[vslist] 8th ICCNS: Call for Abstracts and Confirmed Invited Speakers

Cynthia Bradford cindy at bu.edu
Mon Nov 3 08:50:37 GMT 2003


Apologies if you receive more than one copy of this announcement. 

 

 

***** Call for Abstracts and Confirmed Invited Speakers ***** 

 

EIGHTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 

ON COGNITIVE AND NEURAL SYSTEMS

May 19 - 22, 2004

 

Boston University

677 Beacon Street

Boston, Massachusetts 02215 USA

http://www.cns.bu.edu/meetings/

 

Sponsored by Boston University's

Center for Adaptive Systems

and

Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems

with financial support from the 

Office of Naval Research 

 

This interdisciplinary conference is attended each year by approximately 300
people from 30 countries around the world. As in previous years, the
conference will focus on solutions to the questions: 

 

HOW DOES THE BRAIN CONTROL BEHAVIOR?

 

HOW CAN TECHNOLOGY EMULATE BIOLOGICAL INTELLIGENCE?

 

The conference is aimed at researchers and students of computational
neuroscience, cognitive science, neural networks, neuromorphic engineering,
and artificial intelligence. The conference includes tutorial and invited
lectures, and contributed lectures and posters, by experts on the biology
and technology of how the brain and other intelligent systems adapt to a
changing world. Single-track oral and poster sessions enable all presented
work to be highly visible. Three-hour poster sessions with no conflicting
events will be held on two of the conference days. Posters will be up all
day, and can also be viewed during breaks in the talk schedule. 

 

 

TUTORIAL LECTURE SERIES 

 

Stephen Grossberg (Boston University): "Linking brain to mind." See below
for details. 

 

 

CONFIRMED INVITED AND PLENARY SPEAKERS 

 

Ehud Ahissar (Weizmann Institute of Science): "Encoding and decoding of
vibrissal active touch"

 

John Anderson (Carnegie Mellon University): "Using fMRI to track the
components of a cognitive architecture" 

 

Alan D. Baddeley (University of Bristol): "In search of the episodic buffer"


 

Moshe Bar (Massachusetts General Hospital): "Top-down facilitation of visual
object recognition"

 

Gail A. Carpenter (Boston University): "Information fusion and hierarchical
knowledge discovery by ARTMAP neural networks"

 

Stephen Goldinger (Arizona State University): "Generalization gradients in
perceptual memory"

 

Daniel Kersten (University of Minnesota): "How does human vision resolve
ambiguity about objects?" 

 

Stephen M. Kosslyn (Harvard University): "The imagery debate 30 years later:
Can neuroscience help resolve the issue?" 

 

Tai-Sing Lee (Carnegie Mellon University): "Inference and prediction in the
visual cortex"

 

Eve Marder (Brandeis University): "Plasticity and stability in rhythmic
neuronal networks" 

 

Bartlett W. Mel (University of Southern California): "The pyramidal neuron:
What sort of computing device?"

 

Miguel Nicolelis (Duke University): "Real-time computing with neural
ensembles"

 

Jeffrey D. Schall (Vanderbilt University): "Neural selection and control of
visual guided eye movements" 

 

Chantal Stern (Boston University): "Sequence? What sequence? fMRI studies of
the medial temporal lobe in sequence learning"

 

Mriganka Sur (Massachusetts Institute of Technology): "Plasticity and
dynamics of visual cortex networks"

 

Joseph Z. Tsien (Princeton University): "Temporal analysis of memory
process"

 

William H. Warren Jr. (Brown University): "Behavioral dynamics of locomotor
path formation" 

 

Jeremy Wolfe (Harvard Medical School): "Has "preattentive vision" reached
the end of the road?" 

 

 

LINKING BRAIN TO MIND: A Tutorial Lecture Series

by Stephen Grossberg

steve at bu.edu 

http://www.cns.bu.edu/Profiles/Grossberg

 

In 1983, Stephen Grossberg gave a week-long series of tutorial lectures at
an NSF-sponsored conference at Arizona State University. The lectures
included a self-contained introduction to principles, mechanisms, and
architectures whereby neural models link mind to brain and inspire
neuromorphic applications to technology. Many leaders of the Connectionist
Revolution which gained momentum during the mid-1980s attended the
conference. In 1990-1992, three additional tutorial lecture series were
given at the Wang Institute of Boston University. 

 

Since 1992, major breakthroughs have occurred in the theoretical
understanding of how a brain gives rise to a mind. Models have begun to
quantitatively explain and predict the neurophysiologically recorded
dynamics of identified nerve cells, in anatomically verified circuits and
systems, and the behaviors that they control. Because these results clarify
how an intelligent system can autonomously adapt to a changing world, they
have also been used to develop biologically-inspired solutions to
technological problems.

 

Several research groups have asked Professor Grossberg to give another
lecture series to chart recent progress. Each morning session of the May
2004 conference will include one such tutorial lecture. The lectures will
introduce concepts, principles, and mechanisms of mind/brain modeling and
summaries of recent models about how brain development, learning, and
information processing control perception, cognition, emotion, and action
during both normal and abnormal behaviors. Brain-inspired algorithms for
solving difficult technological problems will also be described. 

 

 

CALL FOR ABSTRACTS

 

Session Topics:

* vision

* image understanding         

* audition                                

* speech and language        

* unsupervised learning        

* supervised learning            

* reinforcement and emotion 

* sensory-motor control        

* cognition, planning, and attention

* spatial mapping and navigation                                        

* object recognition

* neural circuit models

* neural system models

* mathematics of neural systems

* robotics

* hybrid systems (fuzzy, evolutionary, digital)

* neuromorphic VLSI

* industrial applications

* other

 

Contributed abstracts must be received, in English, by January 30, 2004.
Notification of acceptance will be provided by email by February 27, 2004.
A meeting registration fee must accompany each Abstract. See Registration
Information below for details. The fee will be returned if the Abstract is
not accepted for presentation and publication in the meeting proceedings.
Registration fees of accepted Abstracts will be returned on request only
until April 16, 2004.

 

Each Abstract should fit on one 8.5" x 11" white page with 1" margins on all
sides in a single-spaced, single-column format with a font of 10 points or
larger, printed on one side of the page only. Fax or electronic submissions
will not be accepted. Abstract title, author name(s), affiliation(s),
mailing, and email address(es) should begin each Abstract. An accompanying
cover letter should include: Full title of Abstract; corresponding author
and presenting author name, address, telephone, fax, and email address;
requested preference for oral or poster presentation; and a first and second
choice from the topics above, including whether it is biological (B) or
technological (T) work [Example: first choice: vision (T); second choice:
neural system models (B)]. 

 

Talks will be 15 minutes long. Posters will be up for a full day. Overhead,
slide, VCR, and LCD projector facilities will be available for talks.  

 

Abstracts which do not meet these requirements or which are submitted with
insufficient funds will be returned. Accepted Abstracts will be printed in
the conference proceedings volume. No longer paper will be required. The
original and 3 copies of each Abstract should be sent to: Cynthia Bradford,
Boston University, Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems, 677 Beacon
Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02215 USA.

 

REGISTRATION INFORMATION: Early registration is recommended. To register,
please fill out the registration form below. Student registrations must be
accompanied by a letter of verification from a department chairperson or
faculty/research advisor. If accompanied by an Abstract or if paying by
check, mail to the address above. If paying by credit card, mail as above,
or fax to +1 617 353 7755, or email to cindy at bu.edu. The registration fee
will help to pay for a conference reception, 3 daily coffee breaks, and the
meeting proceedings.

 

STUDENT FELLOWSHIPS: Fellowships for PhD candidates and postdoctoral fellows
are available to help cover meeting travel and living costs. The deadline to
apply for fellowship support is January 30, 2004. Applicants will be
notified by email by February 27, 2004. Each application should include the
applicant's CV, including name; mailing address; email address; current
student status; faculty or PhD research advisor's name, address, and email
address; relevant courses and other educational data; and a list of research
articles. A letter from the listed faculty or PhD advisor on official
institutional stationery must accompany the application and summarize how
the candidate may benefit from the meeting. Fellowship applicants who also
submit an Abstract need to include the registration fee payment with their
Abstract submission. Fellowship checks will be distributed after the
meeting.

 

 

REGISTRATION FORM

 

Eighth International Conference on Cognitive and Neural Systems 

Boston University 

Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems 

677 Beacon Street 

Boston, Massachusetts 02215 USA

May 19-22, 2004 

Fax: +1 617 353 7755

http://www.cns.bu.edu/meetings/

 

Mr/Ms/Dr/Prof:_____________________________________________________

 

Affiliation:_________________________________________________________

 

Address:__________________________________________________________

 

City, State, Postal Code:______________________________________________

 

Phone and Fax:_____________________________________________________

 

Email:____________________________________________________________

 

 

The registration fee includes the conference proceedings, a reception, and 3
coffee breaks each day. 

 

CHECK ONE:

(  ) $95 Conference (Regular)          

(  ) $65 Conference (Student)          

 

METHOD OF PAYMENT (please fax or mail):

 

[   ] Enclosed is a check made payable to "Boston University" 

Checks must be made payable in US dollars and issued by a US correspondent
bank. Each registrant is responsible for any and all bank charges.

 

[   ] I wish to pay by credit card 

      (MasterCard, Visa, or Discover Card only)

 

Name as it appears on the card:___________________________________________

 

Type of card: _____________________________ Expiration date:________________

 

Account number:_______________________________________________________ 

 

Signature:____________________________________________________________

 

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