Recent events
Helmholtz lecture Ole Jensen, May 12: A pipeline mechanism supporting visual exploration and reading
Helmholtz lecture Prof. Ole Jensen (School of Psychology, University of Birmingham, UK): !! This Helmholtz lecture starts at 4:15pm !! Title: A pipeline mechanism supporting visual exploration and reading Abstract:We saccade every ~250 ms during visual exploration and reading. Given that it takes ~100 ms to prepare and execute a saccade, the visual system has less…
Read moreHelmholtz lecture Sanne Schagen, April 14
Helmholtz lecture Sanne Schagen (Faculty of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Programme group Brain and Cognition, UvA) Title: How Neuropsychology is Impacting Cancer Care Abstract:Today, more than 50 million people are living within five years of a past cancer diagnosis. Cancer survivorship comes with complications. Decrements in functioning affect patients’ capacity to work, diminish societal participation and…
Read moreHelmholtz lecture Paul Bays, March 31: Computational principles of visual perception and memory
Helmholtz lecture Prof. Paul Bays (Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge, UK): Title: Computational principles of visual perception and memory Abstract: The brain must often combine sensory information from the present with that from the recent past. Nowhere is this more apparent than in vision, where a rapidly changing environment combines with perturbations of the retinal…
Read moreHelmholtz lecture Heleen Slagter, March 17: Attention and distraction in the predictive brain
Helmholtz lecture Prof. Heleen Slagter (Faculty of Behavioural and Movement Sciences, Cognitive Psychology, VU Amsterdam): Title: Attention and distraction in the predictive brain Abstract: to be announced, visit the website for updates. Location: Ruppert Rood, Leuvenlaan 21, 3584 CE Utrecht Helmholtz Lectures take place from 4 to 5pm, with drinks afterwards in the pantry of…
Read moreHelmholtz lecture Denny Borsboom, February 10: Theory construction methodology for building theories in psychology
Helmholtz lecture Denny Borsboom (Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam): Title: Theory construction methodology for building theories in psychology Abstract: Several authors have lamented the lack of systematic theory formation in scientific psychology, and some have gone as far as to pinpoint the paucity of theory as a cause of the reproducibility crisis (Borsboom, 2013). However, little practical…
Read moreHelmholtz lecture Kenny Coventry, January 27: On the interactions between language, perception and attention
Helmholtz lecture Prof. Kenny Coventry (School of Psychology at the University of East Anglia, UK): Title: On the interactions between language, perception and attention Abstract: Talking about where objects/places are located is one of the most basic functions of language. Using spatial terms requires coordination between language and non-linguistic systems to be able to direct the attention…
Read moreHelmholtz lecture Monika Harvey, January 13: Action and Non-invasive Brain Stimulation Training in patients with sub-acute and chronic spatial neglect
Helmholtz lecture Prof. Monika Harvey (School of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of Glasgow, UK): Title: Action and Non-invasive Brain Stimulation Training in patients with sub-acute and chronic spatial neglect. Abstract: Up to 80% of people who experience a right-hemisphere stroke suffer from hemispatial neglect, a severe visuospatial impairment, where they fail to perceive/misperceive items presented…
Read moreHelmholtz lecture Wolfgang Einhäuser, November 25: Attention and gaze in real and virtual worlds
Helmholtz lecture Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Einhäuser-Treyer (Chemnitz University of Technology): Title: Attention and gaze in real and virtual worlds Abstract: When studying real-world behavior, experimenters face a trade-off between ecological validity and experimental control. On the one hand stimuli and task shall be as realistic as possible, while on the other hand all relevant variables shall be carefully…
Read moreHelmholtz lecture Marius Peelen, November 4: Interactions between objects and scenes in visual perception
Helmholtz lecture Dr. Marius Peelen (Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Nijmegen): Title: Interactions between objects and scenes in visual perception Abstract: Real-world visual input often consists of rich scenes that are meaningfully composed of multiple objects that interact in complex ways (e.g., by partially occluding each other). Despite this complexity, we recognize scenes, and…
Read moreHelmholtz lecture Alexander Sack, June 24: The State is the Art: Using simultaneous TMS-EEG-fMRI to assess oscillatory brain state-dependent gating of cortico-subcortical network activity
Date: 24 June 2022, 4-5pm Speaker: Alexander Sack from Maastricht University The State is the Art: Using simultaneous TMS-EEG-fMRI to assess oscillatory brain state-dependent gating of cortico-subcortical network activity The human brain can flexibly activate a concrete set of brain regions within dynamically changing networks depending on behavioural and cognitive context. Neuroimaging can map these…
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