Helmholtz Institute

Recent events

Helmholtz lecture Frank van Overwalle, May 20: “The forgotten brain: The role of the cerebellum in sequencing social actions”

Date: 20 May 2022, 4-5pm Speaker: Prof. Frank van Overwalle from Vrije Universiteit Brussel Title: The forgotten brain: The role of the cerebellum in sequencing social actions. Abstract: The capacity to understand another person’s emotions, intentions, beliefs and personality traits, is termed social mentalizing. During the last two decades, social neuroscience has made great progress…

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Movie night, June 10: Movie: “In Silico” – Noah Hutton

After the movie screening there will be an Q&A with the director Noah Hutton where you will have the opportunity to ask your own questions. We will continue the event with an optional workshop in which you will be motivated to work through a discussion guide in a small group. You can indicate if you…

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Helmholtz lecture Frans Cornelissen (Rijksuniversiteit Groningen), March 25: Imaging human neural interaction in health and disease

Assessing Cortical Visual Processing and Plasticity in an Ophthalmic Disorder: from Stimulus-Driven to Cortical Circuitry ApproachesAn unresolved question concerns the degree to which cortical neurons can adapt their receptive fields and connections when normal vision is compromised by damage to the visual system.  Answering it is particularly relevant in the context of vision rehabilitation based on either…

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Helmholtz lecture Caroline van Heugten, March 11: Neuropsychological interventions: the gap between research and clinical practice

Abstract: The last decades our knowledge on neuroplasticity has increased rapidly. Neuroplasticity is defined as the brain’s ability to modify, change, and adapt both in structure and function throughout life and in response to experience. Patients with brain damage due to a stroke or an accident (traumatic brain injury) are dependent on the brain’s capacity…

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Helmholtz lecture Tim Brady, November 12: Why intuitive theories of memory lead us wrong: memory representations are continuous strength, population-based and hierarchical

Helmholtz lecture Tim Brady (Dep. of Psychology, UC San Diego): Why intuitive theories of memory lead us wrong: memory representations are continuous strength, population-based and hierarchical. Abstract: In the real world, objects are discrete physical entities – your coffee mug either is or is not in your hand. As a result, both in everyday life…

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TiCS paper by Ada Tsouli et al.

Published in Trends in Cognitive Sciences (2021) by Ada Tsouli, Ben Harvey, Maarten van der Smagt and others: The role of neural tuning in quantity perception https://authors.elsevier.com/a/1dyov_V1r-K%7EIZ

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Helmholtz lecture Viola Störmer, September 24th: The structure of attention and working memory

Helmholtz lecture by Viola Störmer (Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences at Dartmouth College): The structure of attention and working memory Abstract: Attention is one of the most important components of cognition: it lets us focus on specific information in the environment and determines what information enters working memory and other higher levels of processing. In this talk, I will investigate the…

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