Graduate and Post-Doctoral Conference: PPNB 2007
Philosophy of Psychology, Neuroscience, and Biology
Saturday 24 March 2007, 9:30 am —7:15 pm
The Orangery, Goldney Hall, Lower Clifton Hill, Clifton, University of Bristol
(www.goldneyhall.com)
Guest speakers
Prof Dan Sperber, Director of Research at the French National Centre for Scientific Research
(CNRS), Paris
Sarah-Jayne Blakemore, Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London
Registration: there are still a few places left. If you wish to attend the conference, please email the conference organiser, Zoe Drayson: phil-ppnb2007@bristol.ac.uk
Conference Schedule
From 9:30: coffee, available all morning
9:45-11:00: Guest speaker, Dan Sperber
Mindreading, comprehension, and epistemic vigilance in an evolutionary and developmental perspective.
11:00-11:15 coffee break
11:15-12:45: 1st block of parallel sessions
- Direct realism and Disjunctivism
- James Genone, Berkeley
Direct Realism and Perceptual Error - Matthew Conduct, Durham
Naïve Realism without Disjunctivism
- James Genone, Berkeley
- Consciousness and its Modalities
- Malika Auvray, Antwerp and Oxford
Enaction and sensory substitution - Nicholas Shea, Oxford
Using Phenomenal Concepts to Explain Away the Intuition of Distinctness
- Malika Auvray, Antwerp and Oxford
- Modelling the Mind
- Vincenzo Fiore, Edinburgh
Small, Hyper Mind - Dave Cochran, St Andrews
Access-consciousness as network structure in a system of fragmentable, recombinable multi-modal exemplars
- Vincenzo Fiore, Edinburgh
12:45-1:30: lunch break
1:30-3:00 2nd block of parallel sessions
- Consciousness, Action, and Two Visual Systems
- Julian Kiverstein, Edinburgh
Do visual form agnosics have a conscious experience of shape? - Dave Ward, Edinburgh
Action, Perception and the Two Streams
- Julian Kiverstein, Edinburgh
- Control and Agency
- Thor Grünbaum, Copenhagen
Agency and Alienation - Joshua Skewes, Aarhus
Willing the inevitable: guidance control in cognitive neuroscience
- Thor Grünbaum, Copenhagen
- Evolving Minds and Emotions
- Jonathan Grose, Bristol
Honest vs Deceptive Emotional Displays - Chris Haufe, Duke
How Should Evolutionary Theory Constrain A Theory of Psychology?
- Jonathan Grose, Bristol
3:15-4:45: 3rd block of parallel sessions
- Simulation and the First Person
- Komarine Romdenh-Romluc, Sheffield
Simulation and Immunity to Error through Misidentification - Karen Shanton, Rutgers
An investigation of first-person past mindreading - Consciousness, Natural and Synthetic
- David Carmel, UCL
Consciousness in time: The temporal resolution of visual awareness - David Gamez, Essex
Analysing Artificial Systems for Consciousness
- David Carmel, UCL
- Perspective and Process
- Michael Madary, Bristol
What specular highlights tell us about perceptual content - Riccardo Manzotti, Milan
A process and externalist approach to the conscious mind
- Michael Madary, Bristol
4:45-5:15: tea break
5:15-6:30: Guest speaker, Sarah-Jayne Blakemore
The social brain.
6:30: wine reception
Background and Rationale
Following the success of PPNB 2005 in Oxford, the CONTACT project is hosting PPNB 2007 in Bristol and PPNB 2008 in Edinburgh.
We aim to bring together young researchers interested in mind-world relations, to address philosophical issues raised by empirical work in psychology, neuroscience, biology, and other life sciences. Relevant topics include: consciousness, perception, emotion, covert processing and related dissociations, ecological or embodied approaches to the mind, representation in neural networks, social cognition, motor control and voluntary action, simulation theory, evolutionary psychology, issues of group selection, the relation of thought to language, mental disorders, the evolution of language, animal minds, modularity, rationality, cognitive and biological issues concerning complexity or emergence, dynamic versus computational views of cognition, and so on.
We welcome participation and paper submissions by both philosophers and scientists; papers should be of a character suitable for interdisciplinary discussion. Numbers will be limited to 60 to facilitate discussion. Priority for places will be given to research students and those who completed doctoral work no earlier than 2002
Lunch, coffee/tea, and a glass of wine afterward will be provided for all participants.
There is a registration fee of £20; payment by cheque will be requested prior to the conference.
Please note: Those attending the conference will be expected to make their own arrangements for dinner and accommodation as needed.
Sponsors
CONTACT Bristol, a project on consciousness in interaction with natural and social environments, funded by an AHRC grant to Prof. Susan Hurley under the ESF CNCC initiative (http://www.media.unisi.it/cirg/contact)
McDonnell Centre for Cognitive Neuroscience, Oxford