• Understanding publication practices, (models and time-courses) across disciplines to improve the impact of your inter-disciplinary research

    Salle des voûtes, St Charles 3 place Victor Hugo, Marseille, France

    An inter-disciplinary discussion at ILCB In our modern science practices, it would not be surprising to hear that the three most important assets for a scientist are… publication, publication, publication! But what exactly is a publication? The answer to this question could be very different across disciplines, and many of its significant aspects are evolving. […]

  • In search for the cognitive foundations of Euclidean geometry ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. Towards processing theories of conversation

    Malmousque Chemin de la Batterie des Lions, Marseille, France

    11h Dr. Véronique Izard (Integrative Neuroscience and Cognition Center, CNRS & Université Paris Descartes) : In search for the cognitive foundations of Euclidean geometry 12h Prof. Antje S. Meyer (Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen The Netherlands)  : Towards processing theories of conversation 13h Lunch Confirm attendance (mandatory) by sending an email to lunchtalks@ilcb.fr   […]

  • Brains in Harmony: the role of brain-to-brain synchrony in naturalistic social interactions

    Salle des voûtes, St Charles 3 place Victor Hugo, Marseille, France

    Brains in Harmony: the role of brain-to-brain synchrony in naturalistic social interactions Neuroscience research has produced tremendous insight into how the human brain supports dynamic social interactions. Still, laboratory-generated findings do not always straightforwardly generalize to real-world environments. To fill this gap, I collaborate with scientists, artists, and educators to take neuroscience out of the laboratory, into schools, […]

  • Prospects for Collaborative Research between Latin Palaeography, Cognitive Psychology and the Neurosciences

    Salle de conférences 5 avenue Pasteur, Aix-en-Provence, France

    Prospects for Collaborative Research between Latin Palaeography, Cognitive Psychology and the Neurosciences Twenty years ago, Brian Stock, the distinguished Canadian historian of medieval literature and philosophy, published Augustine the Reader, a seminal resource for examining the patristic vocabulary for reading in the fifth century C.E.  The Latin verbs videre and inspicere came to be closely […]

  • Musicians at the cocktail party: Neural correlates of bottom-up and top down mechanisms

    Amphi MASSIANI 3 place Victor Hugo, Marseille, France

    "Musicians at the cocktail party: Neural correlates of bottom-up and top down mechanisms" Robert Zatorre Montreal Neurological Institute McGill University Segregating sound mixtures makes demands on multiple cognitive and neural mechanisms that musical training may enhance or exploit. In a series of studies we have documented the music-related enhancement behaviorally in the context of speech […]

  • Using Data Science to Study Children’s Cognitive Development

    Salle des voûtes, St Charles 3 place Victor Hugo, Marseille, France

    "Using Data Science to Study Children's Cognitive Development" Abdellah Fourtassi Following the seminal work of Piaget, the traditional approach in cognitive development has focused on studying the structure of children’s knowledge in controlled situations (e.g., laboratory experiments). While this approach allows for precise inference about how children behave in certain tasks, it cannot provide an […]

  • What we learn and when we learn it: the interaction of maturation and experience in music and language

    FRUMAM 3 place Victor Hugo, Marseille, France

    What we learn and when we learn it: the interaction of maturation and experience in music and language Virginia Penhune Department of Psychology, Concordia University Laboratory for Motor Control and Neural Plasticity https://www.concordia.ca/artsci/psychology/research/penhune-lab.html The impact of training or experience is not the same at all points in development. Children who learn to play a musical […]

  • Cerebral Processing of Voice Information: From Monkeys to Deep Learning

    Salle des voûtes, St Charles 3 place Victor Hugo, Marseille, France

    Pascal Belin, Institut de Neurosciences de La Timone, CNRS & Aix-Marseille Université, France --------------------------- How do we extract and process the treasure-trove of information in voices? Experiments involving techniques ranging from monkey neuroimaging to deep learning provide an increasingly detailed picture of the ‘vocal brain’ and its evolution in primates. Results suggest an organization in […]

  • Louis-Jean Boë GIPSA-lab, UGA–CNRS, Grenoble

    Salle des voûtes, St Charles 3 place Victor Hugo, Marseille, France

    The Dawn of Speech is Older Than We Thought The production of speech repurposes an entire set of anatomical features that are primarily used for vital functions: breathing, sucking, chewing and swallowing.  Hypotheses about the dawn of speech try to determine the period during which our ancestors began to produce, by exaptation, differentiated vocalizations associated […]