Dear All,
The CEU Department of Cognitive Science invites you to the following talk.
Speaker: Thibaud Gruber<https://www.unige.ch/cisa/center/members/gruber-thibaud/> <https://www.unige.ch/cisa/center/members/gruber-thibaud/>
Title: An affective, behavioral and cognitive story of the evolution of communication and culture in humans and other great apes
The studies of the evolution of language and culture are intertwined. Often, the same mechanisms – including the usual suspects such as imitation – are argued to be at the heart of the evolution of both. In addition, in the last decades, research on social learning in non-humans vs humans has largely focused on behavioral and cognitive processes, while research on non-human vs human communication has often opposed cognitive processes to emotional ones. These two approaches sometimes fall in the pitfall of looking for the one characteristic that makes us unique amongst other animals. In this talk, I want to focus on the commonalities between animal and human social learning, with the goal to braid together literature from social learning, affective development, and the evolution of communication. All three domains can be unified in an ABC model of social learning, which aims to provide a combined Affective, Behavioral and Cognitive approach to the acquisition of knowledge in a broad sense. Affect, for example through motivation or emotions, indeed colors our quest for knowledge and for knowledge transmission. I will rediscuss classic examples of the animal literature such as the vervet alarm call system or the acquisition of tool use in chimpanzees. The ABC framework also allows introducing continuity between so-called simple and complex cognitive processes, which makes it a more realistic pathway for their attribution to animals or non-verbal infants. As such it opens new avenues of research to resolve the debates on the evolution of communication and culture, particularly in our lineage.
Thibaud Gruber is a primatologist and a comparative psychologist whose has been working over 15 years on the topics of the evolution of culture and communication in great apes and humans. After a Master in Cognitive Sciences at the ENS, Paris, he pursued a PhD in Psychology at the University of St Andrews, UK in 2011. He then obtained his Habilitation in Cognitive Sciences at the ENS, Paris, in 2018. He has held postdoctoral research positions at the University of Zürich, Neuchâtel and Geneva, funded by the Fyssen Foundation, the Marie Curie initiative of the European Commission, and the Swiss National Science Foundation. In 2020, thanks to an Eccellenza Fellowship from the SNSF, he has set up his own lab, the eccePAN lab (Ecology, Cognition, Communication, Emotion), at the Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, at the University of Geneva, with a joint position at the Swiss Center for Affective Sciences.
Time: 16:00, Thursday, 28 November 2024
Location: Vienna Campus, Quellenstrasse 51, Room : QS D-002 Tiered
Zoom: Meeting ID: 984 1754 5209<https://ceu-edu.zoom.us/j/98417545209?pwd=909i0Oc5aydidvanERaSfHkbKzEZmh.1> Passcode: 041432
Hosts: Thomas Ganzetti and Günther Knoblich
Best regards,
Andi
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The Department of Cognitive Science
cordially invites you to the public defense of the PhD thesis
Representation of Uncertainty and Recall Precision in Long-Term Episodic and Semantic Memories
by
Dávid Ádám Magas
THURSDAY, SepteMber 11, 4 P.M. CET
Room C322 (CEU, Quellenstrasse 51, 1100 Vienna)
Join Zoom Meeting
https://ceu-edu.zoom.us/j/93244559610?pwd=24NXxnQ9bYEv3Pc7f26p70fvX2JoVF.1<https://www.google.com/url?q=https://ceu-edu.zoom.us/j/93244559610?pwd%3D24…>
Meeting ID: 932 4455 9610 Passcode: 488643
PRIMARY SUPERVISOR: József Fiser (CEU)
SECONDARY SUPERVISOR: Máté Lengyel (CEU)
Members of the Dissertation Committee:
Ernő Téglás, Chair, CEU
Professor Pernille Hemmer (Rutgers University)<https://ifh.rutgers.edu/faculty_staff/pernille-hemmer/> as External examiner
Professor Timothy Brady (UC San Diego)<https://psychology.ucsd.edu/people/profiles/tbrady.html> as External examiner
*Anyone not affiliated with CEU wishing to attend in-person in Vienna must RSVP here<https://forms.office.com/Pages/DesignPageV2.aspx?origin=NeoPortalPage&subpa…> to get access to the lecture hall.
ABSTRACT |Episodic memory has often been characterized as detailed autonoetic awareness of one's past events. In my dissertation, I reconceptualize episodic memory as part of a general knowledge structure or long-term semantic memory. I offer a common framework in which the recall precision and the representation of uncertainty in short-term and long-term episodic and semantic memory can be investigated. As a result, my work bridges important gaps between perception, long-term episodic and semantic memory, and provides insights into the detailed form in which items in perception and long-term memory are encoded and recalled.
In Chapter 2, I analyze recall precision and the representation of uncertainty in perceptual decision-making and in long-term episodic memories without any semantic regularity imposed on them. I show that items in perception and long-term episodic memory are encoded and recalled in a probabilistic manner. In Chapter 3, I organize episodic elements into simple scenes with both perceptual and semantic connections between the elements. I demonstrate that semantic connections are dominant as opposed to perceptual ones in increasing recall precision. Furthermore, I show that the structure in which scene elements are stored in long-term memory corresponds to the recurring input schema of the scenes. In Chapter 4, I introduce overarching semantic regularity into the input and analyze how it affects recall precision and the representation of uncertainty. I show that semantic regularity improves overall recall precision. In addition, I show that this increase was a result of true semantic learning, where people learnt the structure of the input and used that knowledge exclusively in several responses. Furthermore, I point out major individual differences in episodic and semantic learning ability across participants. Lastly, show that the fundamentally probabilistic representation of individual items does not change despite learning the overarching semantic regularity. In Chapter 5, I analyze the effect of attention on episodic and semantic learning and show that semantic but not episodic learning remains intact with divided attention.
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Hosted by the Department of Cognitive Science
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GyörgyNÉ Finta (Réka)
Department Coordinator
Department of cognitive SCience
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CEU GmbH - CEU Central European University private university
Quellenstrasse 51, A-1100 Wien, Room B502
Office: +43 125230 5138
cognitivescience.ceu.edu<https://cognitivescience.ceu.edu/>| www.ceu.edu<http://www.ceu.edu/>
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Dear All,
The CEU Department of Cognitive Science cordially invites you to the following talk by:
Speaker: Francesco Guala<https://sites.unimi.it/guala/> (Università degli Studi di Milano, Italy)
Time: 4pm (to 6 pm) CET
Date: THURSDAY, 14th November 2024
Venue: D002 (QS Vienna) and Zoom: https://ceu-edu.zoom.us/j/97497562931?pwd=QyM6f1EIAyxLEa7MjQOmdWOubziToZ.1
Meeting ID: 974 9756 2931
Passcode: 382039
Chair: Thomas Wolf
Title: BELIEF-LESS COORDINATION
Abstract: Meta-representation does not always facilitate social interaction.
I illustrate this claim focusing on the case of coordination in Hi-lo games, and conjecture that people coordinate using a mode of reasoning that does not require the representation of others’ beliefs. I compare this sort of belief-less reasoning with theories that appeal to limited meta-representation, and present evidence indicating that people employ both – with meta-representation being used less frequently in coordinative than in competitive tasks.
*Anyone not affiliated with CEU wishing to attend in-person in Vienna must RSVP to get access to the lecture hall.
Best regards,
Fanni
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FANNI TAKÁTSY
Lab Manager/Research Coordinator,
Social Mind Center
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[cid:42067b17-4991-4d34-9c89-2f5005166125]
CENTRAL EUROPEAN UNIVERSITY
Quellenstrasse 51. | 1100 Vienna, Austria
takatsyf(a)ceu.edu<mailto:jeneia@ceu.edu>
http://socialmind.ceu.edu/http://cognitivescience.ceu.edu/
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The CEU Department of Cognitive Science cordially invites you to the following talk by:
Pascal Mamassian<https://lsp.dec.ens.fr/en/member/647/pascal-mamassian>, CNRS & Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris, France
Date: Wednesday, February 14, 2024
Time: 4 pm (to 5:30 pm) CET
Venue: D001 (QS Vienna) and Zoom: https://ceu-edu.zoom.us/j/99828555100?pwd=S2Y4VnRMTEFHMitWeWk4bnB0SGdXQT09<https://www.google.com/url?q=https://ceu-edu.zoom.us/j/99828555100?pwd%3DS2…>
Meeting ID: 998 2855 5100
Passcode: 393080
Chair: Jozsef Fiser
Title: Measurements of perceived time of visual events
Abstract: Visual perception is not instantaneous. It takes a few milliseconds for light to be transduced in photoreceptors and tens of milliseconds more for neuronal spikes to occur at successive levels of the visual hierarchy. These delays necessarily impact our abiity to perceive time. I will present examples of human time perception from two classes of tasks, duration estimation and perceived time of an event. In duration estimation, we have shown that observers are able to estimate the duration of an interval even when the onset of that interval is not explictly provided. In perceived time, we have shown that the perceived time of an event is influenced by other events in their temporal proximity, and that this perceived time varies across the visual field. A better understanding of our sensitivity to and biases in the perception of time is important to fully appreciate how well we understand our sensory environment.
*Anyone not affiliated with CEU wishing to attend in-person in Vienna must reply here<https://forms.office.com/e/HjaP91n2ep> to get access to the lecture hall.
Let Jozsef know, please, if you would like to schedule a meeting with the speaker.
Best,
Reka
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GyörgyNÉ Finta (Réka)
Department Coordinator
Department of cognitive SCience
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[cid:image001.jpg@01DA59C4.C465A9F0]
CEU GmbH - CEU Central European University private university
Quellenstrasse 51, A-1100 Wien, Room B502
Office: +43 125230 5138
cognitivescience.ceu.edu<https://cognitivescience.ceu.edu/>| www.ceu.edu<http://www.ceu.edu/>
See CEU story: www.youtube.com/ceuhungary<http://www.youtube.com/ceuhungary>
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CEU is committed to energy and environmental sustainability
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Kedves kollegák!
Pléh Csaba 80. születésnapjára egy egynapos mini-konferenciát rendezünk december 6-án a CEU-n.
Ha érdekel, hová kerültek és min dolgoznak manapság Csaba egykori tanítványai az elmúlt 50 évből, meghallgathatjátok 30 tízperces mini-előadás formájában.
Mellékeljük a részletes programot, ami egyébként az esemény honlapján is megtalálható.
Minden érdeklődőt szívesen látunk (nem csak a kogtársakat).
Terjesszétek az esemény hírét.
Gergő, Judit és Kristóf
Dear all,
The CEU Department of Cognitive Science invites you to the following talk:
Zsuzsa Kaldy <https://www.umb.edu/directory/zsuzsakaldy/> (University of Massachusetts Boston)
An ethological approach to working memory: The cost-based balancing of sampling and remembering
Abstract:
Typical visual working memory tasks involve many trials of rapid presentations of simple stimuli to be remembered across short delays. This is rarely how memory is used in the real world: we are almost always able to resample information by making an action just-in-time (eye or head movements) or preemptively (cognitive offloading). Deciding how often to resample versus how much to store in memory depends on the costs of each option. In five preregistered experiments with 4-8-year-old children using a naturalistic and gamified task (N = 298), I will show that the cost-based balancing of sampling versus remembering emerges around 5 years of age, and follows a similar (but not identical) pattern as in adults. These results demonstrate how attention and visual working memory interact in naturalistic goal-driven behavior.
Date: Wednesday, December 3rd, 2025
Time: 4 pm (to 5:30 pm) CET
Venue: D002-Tiered* (QS Vienna) and Zoom (meeting ID: 969 2496 5784<https://ceu-edu.zoom.us/j/96924965784?pwd=c2duZ0dDMFdEMUthK2Mwa2wzMllEUT09>, passcode: 471712)
Chair: Agnes Kovacs
*Anyone not affiliated with CEU wishing to attend in-person in Vienna must RSVP here<https://forms.cloud.microsoft/pages/responsepage.aspx?id=E1nE2VN24kuSC72wOG…> to get access to the lecture hall.
If you want to schedule a meeting with Zsuzsa on Wednesday, please write to me before Tuesday, 12pm.
Best,
Mariem
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Dear Cognitive Folks,
We’re excited to announce that the next Fluencia Party will take place on
Wednesday, December 3, starting at 8:00 PM at Élesztőház (Tűzoltó utca 22).
More details can be found here:
https://m.facebook.com/events/1347075076882771/
Fluencia is a monthly, informal gathering designed for students (both
undergraduate and graduate), professors, and researchers across cognitive
science, psychology, psychiatry, neurology, and neuroscience. Attendees
come from various universities and research institutes, though individuals
from other institutions are always warmly welcome!
The main goal of Fluencia is to foster interaction, collaboration, and
communication among researchers in these related fields. It’s an excellent
opportunity to meet new people, discuss your research interests, and, of
course, enjoy a relaxing evening with drinks in a friendly atmosphere.
Everyone is welcome! Feel free to reach out if you have any questions.
Looking forward to seeing you there!
Best regards,
Dezső
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https://nemethlab.com/ <http://www.memory-and-language.com/>
Logic and Philosophy of Science Seminar
Department of Logic, Institute of Philosophy
Eötvös Loránd University Budapest
Múzeum krt. 4/i Room 224
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P R O G R A M
The seminar is held in hybrid format, in person (Múzeum krt. 4/i Room 224)
and online. Meeting link: LPS seminar | Meeting-Join | Microsoft Teams
<https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_ZWI4MjRmODktNWQ4NC00…>
28 November (Friday) 4:15 PM Room 224 + ONLINE
Miklós Rédei
Department of Philosophy, Logic and Scientific Method, LSE, London
Conditionally inaccessible decisions
______________________________
Abstract is available from the seminar website: http://lps.elte.hu/lps
The seminar is open to everyone, including students, visitors, and
faculty members from all departments and institutes! Format: 60 minute
lecture, coffee break, 60 minute discussion.
Organizers: Márton Gömöri and Zalán Molnár
by Budapest CEU Conference on Cognitive Development
Dear Colleagues,
We would like to remind you that early bird registration for BCCCD26 will end on 28 November. Please note that places at the gala dinner and pre-conference events are limited, so we encourage you to purchase your tickets when you register. You can register for the conference here: https://bcccd.org/fees.htm.
Please note that all presenting authors must register by 28 November. If you wish to withdraw your presentation for any reason, please inform the chairs as soon as possible.
Best regards,
Anna Kispál & Bartuğ Çelik
BCCCD26 Chairs
Logic and Philosophy of Science Seminar
Department of Logic, Institute of Philosophy
Eötvös Loránd University Budapest
Múzeum krt. 4/i Room 224
_____________________________________________
P R O G R A M
The seminar is held in hybrid format, in person (Múzeum krt. 4/i Room 224)
and online. Meeting link: LPS seminar | Meeting-Join | Microsoft Teams
<https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_ZWI4MjRmODktNWQ4NC00…>
28 November (Friday) 4:15 PM Room 224 + ONLINE
Miklós Rédei
Department of Philosophy, Logic and Scientific Method, LSE, London
Conditionally inaccessible decisions
______________________________
Abstract is available from the seminar website: http://lps.elte.hu/lps
The seminar is open to everyone, including students, visitors, and
faculty members from all departments and institutes! Format: 60 minute
lecture, coffee break, 60 minute discussion.
Organizers: Márton Gömöri and Zalán Molnár