-------------------
INNS (International Neural Networks Society)
has a well established awards program, designed to recognize
individuals who have made outstanding contributions to the field of
Neural Networks. Up to three awards, one in each of the following
categories, are presented annually at IJCNN to senior individuals
for outstanding contributions made to the field of Neural Networks.
The Hebb Award - recognizes achievement in biological learning.
The Helmholtz Award - recognizes achievement in sensation/perception.
The Gabor Award - recognizes achievement in engineering/application.
In addition, there is the Young Investigator Award: up to two awards
are presented annually to individuals with no more than five years
postdoctoral experience and who are under forty years of age, for
significant contributions to the field of Neural Networks.
The INNS Awards Committee is now inviting nominations for the 2010
Hebb, Helmholtz, and Gabor awards as well as the Young Investigator
awards. You can find the details of the nomination procedure on the INNS
Web page: http://www.inns.org; please click on "awards program". We
need excellent candidates to maintain the prestige of the INNS Awards.
I would urge you to think of highly qualified candidates and send in
formal nominations for them (see the INNS web page for the detailed
instructions).
Please email the nominations (along with their attachments) directly
to the
chair of the Awards Committee at rsun(a)rpi.edu by April 1, 2009.
Ron Sun
Chair, INNS Awards Committee
========================================================
Professor Ron Sun
Cognitive Science Department
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
110 Eighth Street, Carnegie 302A
Troy, NY 12180, USA
phone: 518-276-3409
fax: 518-276-3017
email: rsun(a)rpi.edu
web: http://www.cogsci.rpi.edu/~rsun
=======================================================
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Dear Dr. Qwerty,
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TITLE: "Numerical Representation in the Parietal Lobes: Abstract or not Abstract?"
AUTHORS: Roi Cohen Kadosh and Vincent Walsh
ABSTRACT: The study of neuronal specialisation in different cognitive and perceptual domains is
important for our understanding of the human brain, its typical and atypical development, and the
evolutionary precursors of cognition. Central to this understanding is the issue of numerical
representation, and the question of whether numbers are represented in an abstract fashion. Here
we discuss and challenge the claim that numerical representation is abstract. We discuss the
principles of cortical organisation with special reference to number and also discuss
methodological and theoretical limitations that apply to numerical cognition and also to the field
of cognitive neuroscience in general. We argue that numerical representation is primarily
non-abstract and is supported by different neuronal populations residing in the parietal cortex.
KEYWORDS: Abstract, Automaticity, Brain, Cognition, Neuronal Specialisation, Numbers, Parietal
lobes, Prefrontal Cortex, Representation.
FULL TEXT: http://www.bbsonline.org/Preprints/CohenKadosh-05062008/Referees/
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The CEU Philosophy Department cordially invites you to the next screening
of its Philm Club series:
Waltz with Bashir (2008) by Ari Folman
90 min. In Hebrew with English subtitles
WARNING! The film contains graphic violence, sex and brief nudity.
Friday, 6. February, 6:00 p.m.
TIGy Room, Nador 11 Courtyard
The Philm Club aims at screening and discussing movies that raise
philosophically relevant issues in accessible as well as entertaining ways.
Find out more on the club's blog: http://philmclub.wordpress.com/
Kriszta Biber
Department Coordinator
Philosophy Department
Tel: 36-1-327-3806
Fax: 36-1-327-3072
E-mail: biberk(a)ceu.hu
The National Center for Biomedical Ontology (http://ncbo.us) seeks
applicants for a post-doctoral research position to work on projects
relating to applications of ontology in medicine and biology. The
successful candidate will work with ontology researchers in the New
York State Center of Excellence in Bioinformatics and Life Sciences
in Buffalo, New York. He or she will have expertise in at least two
of the following areas: ontology, logic, philosophy of science,
bioinformatics, biology, medicine, computer science. Further details
are available from Barry Smith <phismith(a)buffalo.edu> or under
posting number 0900040 at http://ubjobs.buffalo.edu.
The Tenth Symposium on Logic and Language
Budapest/Gardony, Hungary
August 26-29, 2009
http://www.nytud.hu/lola10
e-mail: lola10(a)nytud.hu
CALL FOR PAPERS
The Research Institute for Linguistics of the Hungarian Academy of
Sciences is pleased to announce the Tenth Symposium on Logic and
Language, to be held on August 26-29, 2009 in Gardony, Hungary.
The 2009 meeting is the tenth installment of the Symposium series, which
is designed to provide a forum where logicians and linguists can meet to
share and discuss ideas and issues about how linguistics and logic
influence each other, with the aim of promoting a fruitful cooperation.
Preceding symposia took place in Debrecen (1987), Hajduszoboszlo (1989),
Revfulop (1990), Budapest (1992), Noszvaj (1994), Budapest (1998), Pecs
(2002), Debrecen (2004), and Besenyotelek (2006).
The organizers invite papers that analyze the interpretation of all
kinds of expressions in natural languages by formal means, or
investigate the logical and computational properties or philosophical
foundations of semantic theories.
Invited speakers:
Donka Farkas (University of California, Santa Cruz)
Stefan Kaufmann (Northwestern University)
Thomas Ede Zimmermann (Universitaet Frankfurt).
The individual presentations are planned to last for 30 minutes.
Deadline for submission of abstracts: EXTENDED TILL February 15, 2009
Notification of acceptance: March 15, 2009
Anonymous abstracts must be submitted electronically in PDF format (a
maximum of two abstracts per person, one single-authored and one
co-authored). The abstracts should be a maximum of four pages, including
examples and references. The name, affiliation, and e-mail address of
the author and the title of the paper should be provided in the body of
the e-mail message. Submissions should be sent to: lola10(a)nytud.hu.
A proceedings will be published electronically on the conference
homepage by the conference date. The guidelines for the submission of
8-page articles will be made available for the prospective authors by
the time of the notification of acceptance.
Deadline for submission of papers for the proceedings: June 10, 2009
Venue, transportation:
The symposium, following the tradition of the first meetings in the
1980s, will take place in the Hungarian countryside, in a hotel with
conference facilities, to provide the participants the possibility for
discussion in a more informal setting. The venue of the 2009 symposium
is Hotel Gardony, situated at Lake Velence, 50 km southwest of Budapest
(www.cometohungary.com/hotel_gardony.html). There will be a bus on the
evening of August 26 taking participants from Budapest to the conference
location, but participants can also travel individually, by train or by
long-distance buses that run regularly.
Registration:
The registration fee will include accommodation from the evening of
August 26 through the morning of August 29, breakfasts, dinners, coffee
breaks, and an excursion, and is expected to amount to the equivalent of
240-320 EUR +- 10% in Hungarian Forints (the exact sum depending on
room type, student/non-student status, and the current exchange rate
between HUF and EUR).
Registration deadline: April 30, 2009
Organizing committee:
Agnes Bende-Farkas
Kinga Gardai
Zsofia Gyarmathy
Beata Gyuris
Laszlo Kalman
Cecilia Molnar
Marta Peredy
Karoly Varasdi
Important dates:
NEW deadline for submission of abstracts: February 15, 2009
Notification of acceptance: March 15, 2009
Registration deadline: April 30, 2009
Deadline for submission of papers for the proceedings: June 10, 2009
LoLa10: August 26-29, 2009
The next talk in the Cognitive Development Center seminar series at
the CEU will be given by
Brenda Philips (Psychology, Sheffield)
Title:
Acquiring artifact knowledge: How children use pedagogical and
intentional cues to learn the function of novel tools
Date and time:
Wednesday, 4 February 2009, 5.30 pm
CEU Philosophy Department
Room 412, Zrinyi u. 14, 1051 Budapest
Everyone is welcome to attend.
---
Gergely Csibra
The CEU Philosophy Department cordially invites you to a talk
(as part of its Departmental Colloquium series)
by
David Lauer (Freie Universität, Berlin))
on
The World in View. McDowell vs. Brandom on the Necessity of Experience
Tuesday, 3 February, 2009, 5.30 PM, Zrinyi 14, Room 412
ABSTRACT
Discussion of John McDowell’s contribution to the philosophy of
perception tends to concentrate on his conceptualism - the thesis that
the contents of perceptual experience are „conceptual through and
through“. However, this astounding claim of McDowell’s is in fact
just a corollary of two more basic tenets of his philosophy, namely the
rejection of what Sellarsians call the „Myth of the Given“, and a
commitment to what McDowell himself calls „Minimal Empiricism“.
Therefore, in order to assess the credentials of McDowell’s
conceptualism, his reasons for holding on to these tenets should be
assessed. I will do so for the latter of the two. Minimal Empiricism is
the thesis that we cannot understand our empirical beliefs as being
about the world - and therefore, as being beliefs - if experience does
not offer us reasons for them. Many commentators have complained that
they cannot find a satisfying argument for this thesis in Mind and
World. I will try to reconstruct an argument for Minimal Empiricism on
McDowell’s behalf, using materials gathered from a series of exchanges
between him and Robert Brandom, which revolves around a thought
experiment originally introduced by Brandom and known as the story of
the chickensexers. Brandom, like Davidson, thinks that we cannot and
need not make sense of experience as offering us reasons for belief, and
that we can understand the intentionality and world-involvingness of our
thought and talk without relying on any theoretical notion of experience
altogether. Against this, McDowell defends the claim that casting out
experience from the realm of rational relations renders the position of
the epistemic subject toward the world unrecognizable and therefore
makes intentionality unintelligible. I will reconstruct McDowell as
arguing for the idea that without reconstructing intentional
world-involvingness as a structural feature of the sensory consciousness
of an epistemic subject, as part and parcel of the phenomenology of our
being-in-the-world, any attempt to exorcise the Myth of the Given (which
unites McDowell with Brandom and Davidson) would remain incomplete.
Kriszta Biber
Department Coordinator
Philosophy Department
Tel: 36-1-327-3806
Fax: 36-1-327-3072
E-mail: biberk(a)ceu.hu