Dear koglist members!
It would be an honor to welcome a new colleague at our department from the membership of koglist. Please let me know if you have any questions about the job. Here is the ad:
The Department of Psychology at The University of Southern Mississippi is seeking an Assistant Professor for a tenure-track position to begin fall 2015. We seek candidates with a research specialization in cognition, broadly defined. The successful applicant will have a strong empirical research record with potential to attract external funding and an interest in both undergraduate and graduate teaching. Salary will be commensurate with qualifications and experience. The position is contingent upon funding. The Department of Psychology, designated as one of six Centers of Excellence in the university, is a growing and dynamic department, with 35 full-time faculty lines and approximately 630 undergraduate majors and 115 graduate students. It is located in Hattiesburg, Miss., a prosperous and growing Pine Belt community about 70 miles from the Gulf Coast and about 100 miles from New Orleans. The department also offers APA-accredited graduate programs in clinical, counseling and school psychology. For consideration, send a CV, three letters of recommendation, reprints and a formal letter of application outlining your interests and qualifications to Don Sacco, Chair of the Experimental Search Committee, The University of Southern Mississippi, Department of Psychology, 118 College Drive #5025, Hattiesburg, MS 39406-0001. In addition, applicants must complete an employment application form located on the university’s Human Resources website at www.usm.edu/hr/emp_app/main.php<http://www.usm.edu/hr/emp_app/main.php>. Inquiries can also be directed to Donald.Sacco(a)usm.edu. General information about Southern Miss can be found at www.usm.edu<http://www.usm.edu/>, and information about the experimental psychology program is available at www.usm.edu/experimental-psychology<http://www.usm.edu/experimental-psychology>. Applications will be reviewed beginning November 1, 2014, and will continue until the position is filled. We especially encourage applications from women and members of ethnic minorities. AA/EOE/ADAI
To view the full position advertisement and/or apply for this position, go to the following website, https://jobs.usm.edu/applicants/jsp/shared/frameset/Frameset.jsp?time=14100…, and search job posting number 0003208.
----------
Alen Hajnal, PhD.
Associate Professor
Department of Psychology
University of Southern Mississippi
http://ocean.otr.usm.edu/~w785427/lab.html
The CEU Department of Cognitive Science cordially invites you to a talk
(as part of its Departmental Colloquium series)
by
Anna Babarczy, Budapest University of Technology and Economics
on
Can the comprehension of abstract language be rooted in sensory
experiences?
Date: Wed, March 14, 2012 - 17:00 - 18:30
Location: Department of Cognitive Science, CEU, Frankel Leó út 30-34.,
Room G15
Can the comprehension of abstract language be rooted in sensory
experiences?
ABSTRACT: The question of learning the meaning of abstract language
(roughly, expressions with no perceptible referents) has been bugging
philosophers for thousands of years. More recently, a number of
experimental paradigms have emerged trying to shed light on this issue.
The basic idea explored in the talk is that people understand abstract
(metaphorical) expressions by linking them to sensory or bodily
experiences. If this is the case, we should be able to show that these
experiences affect people’s interpretation of abstract utterances. The
talk looks at the evidence we have so far (pro and contra).We're looking
forward to see you there (Frankel Leo u. 30-34) !
_______________________________________________
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The CEU Department of Cognitive Science cordially invites you to a talk
(as part of its Departmental Colloquium series)
by
Marc O. Ernst (Bielefeld University, Germany)
Date: Wednesday, Oct 22, 2014 - 17:00 - 18:30
Location: Department of Cognitive Science, CEU, Frankel Leó út 30-34.,
Room G15
Title:
>From Multisensory Perception to Sensorimotor Behaviour: A Probabilistic
Approach
Abstract:
The human brain uses multiple sources of sensory information together
with prior knowledge about the statistical regularities of the world in
order to generate the most appropriate action. However, there is
uncertainty due to noise and ambiguity in the sensory information.
Furthermore, sensory information as well as prior knowledge may be
imprecise and possibly inaccurate for the current action context.
Therefore, a decision for choosing some action can only be taken
probabilistically. Bayesian Decision Theory, which I will review here in
this talk, provides a suitable probabilistic framework to come up with
ideal observer models, against which human perception and performance
can be compared. Besides an introduction to this general framework, I
will talk about two of our recent studies in more detail, which are
examples of the application of this framework to multisensory perception
and action. The first study deals with the decision process, which
signals to combine. Sometimes there are seemingly arbitrary association
between multisensory signals such as, for example, sound frequency and
spatial elevation. This goes so far that even in most natural languages
the spatial labels -high- and -low- are used for particular sound
frequencies. We recently showed (Parise et al., PNAS, 2014) the reason
for this association to be found in the statistics of the natural
environment where high frequency sounds are more likely to originate
from a higher spatial elevation and vices versa. The second study (van
Dam, Ernst, PLoS One, 2013) investigates the knowledge we have about the
errors we make when executing actions. This is important because it is
the knowledge about such errors that shapes sensorimotor learning. We
show that we have a surprisingly detailed understanding of even the
random errors we make and that we can use this knowledge in a
statistically optimal way for the correction of the errors. I will end
my talk with a discussion about the benefits and the limits of this
framework.
We're looking forward to see you there (Frankel Leo u. 30-34) !
Cognitive Science Events at CEU: http://cognitivescience.ceu.hu/events
_______________________________________________
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Kedves Kollégák!
Szeretettel várjuk az érdeklo"do"ket a Nyelvtudományi Intézet novemberi
programjaira.
2014. november 6. (csütörtök) 15.00 óra
Craige Roberts
(Ohio State University - CEU)
Beyond the Pragmatic Wastebasket: One perspective
szervezo": Elméleti Nyelvészeti Osztály
helyszín: földszinti elo"adóterem
2014. november 12. (szerda) 10.00 - 13.30
A Magyar Tudomány Ünnepe
A korszeru" nyelvtudomány mint a jövo" alakításának eszköze
helyszín: MTA Székház, Nagyterem
http://www.nytud.hu/program/mtu2014/korszeru_nyelvtudomany.html
2014. november 13. (csütörtök) 17.15 óra
Mády Katalin
(MTA NYTI)
Mitõl hosszú egy mezo"ségi hosszú magánhangzó?
szervezo": Kísérleti és Analógiás Fonológia-Alaktan Kutatócsoport
helyszín: földszinti elo"adóterem
2014. november 18. (kedd) 11.00 óra
Marcel den Dikken
(MTA NYTI - CUNY)
Find the gap: On structure building and the formation of filler-gap
dependencies in syntax
szervezo": Elméleti Nyelvészeti Osztály
helyszín: földszinti elõadóterem
2014. november 18. (kedd) 14.00 óra
Hu Jianhua
(Kínai Társadalomtudományi Akadémia Nyelvi Intézete)
TBA
szervezo": Elméleti Nyelvészeti Osztály
helyszín: földszinti elo"adóterem
2014. november 18. (kedd) 16.00 óra
Li Aijun
(Kínai Társadalomtudományi Akadémia Nyelvi Intézete)
szervezo": Elméleti Nyelvészeti Osztály
helyszín: földszinti elo"adóterem
2014. november 19. (szerda) 10.00 - 16.00
A Magyar Tudomány Ünnepe - Kutatóintézetek tárt kapukkal
A Többnyelvu"ségi Kutatóközpont Nyílt Napja
"Többnyelvûség, sokszínûség - siket jelnyelv - nyelvi kisebbségek"
helyszín: MTA NYTI földszinti elo"adóterem
http://www.nytud.hu/program/mtu2014/
2014. november 20. (csütörtök) 11.00 óra
Heltainé Nagy Erzsébet
(MTA NYTI)
Nyelvi változások - nyelvi tanácsadás
szervezo": Nyelvmu"velo" és Nyelvi Tanácsadó Kutatócsoport
helyszín: földszinti elo"adóterem
2014. november 20. (csütörtök) 14.00 óra
Balázs Surányi - Shinichiro Ishihara
(MTA NYTI - Goethe University Frankfurt)
Multiple positions of sentence-level prominence and prosodic recursion:
Evidence from pre-verbal quantifiers in Hungarian
szervezo": Elméleti Nyelvészeti Osztály
helyszín: földszinti elo"adóterem
2014. november 25. (kedd) 11.00 óra
Horváth László
(MTA NYTI)
Igevonzat-történeti kérdések
szervezo": Szótári Osztály
helyszín: földszinti elo"adóterem
***
A részletekro"l, valamint az esetleges változásokról a honlapon
tájékozódhatnak:
http://www.nytud.hu/intprog.html
MTA Nyelvtudományi Intézet
1068 Budapest, Benczúr u. 33.
The CEU Department of Philosophy cordially invites you to a talk
(as part of its Departmental Colloquium series)
by
David Pitt (Cal State LA and CEU)
on
`Objects and Their Phases`
Tuesday, 4 November 2014, 5.30 PM, Zrinyi 14, Room 412
ABSTRACT
I propose to solve the puzzle of the relation of a clay statue to the
lump of clay it’s made of in the following way. A clay statue is a phase
of the clay it’s made of (the clay is its “material content”), in the
same way that (liquid) water, ice and steam are phases of H2O. A statue
is shaped clay; water is liquid H2O; ice is frozen H2O; steam is gaseous
H2O. Likewise fists and hands (fists are clenched hands), paper
airplanes and paper (paper airplanes are folded paper), ermines and
stoats (ermines are white stoats), meteoroids, meteors, meteorites and
rocks (orbiting, falling and fallen space rocks, respectively) – and, of
course, lumps and the particles that constitute them.
Thus, a statue and its constituent lump, though they are not identical,
are not distinct physical objects occupying the same place at the same
time. They are a lump and a phase of that lump occupying (necessarily –
that statue is a phase of that lump) the same place at the same time.
‘Statue’ is a phase sortal that picks out
a-material-content-with-a-certain-shape. (The name of a statue is a
phase nominal that picks out the same thing.) It is something over and
above the lump, but it is not some thing over and above the lump.
I apply this way of looking at the relation between kinds of objects
and their material contents to the univeralist-nihilist debate over
material composition and to temporal and modal questions of material
constitution.
Krisztina Biber
Department of Philosophy
Coordinator
------------------------------------------
Central European University
Nador u. 9. | 1051 Budapest, Hungary
Office: + 36.1.327.3806 | biberk(a)ceu.hu | www.ceu.hu
Szeretettel hívunk meg minden érdeklődőt a Kognitív Szeminárium következő
előadására:
Geier János - Világosságillúziók modellezése
2014. november 7., 14:00-15:00, Izabella utca 46, P3-as terem
Összefoglaló:
A világosságillúziók közös jellemzője, hogy az ilyen képek bizonyos
tartományait eltérő intenzitásúnak észleljük annak ellenére, hogy azok
fizikailag azonos intenzitásúak. Ilyenek a 19 században már ismert
szimultán kontraszt-, Chevreul-, Mach sáv- és Hermann rács illúziók.
Újabbak a Craik-O'Brien-Cornsweet- (COC), White-, Logvinenko- illúziók és
Adelson különféle illúziói.
A világosságillúziók tankönyvi (pl. Seculer és Blake) klasszikus
magyarázatai a laterális gátláson alapulnak, ezen belül is az ún.
Baumgartner modellen, mely szerint a retinán "található" körkörös, ON
középpontú és OFF körgyűrűvel bíró receptív mezők lennének "felelősek" pl
.a Hermann rács foltjaiért, vagy a többi 19. sz. -ban ismert illúzióért.
Ezt a magyarázatot azonban egyértelműen cáfolja saját, először 2001-ben
bemutatott ötletem: a Hermann rács vonalainak enyhe görbítése egycsapásra
megszünteti a kereszteződésekben látható illuzórikus foltokat. A laterális
gátlás modellekkel szembeni további érv a 2011 -ben Hudák Mariannal közösen
írt cikkünkben található, mely szerint, ha a Chevreul lépcsősort háttér
luminancia rámpába helyezzük, az az irányától függően jelentősen felerősíti
vagy legyengíti az eredeti illúziót. Ezek, és sok más érv alapján
kijelenthető: a retina nem kódolja az abszolút luminanciát, csak a
luminacia változását. Emiatt ezt a közvetlenül nem hozzáférhető abszolút
luminanciát egy magasabb feldolgozási szinte rekonstruálnia kell a
látórendszernek, hiszen másképp nem látnánk pl. homogén tartományokat.
Előadásomban ismertetem azt a komputációs modellt és számítógépes
szimulációját, amelyet magam dolgoztam ki világosság illúziók egységes
modellezésének szándékával. Ez a modell itatóspapírra csepegtetett tinta,
(vagy még inkább: fémlemez melegítése és hűtése) diffúziójának hasonlatára
épül. Egy ilyen diffúziós folyamattal lehet rekonstruálni a hiányzó
abszolút luminanciát. E diffúziós modell lényegét fogom ismertetni.
Bemutatom az ezen alapuló számítógépes szimulációt is, élőben, ahogyan a
komputer előállítja az input képek alapján azt az output képeket. Az output
képek nagyon hasonlítanak az input képekhez, normál fényképnél nem is
vehető észre az eltérés, ellenben a világosságillúziókat tartalmazó képeken
a világosság viszonyok az emberi percepció szerint alakulnak.
www.geier.hu
Irodalom:
Geier J, Bernáth L, Hudák M, Séra L, 2008, "Straightness as the main factor
of the Hermann grid illusion" *Perception**37*(5) 651 – 665
Geier J, Hudák M (2011) Changing the Chevreul Illusion by a Background
Luminance Ramp: Lateral Inhibition Fails at Its Traditional Stronghold - A
Psychophysical Refutation. PLoS ONE 6(10): e26062.
doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0026062,
http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0026062
Dear All,
This is to remind you that the next talk in the CEU Cognitive Science seminar series will by given by:
Kim Plunkett (University of Oxford):
Date: Wednesday, October 29, 2014, 5 PM
Location: Department of Cognitive Science, CEU, Frankel Leó út 30-34., Room G15
Title: How Infants Build a Semantic System
Studies of early semantic development have traditionally described changes in the referential scope of early words, e.g., the range of objects that the infant associates with the word 'dog', as if infants learn object-label associations in isolation from each other. A proper understanding of semantic development should also provide an account of sensitivity to the meaning relations in the developing lexicon, and enumerate the the principles and processes by which the toddler constructs a network of meanings. In this talk, I will describe some recent graph theoretic attempts to describe semantic networks in early childhood and experimental methods to investigate the development of the lexical-semantic system. I will argue that the rudiments of a lexical-semantic system are in place before the child's second birthday. I will discusss whether infants attempt to construct a semantic network from the beginning of lexical development, or whether the early semantic system consists of lexical islands to which entries are added in a piecemeal fashion, only later later to coalesce into a network of meanings.
PLEASE NOTE: Our seminar room has a limited capacity. Please arrive early to ensure you get a seat. The talk will begin promptly at 5.
Cognitive Science Events at CEU: http://cognitivescience.ceu.hu/events
_______________________________________________
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Kedves KogList olvasok!
Szeretettel varok jelentkezoket.
Udvozlettel,
Hajnal Alen
---------------------------------------
The Perception Action Cognition (PAC) Lab is looking for new graduate students with a starting date of August 2015.
For research topics, please check out my google scholar profile:
http://scholar.google.com/citations?user=c9bakr4AAAAJ&hl=en
Current research topics include
space perception
affordances
postural stability
fractality of motor behavior
What I am looking for in a graduate student is a dedicated, highly motivated person with excellent quantitative and behavioral statistics skills.
The successful applicant will receive a full paid assistantship (with a monthly stipend and tuition waiver) that is renewable every year for 4 years.
The deadline for applications is early January 2015. As part of the application package we require the submission of transcripts, GRE scores, TOEFL (for international applicants), statement of research interests, and 3 recommendation letters.
Submit an application to the Experimental Psychology PHD program here: https://usmgrad.admissionpros.com/default.asp
----------
Alen Hajnal, PhD.
Associate Professor
Department of Psychology
University of Southern Mississippi
THEORETICAL PHILOSOPHY FORUM
Institute of Philosophy
Faculty of Humanities, Eötvös University
Address: Múzeum krt. 4/i, Budapest
November Program
19 November (Wednesday) 5:00 PM Room 226
László E. Szabó
Department of Logic, Institute of Philosophy, Eötvös University, Budapest
Operationalist Approach to Quantum Theory: Two Representation Theorems
26 November (Wednesday) 5:00 PM Room 226
László Nemes
Is philosophy an American discipline?
_______________________________
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: Laszlo E. Szabo
(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
Dear all,
The next talk in the CEU Cognitive Science seminar series will by given by:
Kim Plunkett (University of Oxford):
Date: Wednesday, October 29, 2014, 5 PM
Location: Department of Cognitive Science, CEU, Frankel Leó út 30-34., Room G15
Title: How Infants Build a Semantic System
Studies of early semantic development have traditionally described changes in the referential scope of early words, e.g., the range of objects that the infant associates with the word 'dog', as if infants learn object-label associations in isolation from each other. A proper understanding of semantic development should also provide an account of sensitivity to the meaning relations in the developing lexicon, and enumerate the the principles and processes by which the toddler constructs a network of meanings. In this talk, I will describe some recent graph theoretic attempts to describe semantic networks in early childhood and experimental methods to investigate the development of the lexical-semantic system. I will argue that the rudiments of a lexical-semantic system are in place before the child's second birthday. I will discusss whether infants attempt to construct a semantic network from the beginning of lexical development, or whether the early semantic system consists of lexical islands to which entries are added in a piecemeal fashion, only later later to coalesce into a network of meanings.
PLEASE NOTE: Our seminar room has a limited capacity. Please arrive early to ensure you get a seat. The talk will begin promptly at 5.
Cognitive Science Events at CEU: http://cognitivescience.ceu.hu/events
_______________________________________________
Subscribe by sending an empty mail to seminars-subscribe(a)cdc.ceu.hu
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