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<p dir="auto">Dear colleagues,</p>
<p dir="auto">I am excited to announce (the fifth iteration of) a satellite event of the annual meeting of the Vision Sciences Society: <strong>phiVis – Philosophy of Vision Science</strong>. </p>
<p dir="auto">Recent years have seen a resurgence of interest in the intersection between vision science and the philosophy of perception. But opportunities for conversation between vision scientists and philosophers are still hard to come by. The phiVis workshop is a forum for promoting and expanding this interdisciplinary dialogue. Philosophers of perception can capitalize on the experimental knowledge of working vision scientists, while vision scientists will have an opportunity to connect their research to longstanding philosophical questions. The workshop will feature short talks by philosophers of perception that engage with the latest research in vision science, followed by prepared comments by vision scientists, on topics such as attention, perceptual learning, feature binding, and more. Our first event, at VSS 2021, drew nearly 300 live and virtual attendees, and our subsequent events drew a capacity crowd in person. We are now gearing up for Round 5!</p>
<p dir="auto">This year's event will take place on <strong>Tuesday, May 20, from 1:15pm-3:15pm ET</strong>, and will be held <strong>onsite at VSS</strong> (at the TradeWinds Island Grand Resort in St Pete Beach, FL). The in-person event is open to VSS attendees; a limited number of non-VSS-attendees may also attend virtually. The event will feature the following talks:</p>
<p dir="auto"><strong>Gabriel Greenberg (UCLA) | Neural Images: Retinotopy, Representation, and Convolution</strong><br>
with comments by Jennifer Groh (Duke)</p>
<p dir="auto"><strong>Jacob Beck (York) | Resurrecting a Primary-Secondary Quality Distinction</strong><br>
with comments by Darko Odic (UBC)</p>
<p dir="auto"><strong>Kathleen Akins (Simon Fraser) | Color Perception is High-Level Perception</strong><br>
with comments by Rosa Lafer-Sousa (UW-Madison)</p>
<p dir="auto">You can learn more about the phiVis workshop at our website — <a href="https://www.phivis.org/" style="color: #3983C4;">www.phivis.org</a> — and also in the attached flyer.</p>
<p dir="auto"><strong>All are welcome</strong>, though we encourage interested attendees to RSVP: <a href="https://www.phivis.org/events/phivis-in-person/form" style="color: #3983C4;">in person</a>; <a href="https://www.phivis.org/events/phivis-online/form" style="color: #3983C4;">virtual</a>. These links can also be found on the workshop's website.</p>
<p dir="auto">Hope to see you there!</p>
<p dir="auto">Sincerely,</p>
<p dir="auto">Chaz Firestone<br>
Kevin Lande<br>
co-organizers, phiVis</p>
<p dir="auto">--<br>
Chaz Firestone<br>
Associate Professor of Psychological & Brain Sciences<br>
Director, Perception & Mind Laboratory | <a href="https://perception.jhu.edu" style="color: #3983C4;">perception.jhu.edu</a><br>
Co-Director, Foundations of Mind Group | <a href="https://mind.jhu.edu/" style="color: #3983C4;">mind.jhu.edu</a><br>
Johns Hopkins University</p>
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