Date: Wed, 12 Oct 94 18:32:43 EDT
From: payette(a)ca.uqam.atoci.uranus
Subject: Re: Colloque de Lyon
The Seventh Colloquium of the Jacques Cartier Center
Lyon, France.
THE COGNITIVE SCIENCES: FROM COMPUTATIONAL MODELS
TO THE PHILOSOPHY OF MIND
Wednesday, November 30th to Friday, December 2nd 1994
under the aegis of:
the Pole Rhones-Alpes of the Cognitive Sciences,
Programme Interdisciplinaire de Recherche Cognisciences,CNRS
Universite du Quebec a Montreal
Universite de Montreal
Universite Joseph Fourier
Universite Claude Bernard
Scientific committee:
Denis Fisette (Universite du Quebec a Montreal, Quebec)
Marc Jeannerod (Universite Claude Bernard, Lyon)
Daniel Laurier (Universite de Montreal, Quebec)
Daniel Payette (Universite du Quebec a Montreal, Quebec)
Vincent Rialle (Universite Joseph Fourier, Grenoble)
Guy Tiberghien (Universite Pierre Mendes-France, Grenoble)
Coordination in North America: Daniel Payette and Denis Fisette
Universite du Quebec a Montreal, Dpt de Philosophie, Dpt Psychology; C.P.
8888,Succ A, Montreal (Quebec) H3C-3P8, Canada;
E.mail : payette(a)uranus.atoci.uqam.ca;
tel (+514) 987 8418; Fax: (+514) 9876721
Coordination in Europe: Vincent Rialle
Universite J. Fourier, Labo.TIMC-IMAG, Faculte de Medecine, 38706 LaTronche
Cedex E.mail: Vincent.Rialle(a)imag.fr;
Tel. (+33) 76 63 71 87; Fax. (+33) 76 51 8667
DATES: Wednesday, November 30th to Friday, December 2nd 1994
CONFERENCE SITE:
Amphitheatre CHARLES BERAUDIER. Conseil Regional RHONE-ALPES,78 route de
Paris, 69751 CHARBONNIERES-les-BAINS. France
*Talks will only be given by invited speakers. (Simultaneous
French-English and English-French will be provided).
THEME OF COLLOQUIUM
The modeling of mental processes in the various human cognitive
activities has generated increasing interest in the scientific world
today. Cognitive models, cognitive simulations, auto-organization,
adaptation, emergence, genetic selection, Darwinian mentalism and
enaction are active research topics in neurological and psychological
theory.
The cognitive sciences offer a continuum of research extending from the
engineering sciences to the philosophy of mind, including the
neurosciences, cognitive psychology, linguistics, semantics, semiotics
and artificial intelligence. Three subconferences will organize
themselves around the following major complementary themes: (i)
Modeling (cognitive and brain functions), (ii) Philosophy of Mind and
Epistemology, and (iii) Applications (AI, technical and computational
engineering).
(i) Modeling is a point of intersection for all these specialties
because it includes the modeling of functions and dysfunctions of the
central nervous system, the neurocomputer sciences, the modeling of
psychocognitive and mental processes, the emergence of intentional
structure on the basis of biological structure, enaction, genetic
algorithms, neural networks, artificial "life," etc.
(ii) The philosophical and epistemological subcomponent poses questions
like the following: Can we elaborate mathematical models of the mind
and use them to describe and explain human behavior? Are we aiming
toward a mathematical model of the mind? Can we capture the formal
principles of the development and emergence of cognition? Can we
technologically recreate thought? Is the computational symbolic
paradigm, which has imposed itself for the last decades, still a
powerful conceptual tool or is it proving too reductionistic and if so,
how? What is the epistemological status of, for example, the
alternative proposed by the parallel distributed model to the
computational models of classical cognitivism? Wich relations can be
established between the modeling activity of the cognitive and
neurosciences and human experience?
(iii) The applications subconference will consider practical domains in
which scientific results have been applied in the treatment of
language, the automated cognitive analyses of textual documents (an
intersection of linguistics, semantics, semiotics and artificial
intelligence), aids to decision making, applications in sensory
information processing, etc.
OFFICIAL PROGRAM
WEDNESDAY, 30 November 1994
8h15 - 8h30
Allocution d'accueil du Conseil Regional
8h30 - 9h
Guy Tiberghien (Universite Pierre Mendes-France, Grenoble)
Introduction
SESSION 1 :NEURO AND PSYCHOLOGICAL MODELING
9h - 9h-30
Jean Francois Le Ny (Universite Paris-Sud, psychologie cognitive)
Pourquoi les modeles cognitifs devraient-ils etre calculatoires ?
9h30 - 9h45 Discussion
9h-45 - 10h15
Marc Jeannerod (Universite Claude Bernard, Lyon, neurosciences)
The Representational Brain
10h15 - 10h30 Discussion
10h30 - 10h45 PAUSE
10h45 - 11h15
Zenon Pylyshyn (Rutgers University, USA, psychologie cognitive)
What's in the Mind? A Computational Approach to a Ancient Question.
11h15 - 11h30 Discussion
11h30 - 12h00
Stevan Harnad (Princeton University, psychologie cognitive)
Modeles, mobiles et mentalite
12h00 - 12h15 Discussion
MEAL
14h00 - 14h30
Michel Imbert (Universite Paul Sabatier, Toulouse, neurosciences)
De l'etude du cerveau a la comprehension de l'esprit
14h30 - 14h45 Discussion
14h45 - 15h15
Guy Tiberghien (Univers Pierre Mendes-France,Grenoble,psychologie
cognitive)
Connexionnisme: stade supreme du behaviorisme ?
15h15 - 15h30 Discussion
15h30 - 15h45 PAUSE
15h45 - 16h15
Jacques Demongeot (Universite Joseph Fourier, Grenoble, neurosciences)
Memoire d'evocation dans les reseaux de neurones
16h15 - 16h30 Discussion
16h30 - 17h00
Bennet Murdock (Universite de Toronto, psychologie cognitive)
THE ROLE OF FORMAL MODELS IN MEMORY RESEARCH
17h00 - 17h15 Discussion
17h15 - 17h45
Robert Proulx (Universite du Quebec a Montreal, neuro-psychologie)
Plausibilite biologique de certains systemes de categorisation adaptative a
base de reseaux de neurones
17h45 - 18h00 Discussion
TUESDAY, December 1
Session 2 : EPISTEMOLOGY, PHILOSOPHY OF MIND and COGNITION
9h - 9h30
Elisabeth Pacherie (Universite de Provence, CNRS & CREA, Paris)
Cognitive Domains and Modularity
9h30 - 9h45 Discussion
9h-45 - 10h15
Pierre Livet (Universite de Provence & CREA, Paris, philosophie)
Categorisation et connexionnisme
10h15 - 10h30 Discussion
10h30 - 10h45 PAUSE
Normand Lacharite (Universite du Quebec a Montreal, epistemologie)
10h45 - 11h15
Conflits de modeles en theorie de la representation
11h15 - 11h30 Discussion
11h30 - 12h00
Peter Gardenfors (Lund University, Suede, philosophie)
Language and the Evolution of Mind
12h15 - 12h15 Discussion
MEAL
14h00 - 14h30
Andy Clark (Washington University, philosophie)
Wild Cognition: Putting Representation in its Place
14h30 - 14h45 Discussion
14h45 - 15h15
Kevin Mulligan (Universite de Geneve, Suisse, philosophie)
Constance perceptuelle et contenu spatial
15h15 - 15h30 Discussion
15h30 - 15h45 PAUSE
15h45 - 16h15
Ronald De Sousa (Universite de Toronto, epistemologie)
La rationalite: un concept normatif ou descriptif ?
16h15 - 16h30 Discussion
16h30 - 17h00
Daniel Laurier (Universite de Montreal, philosophie)
Rationalite et naturalisme
17h00 - 17h15 Discussion
17h15 - 17h45
Joelle Proust (CNRS & CREA, Paris, philosophie)
Un modele naturaliste de l'intentionnalite
17h45 - 18h00 Discussion
FRIDAY, December 2
Session 3: IA MODELING, LANGUAGE and COGNITIVE SEMANTIC
Paul Jorion (Maison des Sciences de l'Homme, Paris, psychologie cognitive)
9h - 9h30
Modelisation du reseau mnesique : une utilisation minimaliste de l'IA
9h30 - 9h45 Discussion
9h-45 - 10h15
Bernard Amy (Universite Joseph Fourier, Grenoble, connexionnisme)
Neural Networks in AI
10h15 - 10h30 Discussion
10h30 - 10h45 PAUSE
10h45 - 11h15
Paul Bourgine (CEMAGREF, Paris-Antony, IA-modelisation)
Co-evolution et emergence du soi
11h15 - 11h30 Discussion
11h30 - 12h00
Paul Pietroski (Universite McGill, Canada, philosophie)
What can linguistics teach us about belief
12h00 - 12h15 Discussion
MEAL
14h00 - 14h30
Le paradigme hermeneutique et la mediation semiotique
Francois Rastier (Institut National de la Langue Francaise, CNRS,
linguistique computationnelle)
14h30 - 14h45 Discussion
14h45 - 15h15
L'impact des perspectives cognitives dans le traitement de l'information
Jean-Guy Meunier (Universite du Quebec a Montreal, semiotique)
15h15 - 15h30 Discussion
15h30 - 15h45 PAUSE
15h45 - 16h15
Guy Denhiere (Universite Paris VIII, psychologie cognitive)
Isabelle Tapiero (Universite Lyon II, psychologie cognitive)
La signification comme structure emergente : de l'acces au lexique a la
comprehension de textes
16h15 - 16h30 Discussion
16h30 - 17h00
Paul Freedman (Centre de Recherche en Informatique de Montreal, IA)
La vision artificielle: le traitement intelligent de documents
17h00 - 17h15 Discussion
17h15 - 17h45
Denis Vernant (Universite Pierre Mendes-France, Grenoble, philosophie)
L'intelligence de la machine et sa capacite dialogique
17h45 - 18h00 Discussion
18h00: END OF COLLOQUIUM
------------------------------------------------------------------------
-ADMISSION FEES-
(Includes:access to the conference room, meals and the colloquium
documents)
Individuals-------------------------------------------------1500FF
Student (join proof of eligibility with registration)------- 500FF
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
REGISTRATION BULLETIN
(The Cognitive Sciences:From computational models to philosophy of mind)
Name:___________________________________________________________________
Status:_____________________________________
Institution/Company_________________________
Complete Address_________________________________________________________
Fax:________________________
Phone :______________________
@mail number__________________________________
Enclosed : Check or money order of (_____________________FF)
(Make check or money order payable to CENTRE JACQUES CARTIER)
-Send information on possibilities of housing in Lyon(______)
_Send me the colloquium brochure (_____)
-November 30 meal __
-December 1, meal __
-December 2, meal __
RETURN TO:
CENTRE JACQUES CARTIER,
86 rue Pasteur, 69365 Lyon Cedex 07,
France. Phone:(33) 78 69 72 21
@mail: ferreira(a)diogene.univ-lyon2.fr
------- Forwarded Message Follows -------
From: sipsc01(a)mailserv.zdv.uni-tuebingen.de (Hans Schleichert)
Subject: Job open
To: scanlist(a)cogpsyphy.hu (NeuroScan User Discussion Group)
Date sent: Tue, 11 Oct 1994 18:51:16 +0100 (MET)
Tuebingen University has a job open for a psychologist, physiologist,
biologist, or physicist. The job is in the area of pain research.
Required are: Knowledge of psychophysiology, esp. EEG. Those who have
worked with SynAmps and SCAN will find this an advantage. Thorough know-
ledge of statistical methods, and software. Good knowledge of PC and MS
DOS, Windows etc. Programming experience (>= 1 programming language).
The job includes: Research in the area of chronical pain and classical
conditioning. Planning of experiments, maintaining 2-3 psychophysiology
labs, doing experiments, processing data, writing publications.
The job is full time of you have an academic degree (M.D., Ph.D.) or
half time otherwise. You have a chance of making a PhD or Habilitation
(qualifiying for german professorship).
The job is limited to 14 months, starting on 01 Nov 1994, but there is a
good chance of another 2-3 years.
Please apply by writing to:
Prof Dr Niels Birbaumer
Institut fuer Medizinische Psychologie und Verhaltensneurobiologie
Gartenstrasse 29
D-72074 Tuebingen
F R Germany
Tel +49-7071-29-4219
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hans Schleichert home:
Institute of Medical Psychology Mauerstrasse 12
and Behavioural Neurobiology D-72070 Tuebingen, Germany
Eberhard-Karls-University Tel. (+49-7071) 440243
Gartenstrasse 29 CompuServe [100031,775]
D-72074 Tuebingen, Germany
Voice/modem (+49-7071) 29-5997
Fax (+49-7071) 29-5956
Internet <sipsc01(a)mailserv.zdv.uni-tuebingen.de>
--
Gabor Ujvari | Institute for Psychology, Budapest, HUNGARY
ujvari(a)cogpsyphy.hu | Tel.: (36) 1 153-3244 Fax: (36) 1 269-2972
------- Forwarded Message Follows -------
From: Stevan Harnad <harnad(a)ecs.soton.ac.uk>
Date sent: Thu, 13 Oct 94 19:50:21 BST
To: pg(a)ucs.uucp, staff(a)ecs.soton.ac.uk
Subject: Computer Models of Affective States
Date: Wed, 12 Oct 1994 16:21:50 +0000 (WET-DST)
From: KAISER(a)ch.unige.uni2a
Subject: Program of GEW'95
Call for Applications
GENEVA EMOTION WEEK '95
April 8 to April 13, 1995
University of Geneva, Switzerland
The Emotion Research Group at the University of Geneva announces the
third GENEVA EMOTION WEEK (GEW '95), consisting of a colloquium focusing
on a major topic in the psychology of emotion, and of a series of
workshops designed to introduce participants to advanced research
methods in the field of emotion.
The colloquium consists of extensive presentations of theoretical and
methodological approaches as well as recent empirical work by a group of
invited speakers and faculty members of the University of Geneva. Ample
time is allotted for discussion. The colloquium lasts 3 days. The theme
chosen for the GEW '95 is:
Artificial Emotions
The intention of GEW'95 is to bring together researchers in diverse
disciplines, including AI, neurosciences, philosophy, and psychology,
who share an interest in architectures and mechanisms underlying
emotion, motivation, and intelligence. The focus is on architectural
requirements for an autonomous agent, combining the various sub-
functions and sub-mechanisms normally studied separately in AI and
Psychology. GEW'95 is organized in collaboration with the Cognition
and Affect Group under the direction of Prof. Aaron Sloman at the
Cognitive Science Research Center, University of Birmingham.
This group organized the first Workshop on Architectures for
Understanding Motivation and Emotions (WAUME93) at Birmingham
and is pleased that WAUME95 is to be merged with GEW'95.
Speakers and Topics of the colloquium:
--------------------------------------
Prof. Joseph Le Doux, New York University:
- Neural Computation of Emotional Meaning by the Brain.
Prof. Stevan Harnad, University of Southampton:
- Measuring and Modelling Performance Capacities and
Qualitative States.
Prof. Aaron Sloman, University of Birmingham:
- Architectures for Emotional Agents.
Prof. Klaus Scherer, University of Geneva:
- Computer Modeling of Appraisal Processes.
Discussant: Prof. Nico Frijda, Univ. Amsterdam
The workshops will be dedicated to practical work, e.g. simulation
models, tools, problems, etc. The workshops listed below will be held by
the organizers and the invited speakers. In addition, 2 or 3 workshop
proposals from participants for workshops lasting between 1.5 and
3 hours will be selected on a competitive basis. At the end of each
workshop day there will be a session (3 x 2h) for posters,
demonstrations, videos, and individual discussions.
The topics of the invited workshops, each lasting approx. 3 hours are:
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Dr. Jorge Armony, Center for Neuroscience, New York:
- An Anatomically Constrained Connectionist Model of Fear Conditioning.
Prof. Stevan Harnad, Southampton:
- Turing Testing and the Causal Status of Affect.
Prof. Aaron Sloman, Cognition and Affect Group, Birmingham:
- Exploring Motivated Agent Design.
Dr. Prem Kalra, Prof. Nadia Magnenat Thalmann, Miralab, Geneva:
- Simulating Facial Expressions and Phonemes for Virtual Humans.
Dr. Thomas Wehrle, Prof. Klaus Scherer, Emotion Research Group, Geneva:
- Computational Models: Open Issues.
- A Psychological Modeling Environment for Autonomous Agents.
Prospective participants are researchers or doctoral students
working in AI, neurosciences, philosophy, or psychology.
Admission for the limited number of places is decided on the basis
of prior application. People interested in participating are asked to
fill in the enclosed application form as soon as possible and before
January 31, 1995
=========================================================================
APPLICATION FORM (please append a short Curriculum Vitae)
GENEVA EMOTION WEEK (GEW'95): April 8 to 13, 1995
Name:....................................................................
First Name:..............................................................
..
Affiliation:.............................................................
Address:.................................................................
.........................................................................
.........................................................................
Telephone:...............................................................
Fax:.....................................................................
E-Mail:..................................................................
Highest academic degree received
(university, title, year):...............................................
Present position:........................................................
Reasons for interests in GEW'95:.........................................
.........................................................................
.........................................................................
.........................................................................
.........................................................................
.........................................................................
.........................................................................
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
I plan to submit a contribution: yes.... no....
Tentative title of contribution:.........................................
.........................................................................
Form of Contribution: Poster.... Demonstration....
Video.... Workshop.....
Equipment needed:........................................................
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
A limited number of workshops (each lasting approx. 1.5 hours) are
selected competitively. Workshop proposals should include the workshop
title, a description of the background in the research area, a brief
resume of the organizer(s), references to published work and relevant
experience. Proposals must be received by December 31, 1994.
The preferred maximum number of attendees is 36. In order to enable
us to plan arrangements for the workshop it will be useful to know
soon whether there will be a significantly larger number of well
qualified applicants. If you think there is a real chance that
you will be applying, please send in a note as soon as possible to
the address below, saying so and indicating whether you are likely
to submit a workshop proposal or not.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
The colloquium will start on Saturday, April 8, 1995 at 14:00 and end on
Monday, April 10, 1995 at 12:00.
The workshops will start on Monday, April 10, 1995 at 14:00 and end on
Thursday, April 13, 1995 at 12:00.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arrival Date*:................... Departure Date*:........................
Full colloquium/workshop fee with all lunches including accommodation
for April 8 to April 13, 1995 (5 nights)*:
Category A:..... Hotel de l'Etoile (Sw.frs. 1'200.--)
Category B:..... Cite Universitaire (Sw.frs. 600.--)
Fee for colloquium only including accommodation
for April 8 to April 10, 1995 (2 nights)*:
Category C:..... Hotel de l'Etoile (Sw.frs. 300.--)
Category D:..... Cite Universitaire (Sw.frs. 200.--)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
*Participants who want to come earlier or leave later have to organize
their accommodation for these days themselves.
Full colloquium/workshop fees:
A) Researchers holding an academic position: Sw.frs. 1'200
(including hotel accommodation)
B) Doctoral students and assistants: Sw.frs. 600.--
(including students' hostel accommodation)
Colloquium only:
C) Researchers holding an academic position Sw.frs. 300.--
(including hotel accommodation)
D) Doctoral students and assistants: Sw.frs. 200.--
(including students' hostel accommodation)
Upon acceptance of your participation, you will receive a
confirmation letter and payment instructions. Organizers
of an accepted workshop (one person per workshop) will be
informed before January, 31, 1995 and pay a reduced fee
of Sw.frs. 1'050.-- (Sw.frs. 400.-- for doctoral students).
Please return to: Dr. Susanne Kaiser - University of
Geneva, FPSE, Section de Psychologie
9, route de Drize, CH-1227 Carouge
Fax: +41/22/300 1482; E-mail: kaiser(a)uni2a.unige.ch
=======================================================================
--
Gabor Ujvari | Institute for Psychology, Budapest, HUNGARY
ujvari(a)cogpsyphy.hu | Tel.: (36) 1 153-3244 Fax: (36) 1 269-2972
You are invited to the first in a new double series of colloquia in
Cognitive Science, hosted by the Cognitive Psychology Research Group
at the University of Southampton. There will be both an External and an
Internal Speaker Series. Our first speaker (External) is a Neural Net
Theorist from the Bolyai Institute of Mathematics in Hungary. His talk
will take place this Tuesday, 11 October, in the Murray Lecture
Theater, Southampton University, from 12:45 - 13:45.
AUTONOMOUS ADAPTIVE AGENTS:
GENERALIZED DYNAMIC CONCEPTS
Dr. Csaba Szepesvari
Bolyai Institute of Mathematics
University of Szeged
Szeged, Hungary
szepes(a)inf.u-szeged.hu
SUMMARY
A brain-based alternative to reinforcement learning integrates
artificial neural networks (ANN) and knowledge based (KB) systems
into one unit or agent for goal-oriented problem solving. The agent
works under closed-loop control. Its sensory system provides the
input to the controller and the controller's output results in the
agent's immediate motor actions.
The controller can have both inherited and learned ANN and KB
systems. The agent has and develops ANN cues to the environment
for dimensionality reduction (data compression) in order to ease
the problem of combinatorial explosion. A dynamic conceptual model
(DCM) builds cue-models of the phenomena in the world, designs
dynamic action sets and makes them compete at a
spreading-activation neuronal stage to come to a decision.
DCM can create concepts or subgoals. For the production of subgoals
two things are important: (i) DCM has an inherited goal system and
(ii) subgoals are created by the agent's experiences encountered
during the interaction with the environment. Concepts allow the use
of rule-based systems for control. The agent's experiences
transform during learning into a rule system. Concept generation
reduces memory and time requirements. It also improves the system's
ability to handle unknown situations. We examine the capabilities
of a simple robotic-like object in a two-dimensional conditionally
probabilistic space.
Date: Tuesday, October 11
Time: 12:45 - 13:45
Place: Murray Lecture Theater, Murray Building
Cognitive Scientists at University of Southampton are invited to
present their work to their fellow cogntive scientists in the Internal
Speaker Series. If you wish to speak, or to recommend someone to speak,
please contact Professor Stevan Harnad, Psychology Department, Murray
Building 206, harnad(a)soton.ac.uk
The Cognitive Sciences include: Psychology, Neurobiology, Artificial
Intelligence, Robotics, Machine Vision/Speech, Neurocomputation,
Linguistics, and subareas of Biology, Anthropology, Sociology,
Archeology, Philosophy, and further disciplines. The common element
uniting the Cognitive Sciences is a research interest in how the mind
-- and systems that can do what mind the can do -- work.
Dr. Szepesvari will be here from Monday to Thursday and would be very
interested in visiting SU labs doing related work (neural nets,
parallel computation, cogntive systems, robotics/automomous agents,
control systems, AI, vision/speech, etc. Please let me know if you would
be interested in having the speaker visit your lab.
Stevan Harnad
Professor of Psychology
Department of Psychology
University of Southampton
Highfield, Southampton
SO17 1BJ UNITED KINGDOM
harnad(a)ecs.soton.ac.uk harnad(a)princeton.edu
phone: +44 703 592582
--------------------------------------------------------------------
ftp://princeton.edu/pub/harnad/http://louis.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~harnad/http://www.princeton.edu/~harnad/
gopher://gopher.princeton.edu:9000/1
--- Forwarded message follows ---
From: psrds(a)warwick.ac.uk (Trevor Harley)
Subject: Research Fellowships in UK
Date: Mon, 3 Oct 94 11:08:34 GMT
Department of Psychology
University of Warwick
SIX-YEAR RESEARCH FELLOWSHIPS IN
COGNITIVE SCIENCE and/or DEVELOPMENTAL
PSYCHOLOGY
Applications for two Warwick Research Fellowships in Psychology
are invited, by 11th November or as soon as possible thereafter,
from candidates with research interests, postdoctoral experience
and significant publications in Developmental Psychology and/or
Cognitive Science (including Cognitive/Computational Neuroscience
and connectionism). The Fellowships will support outstanding
individuals for six years, and it is expected that Fellows will be
offered permanent academic appointments at the University at the
end of their Fellowship period, at the level of Lecturer, Senior
Lecturer, Reader or Professor.
The primary emphasis will be on research, and each Fellow will be
expected to establish an international reputation. To qualify for a
Fellowship, candidates will have begun to establish their academic
careers, having completed a doctorate and probably having some
years of further research experience. They may already hold an
academic appointment. The essential requirement will be to
demonstrate an outstanding level of achievement in research.
The research rating in Britain of Warwick University is exceeded
only at Cambridge, Oxford and London, and the present posts are part
of a research-led expansion of psychology at Warwick. An
outstanding research environment will be available to successful
candidates.
The salary offered will be on the Lecturer scale, depending on age
and experience. Further particulars and application forms are
available from: Dawn Duddridge, Assistant Registrar (Personnel),
University of Warwick, Coventry, CV4 7AL, United Kingdom. Tel:
(01203) 524673 (24 hours); Fax: (01203) 524572; email
praded(a)admin.warwick.ac.uk
Details are also available on Word Wide Web at:
http://crocus.csv.warwick.ac.uk/WWW/wrf.html
or use Gopher command:
Gopher -p 1/univ-info/wrf gopher.csv.warwick.ac.uk
Informal enquiries concerning these post are welcome and can be
made to Gordon Brown, telephone (0203) 524672, email
pssac(a)warwick.ac.uk; or to Greg Jones (Department Chair),
telephone (0203) 523812, email psreb(a)warwick.ac.uk.
_______________________________________________________________________
Dr. Trevor A. Harley EMAIL: psrds(a)csv.warwick.ac.uk
Department of Psychology PHONE: UK (0)203 523762 (direct)
University of Warwick 523096 (messages)
Coventry CV4 7AL FAX: UK (0)203 524225
UK
_______________________________________________________________________
Az IUHPS/DLMPS hazai bizottsaganak es a Magyar Filozofiai Tarsasag
tudomanyfilozofiai szekciojanak szervezeseben szept. 29-en, csutortokon,
az ELTE BTK (Piarista koz 1.) II. emelet VI. termeben, du. 6-kor
FEHER MARTA
fog eloadast tartani
A TUDASSZOCIOLOGIA EROS PROGRAMJAROL -- 18 EV UTAN
cimmel.
Az eloadas egy rendszeres havi eloadassorozat elos darabja. Tovabbi
informaciok: forrai(a)osiris.elte.hu
margitay(a)tttk.bme.hu
A hetfoi kognitiv szemariumok hozzavetoleges tematikaja es beosztasa:
Hetfon, 6 es 7h30 koezoett, Izabella utca, IV. emelet 301
Szeptember 19 es 26: a mar hirdetett Cuykens eloadasok.
Oktober 3: Bocz Andras es Vinkler Zsuzsa beszamol a bufalloi Kognitiv Nayri
Egyetemrol
Utana a Megismeres tarsas elmeletei
Oktober 10 es 17: Multiple review of Donald: The origins of the modern mind
BBS 1993 4. szam
Oktober 24 es 31: Tomasello et al Cultural learning BBS 1993 No. 3 .
November 7 es 14: Dunbar: Coevoution of neocortical size gropu size and language
Nehany meg lesz.
Mindenkit szerettel varunk Pleh Csaba
M E G H i V o
Az ELTE Altalanos Pszichologiai Tanszeke szeretettel
var minden erdeklodot a "Keddi Szeminariumok" e felevi
elso alkalmara,
Jakab Zoltan:
A hippokampusz szerkezete es mukoedesenek modelljei
c. doktori ertekezesenek hazi vedesere.
Helye es ideje:
1994. szeptember 27., 12.00 - 14.00,
Izabella u. 46, IV. em. 403. terem.
Kedves hetfo esti szeminaristak , s mindenki akit erdekel.
A szokasos hetfo esti kognitiv szeminariumok szeptember 19 hetfon
este 18.00-kor indulnak. Az e felevi altalanos oramegbeszeles
mellett (az altalanos temank egyebkent a Megismeres uj szocialis
elmeletei lesz) 19-en es 26-an ket elaodast tart kezedetnek
Hubert CUYCKENS holland vendegtanar:
19-en
"Lexical semantics in cognitive linguistics: The case of spatial
prepositions"
26-an: "Psycholinguistic implications of cognitive linguistic
networks"
cimmel.
Izabella utca 46 III. emelet 301
A kollega a kognitiv nyelveszet vezeto alakjainak egyike. Mindenkit
szeretettel varunk.
Mint akit erint mar tudja, az egyeb kognitiv orak megbeszelesei:
Agnes Szokolszky
Gibsonian approaches to cognition
kedd, 13, 12 h III. emelet 316
Laszlo Janos: Narrative theories and social representation
pentek 16, 10-12, Pszichologiai Intezet.
A doktorandusoknak pedig altalanos orientacio 19 hetfo,
16.00 II. e 316.
Tobbi ora a hirdetotablakon
Tobben erdeklodtek, hogyan lehet megkapni a KOGLIST olvasoinak listajat.
Valasz: kuldeni kell a listserv(a)cogpsyphy.hu cimre egy
review koglist
utasitast.
Csibra Gergely