Computational Cognitive Science Colloquium 2022
2022/04/24
The CCS Colloquium 2022 has finished. Thank you for participating & we hope to see you again next semester!
All talks will be held either in person or online, on Wednesdays 17:00 CET (exceptions highlighted below).
See below for the detailed schedule and check from time to time for updates. Please mind, that in case of in person presentation, no parallel streaming will take place.
The following COVID-19 regulations apply to the physical colloquium meetings:
- wearing a FFP2 mask is mandatory for every participant
- exception: the speaker while her/his presentation
- 27.04.2022 – Building S1|03 Room 223
Fatma Deniz, Technische Universität Berlin/University of California
Language Representations in the Human Brain: A naturalistic approach - 04.05.2022 – online
Ulrike Hahn, Centre for Cognition, Computation and Modelling, Birkbeck, University of London, UK
The Problem of Testimony - 18.05.2022 – online
Adam Sanborn, Department of Psychology, University of Warwick, UK
Bayesian brains without probabilities - 25.05.2022 – online – cancelled
Steven T. Piantadosi, Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley, USA - 30.05.2022 – Monday 14:00 CET, Building S3|06 Room 146
C. Shawn Green, University of Wisconsin Madison
Every task is a learning task (and should be treated as such) - 01.06.2022 – online
Hyowon (Hyo) Gweon, Stanford University
Learning from others, helping others learn: Cognitive foundations of distinctively human social learning - 08.06.2022 – no talk scheduled
- 15.06.2022 – online
Julijana Gjorgjieva, Technical University of Munich/Max Planck Institute for Brain Research, Frankfurt
How neural circuits organize and learn during development - 22.06.2022 – online
Thomas Serre, Brown University, Cognitive, Linguistic & Psychological Sciences Department/Carney Institute for Brain Science
Feedforward and feedback processes in visual recognition - 29.06.2022 – cancelled
Tobias H. Donner, Section Computational Cognitive Neuroscience, Department of Neurophysiology & Pathophysiology, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf (UKE)
From Computation to Large-scale Neural Circuitry in Human Belief Updating - 06.07.2022 – online
Gabriel Kreiman, Harvard University, Kreiman Lab
Successes and failures of current AI as a model of visual cognition - 13.07.2022 – Building S1|03 Room 223
Rosanne Rademaker, Max Planck Research Group Leader, Ernst Strüngmann Institute
Flexible codes and loci of visual working memory
