Dear Cognitive Folks,
The next Fluencia Party will be on 9th February (Friday) starting at 8.00pm
in Élesztő (Tűzoltó utca close to Corvin metro station).
Info: https://www.facebook.com/events/2013110232260580/
Fluencia is a monthly organized informal "jamboree" for cogsci-,
psychology-related students (undergrads, grads), professors, researchers
from many different universities in Hungary. The idea and motivation are to
facilitate interactions, communication, collaboration among researchers
working here, get to know others and others' interests, topics, etc. And,
of course, to have some drinks and fun in a friendly environment.
Everybody is welcome to attend! If you have any further questions, do not
hesitate to ask.
All the best,
Dezso
--------------------------------------
NEMETH, Dezso (PhD)
Brain, Memory and Language Lab: http://www.memory-and-language.com
Phone: +36-1-4614500/3565, +36-1-4614500/3519
Dear All,
The CEU Department of Cognitive Science and the Social Mind Center invites you to the following talk:
Patric Bach<https://www.actionprediction.org/> (University of Aberdeen)
Perceptual simulation as basis for understanding others
Recent proposals argue that people’s understanding of other people’s behaviours relies on a top-down guided process that is able to “paint” one’s knowledge of the other person – their goals, beliefs, and perspective onto the environment – onto ones’ own perceptual system. I will report data from two experimental paradigms that support this view. These studies show, first, that people’s understanding of others’ behaviour is guided by perceptual anticipations of their forthcoming actions. These anticipations can be made visible as subtle distortions of a perceived action’s path towards those expectations. Second, they show that perceptual expectations of another’s sensory input also underlie people’s ability to take others’ perspective, providing a view how the world looks to them that can support own decision making. Together, these findings argue for a framework in which perceptual anticipations play a key role in social cognition and provide one with insights into others knowledge of the world and their future behaviour.
Date: Wednesday, November 22, 2023
Time: 4 pm to 5:30 pm CET
Venue: QS D-001 Tiered* (Vienna)
Zoom: https://ceu-edu.zoom.us/j/93610300237?pwd=aDJXaml1S2I5cVZBMGxRekxiNzhNQT09 (Meeting ID: 936 1030 0237, Passcode: 919687)
Chair: Natalie Sebanz
*Anyone not affiliated with CEU wishing to attend in-person in Vienna must RSVP to get access to the lecture hall.
Best regards,
Andi and Fanni
This e-mail address is managed by the coordinators of the CEU Social Mind Center.
https://socialmind.ceu.edu/
[cid:105b0ee0-665b-4156-9b5e-a6867f767607]
Central European University
Quellenstrasse 51 | 1100 Vienna, Austria
______________________________________________
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Dear All,
The CEU Department of Cognitive Science invites you to the following talk:
Please note that this event will be held at CEU Budapest site!
Speaker: Damian Blasi (Harvard University)
Language diversity from individual-level biases
In this talk I’ll critically revisit the idea that individual-level biases shape language diversity. The idea is straightforward: the distribution of language structures in the world approximately follows the marginal payoff they provide to humans, in the form of ease of production, learnability, expressivity, and the like. I will discuss a number of cases from across linguistic domains but will ultimately focus on the role of learnability (as evidenced in individual-level experiments). In this regard there are multiple related hypotheses, including the notions that language structures which are (1) easier to acquire by children, (2) easier to acquire by adults and (3) easier to retain by adults, are overrepresented across the world’s languages. The main evidence I’ll use is the history and the nature of languages which instantiate almost ideal case studies for each of the hypotheses described above, accordingly: (1) Creole languages (Blasi, Michaelis & Haspelmath 2017 Nat Hum Beh), (2) languages spoken by large populations (Scherbakova et al. to appear in Sci Adv), and (3) surviving languages (i.e. languages that are no longer transmitted to newer generations, Blasi et al. in prep). I will conclude that the evidence for a direct pipeline between individual-level biases and social-level language structures is surprisingly less robust than widely assumed across the cognitive and language sciences, and I will discuss some future research directions.
Date: Wednesday, Dec 6, 2023
Time: 4 PM (to 5:30 PM) CET
Venue: CEU BUDAPEST site (1051 Budapest, Nádor u. 15.) N13 room 118.*
and Zoom (meeting ID: 977 8672 8334<https://ceu-edu.zoom.us/j/97786728334?pwd=SXpVTkM2eFJsTUZTQU96dVVVTzFwZz09>, passcode: 425757)
Chair: Eva Wittenberg
*Anyone not affiliated with CEU wishing to attend in-person in Budapest must RSVP to vargai(a)ceu.edu to get access to the lecture hall.
Best regards,
Ildikó Varga
Department Coordinator (Budapest)
Department of Cognitive Science
[cid:d0e37c00-e1ec-43c2-98b9-8962bcea9292]
H-1051 Budapest
Nador u. 15. FT room 404
tel: +36-1 327-3000 2941
http://www.ceu.edu<http://www.ceu.edu/>
http://cognitivescience.ceu.edu<http://cognitivescience.ceu.edu/>
______________________________________________
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Dear all,
We would like to invite you to the following talk by Bahar Köymen (University
of Manchester), organized as part of the ELTE Cognitive Seminar series.
Time and date: 17:15 (CET), Tuesday, 5. December 2023.
Speaker: Bahar Köymen
Title: Young children’s reason-giving and meta-talk in collaborative
decision making
Abstract: During collaborative problem solving, partners might disagree, so
have to convince one another why their proposals/claims are better than the
other by giving reasons. This kind of reason-giving is termed “meta-talk”
through which speakers discuss standards of reasons; comparing reasons or
giving reasons about reasons. This ability has been mostly observed with
older children. I will present and discuss some recent evidence about how
young children and children speaking different languages are capable of
producing meta-talk in the context of collaborative decision making.
Zoom link:
https://ppk-elte-hu.zoom.us/j/93020480092?pwd=TkM2L05yeVRDVy9mT09wWW0xS2VOQ…
Meeting ID: 930 2048 0092
Passcode: 211920
If you have questions about the event, please contact us via email (
alexastonem(a)student.elte.hu or reka.schvajda(a)ppk.elte.hu).
We look forward to seeing you at the event,
Schvajda Réka
Alexandra Kelemen
organizers
ELTE Kognitív Pszichológiai Tanszék
Dear All,
The PTE Visual Cognition and Emotion Lab is looking for a postdoc research fellow (for up to 4 years).
Topic: The role of attentional control in the aetiology and maintenance of phobias
Earliest start: January 2024.
More details on the flyer attached to this email!
Please forward our job advertisement to those interested.
Thank you!
Best regards,
Andras Zsido
-----
András Norbert ZSIDÓ, PhD FPsyS
Senior Research Fellow
Institute of Psychology, University of Pécs
Principal Investigator: Visual Cognition and Emotion Lab
Website: https://vicelab.btk.pte.hu/
Editorial Board member: Scientific Reports
[cid:e98737d1-7202-481a-ada8-e3c9beddeac7]
________________________________
A PTE Zöld Egyetem programja jegyében kérem, ne nyomtassa ki ezt az e-mail-t, kivéve, ha szükséges.
Green University - Please do not print this e-mail unless it's necessary.
Hello everyone,
The next Cognitive Science department colloquium will be on Tuesday, 28
November (note different day!) at 4pm in C323 (note different room!)
Speaker:Joan Ongchoco, UBC Vancouver
The continuous vs. the discrete in mental life: Studies in
perception, attention, and decision-making
The raw material of perception is a continuous wash of light and
sound. But what we perceive are often discrete individuals -- *objects*
(due to segmentation in space) and *events* (due to segmentation in
time). I will present five case studies that collectively explore how
discrete object and event representations have a powerful impact on many
forms of perception and cognition -- and in particular, how they
interact with other processes including attention, imagery, enumeration,
time perception, and decision-making. Throughout this work, I will show
how these interactions are relatively spontaneous and inescapable
aspects of how the mind works. In the first two case studies, I will
introduce the phenomenon of "scaffolded attention", and will show how
attention effectively creates discrete object representations even in
the absence of all sensory cues -- in a sort of "everyday
hallucination". In the next two case studies, I will show how dynamic
event segmentation has important consequences for the perception of
other seemingly foundational properties, including number and time. And
in the final case study, I will move from seeing to thinking, and show
how visual event structure may have surprisingly direct connections for
higher-level thought and decision-making. Together, these studies show
how discrete object and event representations have profound consequences
for our mental lives.
Date: TUESDAY, 28 November (Note different day!)
Time: 4pm-5:30pm
Location:QSC-323 (Note different room!)
Zoom link:
https://ceu-edu.zoom.us/j/94614125194?pwd=bUpJdWRZM3JPRGJVWEFaZ2dEbGVIQT09
<https://www.google.com/url?q=https://ceu-edu.zoom.us/j/94614125194?pwd%3DbU…>
Meeting ID: 946 1412 5194
Passcode: 899075
Chair: Jonathan Kominsky
*Anyone not affiliated with CEU wishing to attend in-person in
Vienna must RSVP to get access to the lecture hall.
Sincerely,
Jonathan
--
Dr. Jonathan F. Kominsky
Assistant Professor of Cognitive Science
PI: Causal Cognition Lab
(he/him)
Office: Room D504
Phone: +43 125230 7541
Quellenstrasse 51 | A-1100 Wien | Austria
This message is intended for the individual named above and is
confidential. If you are not the intended recipient, please notify the
sender. Central European University (CEU) is an undergraduate- and
graduate-level private university accredited in the United States,
Austria, and Hungary. CEU’s educational activities in Austria are
performed at Central European University Private University by CEU GmbH,
a private limited-liability company having its seat in Vienna, under the
address Quellenstrasse 51, A-1100 Wien, and is registered at the Vienna
Commercial Court under registration number FN 502313 x. CEU’s
educational activities in Hungary are performed by Közép-európai
Egyetem, at Nádor utca 9., 1051 Budapest, under registration number FI
27861. CEU is accredited in the US, with a registered address at 224
West 57th Street, New York, NY 10019, USA.
______________________________________________
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Dear all,
The CEU Department of Cognitive Science invites you to the following talk:
Judit Gervain (University of Padua, Italy/CNRS & Université Paris Descartes)
Neural oscillations in the service of speech processing and language development
The talk will present a series of neuroimaging studies with young infants investigating how embedded neural oscillations, the neural architecture argued to be responsible for speech processing in adults (Giraud & Poeppel 2012), emerges during early development. Specifically, the studies investigate the hypothesis that prenatally heard speech, strongly low-pass filtered by the intrauterine environment, already align slower oscillations, delta and theta, with the rhythms of the language heard prenatally, while the full-band speech signal experienced post-nasally aligns the faster gammas oscillations. As a result the hierarchy of neural oscillations found in adults emerges as a result of the chronology of infants’ early experience with speech. Furthermore, the talk will suggest that it is possible to find the neural signatures of learning and attuning to the native language already at birth in the temporal dynamics of newborn infants’ electrophysiological responses. To conclude, the talk will discuss how this may lay the foundations for later language development.
Date: Wednesday, Nov 15, 2023
Time: 4 pm (to 5:30 pm) CET
Venue: Auditorium* (QS Vienna) and Zoom (meeting ID: 969 2496 5784, passcode: 471712)
Chair: Ernő Téglás
*Anyone not affiliated with CEU wishing to attend in-person in Vienna must RSVP here<https://forms.microsoft.com/e/qAPuca2PQ2> to get access to the lecture hall.
If you want to schedule a meeting with Dr. Gervain, indicate your interest and availability here<https://doodle.com/meeting/participate/id/e7AwKAjb> (via doodle).
Best,
Bartu
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Dear All,
The CEU Department of Cognitive Science and the Center for Cognitive Computation (CCC) invites you to the upcoming meeting of the Budapest Computational Neuroscience Forum<https://ccc.ceu.edu/budapest-computational-neuroscience-forum>.
Speaker: András Ecker, EPFL
Long-term plasticity induces sparse and specific synaptic changes in a biophysically detailed cortical model
Abstract: Synaptic plasticity underlies the brain's ability to learn and adapt. This process is often studied in small groups of neurons in vitro or indirectly through its effects on behavior in vivo. Due to the limitations of available experimental techniques, investigating synaptic plasticity at the microcircuit level relies on simulation-based approaches. Although modeling studies provide valuable insights, they are usually limited in scale and generality. To overcome these limitations, we extended a previously published and validated large-scale cortical network model with a recently developed calcium-based model of functional plasticity between excitatory cells. We calibrated the network to mimic an in vivo state characterized by low synaptic release probability and low-rate asynchronous firing, and exposed it to 10 different stimuli. We found that synaptic plasticity sparsely and specifically strengthened synapses forming spatial clusters on postsynaptic dendrites and those between populations of co-firing neurons, also known as cell assemblies: among 312 million synapses, only 5% experienced noticeable plasticity and cross-assembly synapses underwent three times more changes than average. Furthermore, as occasional large-amplitude potentiation was counteracted by more frequent synaptic depression, the network remained stable without explicitly modeling homeostatic plasticity. When comparing the network's responses to the different stimuli before and after plasticity, we found that it became more stimulus-specific after plasticity, manifesting in prolonged activity after selected stimuli and more unique groups of neurons responding exclusively to a single pattern. Taken together, we present a plasticity rule that leads to sparse change and analyze the rules governing those changes.
Time: 17:00, November 15., 2023.
Location: CEU, 1051 Budapest, Nádor u. 15, Room 203. and Zoom (Meeting ID: 957 1381 9303<https://ceu-edu.zoom.us/j/95713819303?pwd=SzM0b1NIU0ZUbzBOUkRpeVc0ME1kQT09> Passcode: 367015)
Should you have any inquiries about the series, please contact Mihály Bányai<mailto:mihaly.s.banyai@gmail.com>.
Best regards,
Ildikó Varga
Department Coordinator (Budapest)
Department of Cognitive Science
[cid:3bf470d1-2d75-47ef-9e46-25fb128b3b05]
H-1051 Budapest
Nador u. 15. FT room 404
tel: +36-1 327-3000 2941
http://www.ceu.edu<http://www.ceu.edu/>
http://cognitivescience.ceu.edu<http://cognitivescience.ceu.edu/>
______________________________________________
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Kedves Kogtársak,
Ma 30 éves a Koglist (pontosabban nyáron volt, de ma 30 éve került egy megbízható rendszerre). Eddig 5674 üzenetet közvetített, tehát átlagosan kétnaponta egyet. Jelenleg 342 tagunk van, sokan közülük fiatalabbak, mint maga a lista, de vagyunk néhányan, akik a kezdetektől itt ragadtunk. A Koglist volt az egyik első magyar email levlista, és talán az egyetlen, amely 30 éve folyamatosan működik.
Éljen soká!