deadline for submission is 1st February 2013.
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The abstract title should clearly define the work discussed. Abstracts reporting empirical studies must contain the specific goals of the study, the methods used, a summary of the results, and a conclusion. For theoretical work, the abstract should contain the specific goals and clear conclusions. Abstracts will be reviewed and authors will receive notification by email. Please note that although we do encourage submissions from a broad range of topics and perspectives, we will only be able to accept contributions that directly inform our understanding of joint action. We will do our best to accommodate your preference for talk/poster, but given the tight schedule we cannot guarantee that we will be able to accommodate your preference.
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REGISTRATION
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If you would like to attend JAM 5 without presenting a talk or poster, please send an e-mail with the subject “JAM Registration” to JAM5in2013(a)gmail.com. The email should contain your name, affiliation, and contact address. Note that first authors on submissions are automatically registered.
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All participants are asked to contribute a registration fee to the meeting. The registration fee is 30 Euros for students (including PhD students) and 60 Euros for all other participants, to be paid in cash at the meeting.
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We look forward to seeing you in Berlin next summer!
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Anna Kuhlen, Günther Knoblich, & Natalie Sebanz (Organizing team)
Itt van egy interju ami foleg a nyari iskolarol szol, a tudatossagrol.
Ha erdekelne, szivessen tartanek skypal minikurzusokat ahogy szoktam regebben.
Olel, Istvan
THEORETICAL PHILOSOPHY FORUM
Institute of Philosophy
Faculty of Humanities, Eötvös University
Address: Múzeum krt. 4/i, Budapest
16 January (Wednesday) 5:00 PM Room 226
Hong Yu Wong
Philosophy of Neuroscience Group, Centre for Integrative Neuroscience,
University of Tuebingen
A Motor Theory of Bodily Action?
___________________________________
Abstracts and printable program (poster) are available from the web
site of the Forum: http://phil.elte.hu/tpf (Please feel free to post
the program in your institution!)
The Forum is open to everyone, including students, visitors, and faculty
members from all departments and institutes! Format: 60 minute lecture,
coffee break, 60 minute discussion.
The organizer of the Forum: László E. Szabó
(leszabo(a)phil.elte.hu)
--
L a s z l o E. S z a b o
Professor of Philosophy
DEPARTMENT OF LOGIC, INSTITUTE OF PHILOSOPHY
EOTVOS UNIVERSITY, BUDAPEST
http://phil.elte.hu/leszabo
The CEU Department of Philosophy cordially invites you to a talk
(as part of its Departmental Colloquium series)
by
Helen Steward (University of Leeds)
on
'Helping it'
Tuesday, 15 January, 2012, 5.30 PM, Zrinyi 14, Room 412
ABSTRACT
There is a long-standing debate in the literature on moral
responsibility about the general idea that there is some sort of control
condition on our assignment of blameworthiness to agents. In this paper,
I try to defend the claims of a very ordinary, everyday locution to
offer the best means of formulating a version of the control principle
that stands some chance of fitting with our ethical intuitions. The
locution whose merits I intend to champion is the ‘can’t help it’
locution, as used in the phrase ‘I can’t help it’, I couldn’t help it’,
‘I can’t help that’, etc.. Because the locution is in a certain sense
colloquial, it tends to be avoided in philosophical discussion when
getting down to precise details – though it often appears in initial,
stage-setting statements of the philosophical problems surrounding the
issue of control and blame. My claim here will be that none of the
commonly utilised locutions with which it tends to be replaced is able
properly to express the sorts of things we can express by saying, for
example, ‘I couldn’t help it’. Being able to help it, I shall argue, is
a distinctive and important power, and for a number of significant
reasons, no other way of saying what kind of control is needed for
blameworthiness will do as well.
THEORETICAL PHILOSOPHY FORUM
Institute of Philosophy
Faculty of Humanities, Eötvös University
Address: Múzeum krt. 4/i, Budapest
January Program
There is only one exceptional lecture in January!
16 January (Wednesday) 5:00 PM Room 226
Hong Yu Wong
Philosophy of Neuroscience Group, Centre for Integrative Neuroscience,
University of Tuebingen
A Motor Theory of Bodily Action?
___________________________________
Abstracts and printable program (poster) are available from the web
site of the Forum: http://phil.elte.hu/tpf (Please feel free to post
the program in your institution!)
The Forum is open to everyone, including students, visitors, and faculty
members from all departments and institutes! Format: 60 minute lecture,
coffee break, 60 minute discussion.
The organizer of the Forum: László E. Szabó
(leszabo(a)phil.elte.hu)
--
L a s z l o E. S z a b o
Professor of Philosophy
DEPARTMENT OF LOGIC, INSTITUTE OF PHILOSOPHY
EOTVOS UNIVERSITY, BUDAPEST
http://phil.elte.hu/leszabo
The CEU Department of Philosophy cordially invites you to a talk
(as part of its Departmental Colloquium series)
by
Robert Rupert (University of Colorado)
on
"Embodiment, Consciousness, and the Massively Representational Mind"
Tuesday, 8 January, 2013, 5.30 PM, Zrinyi 14, Room 412
ABSTRACT
In this paper, I first describe the embodied perspective on cognition. I then argue that research on embodiment has produced a wealth of data that, along with a variety of other results, support a massively representational view of the mind. According to this view, the brain is rife with representations that possess overlapping and redundant content, and many of these represent other mental representations or derive their content from them. Moreover, many behavioral phenomena associated with attention and consciousness are best explained by the coordinated activity of units with redundant content. I finish by arguing that this massively representational picture challenges the reliability of a priori theorizing about consciousness.
Dear List Members,
I would like to ask your kind assistance to promote the following
program information of the Central European University's summer school
(June 3-July 26, 2013) held in Budapest, Hungary among your colleagues
and/or students, who may find it an interesting study option for the
summer of 2013.
Thank you for your kind help.
Best regards,
Eva Barbara Bodogan
Web Coordinator
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Central European University, Budapest announces its international
postgraduate summer course on “Moral Intuitionism: Epistemological and
Ethical Aspects” (July 22-31, 2013) for graduate students and junior
researchers and faculty preferably in humanities specializing in
cognitive science.
Financial aid is available.
Detailed course information: www.summer.ceu.hu/intuitionism-2013
Course Director(s):
Nenad Miscevic, Department of Philosophy, University of Maribor,
Slovenia/Visiting faculty, Central European University, Budapest,
Hungary
Course Faculty:
Robert Audi, Department of Philosophy, University of Notre Dame, USA
Brad Hooker, Philosophy Department, University of Reading, UK
Sabine Roeser, Philosophy Departments of TU Delft and University of
Twente, The Netherlands
Russ Shafer-Landau, Department of Philosophy, University of
Wisconsin-Madison, USA
Rob Shaver, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada
Philip Stratton-Lake, Philosophy Department, University of Reading, UK
Language of instruction: English
Application deadline: February 15, 2013
Summer University Office
1051 Budapest, Nádor utca 9, Hungary
http://www.summer.ceu.hu
e-mail:summeru@ceu.hu
tel: 36 1 327 3811
fax: 36 1 327 3124
The Department of Cognitive Science (DCS) and the Cognitive Development Center (CDC) at CEU will continue the talk series in the 2012/13 academic year. Both the DCS Colloquia and the CDC Seminars are scheduled for 5pm on Wednesdays, and are coordinated not to clash with each other. The venue for DCS Colloquia is room G15 in the CEU building in Frankel Leo utca, while the CDC Seminars are held at Hattyuhaz (Hattyu u. 14). The talks last for an hour, and are followed by 30 minutes of discussion.
Below you will find a list of planned talks for the coming months. Note that the program may change and the list is likely to extend. Up to date program will be available at http://cognitivescience.ceu.hu/events , and all talks will be announced on this list.
Everyone is welcome to attend these events. Note that we start our talks on time.
---
16 January, DCS Colloquium
Nicholas Evans, Linguistics, Australian National University
23 January, DCS Colloquium
Shirley-Ann Rueschemeyer, Psychology, University of York
30 January, DCS Colloquium
Giovanni Pezzulo, Robotics, ISTC-CNR Rome
6 February, DCS Colloquium
Luciano Fadiga, Neuroscience, University od Ferrara
13 February, DCS Colloquium
Pascal Mamassian, Psychology, Université Paris Descartes
20 February, DCS Colloquium
John Dewey, Psychology, Michigan State University
6 March, DCS Colloquium
Christina Becchio, Psychology, University of Turin
13 March, CDC Seminar
Birgit Träuble, Psychology, University of Heidelberg
20 March, DCS Colloquium
Alex Todorov, Psychology, Princeton University
3 April, DCS Colloquium
Rolf Ulrich, Psychology, University of Tübingen
10 April, CDC Seminar
Eve Clark, Linguistics, Stanford University
17 April, DCS Colloquium
Frederic Chavane, Neuroscience, Marseille
_______________________________________________
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Kedves Kollégák!
Levelünkben küldjük a Nyelvtudományi Intézet januári programját.
Az előadások absztraktját folyamatosan tesszük fel az intézet honlapjára.
Rendezvényeinkre minden érdeklődőt szeretettel várunk!
Üdvözlettel:
tud. titkár
*
Az MTA Nyelvtudományi Intézetének
januári programja
2013. január 8. kedd 11.00 óra
Bende-Farkas Ágnes
Univerzális kvantorok és szamaras mondatok a nyelvemlékekben
szervező: Elméleti nyelvészeti osztály
helyszín: földszinti előadóterem
2013. január 10. csütörtök 11.00 óra
Marcel den Dikken
(City University of New York)
On feature interpretability and inheritance
http://www.nytud.hu/program/absz/dendikken20130111.pdf
helyszín: földszinti előadóterem
2013. január 15. kedd 11.00 óra
Kálmán László
Az elvontság nem boldogít
szervező: Elméleti nyelvészeti osztály
helyszín: földszinti előadóterem
2013. január 17. csütörtök 11.00 óra
Bartos Huba
A műveltetés morfoszintaxisa a magyarban
http://www.nytud.hu/program/absz/huba121111.html
szervező: Elméleti nyelvészeti osztály
helyszín: földszinti előadóterem
2013. január 29. kedd 11.00 óra
Dömötör Adrienne
Egyenes idézés, párbeszéd, dráma -
a "Három körösztyén leány" a Sándor-kódexben
szervező: Finnugor és nyelvtörténeti osztály
helyszín: földszinti előadóterem
*
MTA Nyelvtudományi Intézet
1068 Budapest, Benczúr u. 33.