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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20151203T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20151203T180000
DTSTAMP:20260424T030043
CREATED:20190212T174919Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190212T174921Z
UID:2289-1449158400-1449165600@www.ilcb.fr
SUMMARY:How do central processes cascade into peripheral processes in written language production ? by Sonia Kandel
DESCRIPTION:How do central processes cascade into peripheral processes in written language production ? by Sonia Kandel (LPNC & Gipsa-Lab Grenoble (Univ. Grenoble Alpes\, CNRS))\nWith the arrival of internet\, tablets and smartphones many people spend more time writing than speaking (email\, chat\, SMS\, etc.). Despite the importance of writing in our society\, the studies investigating written language production are scarce. In addition\, most studies investigated written production either from a central point of view (i.e.\, spelling processing) or a peripheral approach (i.e.\, motor production) without questioning their relation. We believe\, instead\, that central and peripheral processing cannot be investigated independently. There is a functional interaction between spelling and motor processing. Letter production does not merely depend on its shape –and its specifications for stroke order and direction– but also on the way we encode it orthographically. For example\, the movements to produce letters PAR in the orthographically irregular word PARFUM (perfume) are different than in the regular word PARDON (pardon). Spelling processes cascade into motor production. The nature of the spelling processes that are activated before movement initiation will determine the way the cascade will operate during movement production. Lexical and sub-lexical processes do not spread into motor execution to the same extent.\n 
URL:https://www.ilcb.fr/event/how-do-central-processes-cascade-into-peripheral-processes-in-written-language-production-by-sonia-kandel/
LOCATION:Salle des voûtes\, St Charles\, 3 place Victor Hugo\, Marseille\, 13001\, France
CATEGORIES:Seminars
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20151211
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20151212
DTSTAMP:20260424T030043
CREATED:20190212T173550Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190212T173553Z
UID:2275-1449792000-1449878399@www.ilcb.fr
SUMMARY:Statistical learning as an individual ability by Ram Frost
DESCRIPTION:Statistical learning as an individual ability by Ram Frost (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem – Department of Psychology)\nMost research in Statistical Learning (SL) has focused on mean success rate of participants in detecting statistical contingencies at a group level. In recent years\, however\, researchers show increased interest in individual abilities in SL. What determines individuals' efficacy in detecting regularities in SL? What does it predict? Is it stable across modalities? We explore these questions by trying to understand the source of variance in performance in a visual SL task through a novel methodology. The theoretical implications for a mechanistic explanation of SL will be discussed.
URL:https://www.ilcb.fr/event/statistical-learning-as-an-individual-ability-by-ram-frost/
LOCATION:Salle des voûtes\, St Charles\, 3 place Victor Hugo\, Marseille\, 13001\, France
CATEGORIES:Seminars
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20151215
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20151216
DTSTAMP:20260424T030043
CREATED:20190212T173352Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190212T173355Z
UID:2273-1450137600-1450223999@www.ilcb.fr
SUMMARY:Analyzing\, Cognitive\, and Neural Modeling of Language-Related Brain Potentials by Peter Beim Graben
DESCRIPTION:Analyzing\, Cognitive\, and Neural Modeling of Language-Related Brain Potentials by Peter Beim Graben (Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience Berlin\, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin)\nHow is the human language faculty neurally implemented in the brain? What are the neural correlates of linguistic computations? To which extent are neuromorphic cognitive architectures feasible and could they eventually lead to new diagnosis and treatment methods in clinical linguistics (such as linguistic prosthetics)? These questions interfacing neurolinguistics with computational linguistics and computational neuroscience are addressed by the emergent discipline of computational neurolinguistics. In my presentation I will give an overview about my own research in computational neurolinguistics in the framework of language-related brain potentials (ERPs). By means of a paradigmatic ERP experiment for the processing and resolution of local ambiguities in German [1]\, I first introduce a novel method to identifying ERP components such as the P600 as ""recurrence domains"" in neuronal dynamics [2]. In a second step\, I use a neuro-computational approach\, called ""nonlinear dynamical automaton"" NDA [1] in order to construct a context-free ""limited repair parser"" [3] for processing the linguistic stimuli of the study. Finally\, I demonstrate how the time-discrete evolution of the NDA can be embedded into continuous time using winner-less competition in neural population models [4]. This leads to a representation of the automaton's configurations as recurrence domains in the neural network that can be correlated with experimentally measured ERPs through subsequent statistical modeling [5\,6]
URL:https://www.ilcb.fr/event/analyzing-cognitive-and-neural-modeling-of-language-related-brain-potentials-by-peter-beim-graben/
LOCATION:Salle de conférences\, 5 avenue Pasteur\, Aix-en-Provence\, 13100\, France
CATEGORIES:Seminars
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