Computational Cognitive Science Colloquium 2020/2021
2020/08/30
The CCS Colloquium 2020/21 has finished. Thank you for participating & we hope to see you again next semester!
All talks will be held online, on Wednesdays from 15:20 to about 17:00. See below for the detailed schedule. If you would like to attend the talks please register to get a Zoom link before the presentation. here
- 04.11.20
Daniel Schad, Tilburg University
Pavlovian sign- and goal-tracking in humans reflects model-free and model-based learning - 11.11.20
Gemma Roig, Goethe University Frankfurt
Task-specific Vision DNN Models and Their Relation for Explaining Different Areas of the Visual Cortex - 18.11.20
Elisa Filevich, Humboldt University of Berlin
Neural basis of metacognitive monitoring - 25.11.20
Katharina Dobs, Giessen University
A computational explanation for domain specificity in the human brain - 02.12.20 – Talk has been re-scheduled to the next colloquium. Please check for updates!
Tobias Gerstenberg, Stanford University
Understanding “why”: The role of causality in cognition - 09.12.20 – Talk has been re-scheduled to the next colloquium. Please check for updates!
Judith Degen, Stanford University - 16.12.20
Charley Wu, University of Tübingen
Generalization guided exploration - 13.01.21
Daniel Heck, Philipps University of Marburg
Cognitive Psychometrics: Statistical Modeling of Individual Differences in Latent Processes - 20.01.21
Maarten Speekenbrink, University College London
Uncertainty in learning and decision making - 27.01.21
Eric Schulz, Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics
Exploration beyond bandits - 03.02.21
Michael Franke, University of Osnabrück
Theory-driven probabilistic modeling of language use: a case study on quantifiers, logic and typicality - 10.02.21
Susann Fiedler, Max Planck Institute for Research on Collective Goods
What to consider, when making strategic social decisions? An Eye-tracking investigation.
