The next talk in the CDC Seminar series will be given by:
Kai Vogeley, University of Cologne
Date: Wednesday, January 25, 2012, 5 PM
Location: Cognitive Development Center at CEU, Hattyú u. 14, 3rd floor
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.
*Social Cognition and Autism*
Abstract: Social cognition as the capacity to process socially relevant
information is an essential component of the human cognitive equipment that
allows us to communicate and interact with others and to adapt to complex
affordances created by our social environment; seemingly effortlessly we
are able to generate impressions and make inferences about the inner
experience of others in everyday life. However, the enormous variations of
social behaviour and diversity in human communication often enough
challenge our capacity to understand others and can lead to
misunderstandings in social encounters. Research activities from many
different fields have identified a variety of factors (age, gender,
culture, norm deviance, language modalities) as influential sources of
variance in social information processing. In this presentation, I will
talk about psychological processes and neural mechanisms (employing
functional magnetic resonance imaging) that underly nonverbal communication
focusing on gaze perception, impression formation and true interaction with
a special focus on the variance related to the psychopathology of
high-functioning autism. These studies are crucial to our basic
understanding of human communication and interaction and their disturbances.
Cognitive Science events at CEU:
http://cognitivescience.ceu.hu/events
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