CVNet - Conference announcement (Interdisciplinary Conf)

CVNet (cvnet@skivs.ski.org)
Mon, 13 Jan 97 02:20:05 PST

From: George Sperling <gs@mach2.hipl.uci.edu>
To: cvnet@skivs.ski.org, sperling@uci.edu
Subject: Interdisciplinary Conference Schedule

Dear Hoover:
ASAP please post the schedule for the twenty-second meeting of the
Annual Interdisciplinary Conference (AIC-22), Feb 2-7, 1997, in Jackson,
Wyoming. Thanks! George Sperling < sperling@uci.edu >

===========================================================================

Twenty-Second Annual Interdisciplinary Conference
Teton Village, Jackson Hole, Wyoming
February 2 -- February 7, 1996
Organizer: George Sperling, University of California, Irvine

Sunday, February 2: 5:00 - 6:00 pm *** Reception ***
Registration, Snacks, and Refreshments
6:00 - 8:00 pm Memory in the Cerbral Cortex

Ursula Staubli, Neural Science, NYU. Glutamate: Synaptic Transmission &
Plasticity, Long-Term Potentiation, Memory Facilitation.
Zhong-Lin Lu, Psychology, USC. Auditory Sensory Memory Revealed by Magnetic
Source Imaging and Psychophysics.
Sam Williamson (+Mikko Uusitalo), Physics, NYU. Hierarchy of Visual Memories
in Human Cerebral Cortex.

Monday, February 3: 4:00 - 8:00 pm Visual Perception

Bruce Henning, Psychology, U. Oxford, UK. From Orientation Tuning to Gain
Control.
Randy Blake, Psychology, Vanderbilt. Feature Binding Over Space and Spatial
Scale.
Sophie Wuerger, Communication & Neurosci, Keele University, UK. A Tribute to
Wallach: On Visually Perceived Motion.
Adar Pelah, Physiological Lab, U. Cambridge, UK. Visual Motion Adaptation
Without Visual Motion.
Bill Geisler, Psychology, U. Texas, Austin. Discrimination and Identification
Performance in Primary Visual Cortex.
Larry O'Keefe, Neural Science, NYU. Motion in Extrastriate Visual Cortex.

Tuesday, February 4: 4:00 - 8:00 pm Eye and Other Movements

George Sperling, Cognitive Sciences & Psychobiology, UCI. Real and Simulated
Saccades; Real and Stroboscopic Motion.
Michael Platt, Neural Science, NYU. Representation of Visual Attention or
Saccade Preparation in Primate Cortical Area LIP.
Jeff Mulligan, NASA Ames. Eye Movement Latencies to Direction Change for
Different Classes of Motion.
Eileen Kowler, Psychology, Rutgers, New Brunswick, NJ. Saccadic Localization
and Attention.
Tom Fikes, Psychology, U. Puget Sound. Dynamical Systems Modeling for Arm
Control and Other Information.
Andy Liu, Nissan Cambridge, MA. Behavior Models for Autonomous Vehicles.

Wednesday, February 5: 4:00 - 8:00 BRAIN IMAGING 1: MRI and Visual Processing

Rick Buxton, Radiology, UCSD. Principles of Functional MRI.
Roger Tootell, Radiology, Mass General & Harvard Med. Mapping Contours
Generated by Different Visual Dimensions.
David Heeger, Psychology, Stanford. Cross-orientation Inhibition in Human
Primary Visual Cortex.
Geoff Boynton, Psychology, Stanford. Neural Basis of Visual Pattern
Appearance Measured with fMRI.
Ted DeYoe, Cellular Biology, Medical College of Wisconsin. Extraretinal
Influences on Human Visual Processing.
Nancy Kanwisher, Psychology, Harvard. Functional Imaging of Human Visual
Recognition.

Thursday, February 6: 4:00 - 8:00 pm BRAIN IMAGING 2: Higher Mental Functions

Walter Schneider, Psychology, U. Pittsburgh. Brain Imaging of Circuits
Involved in Acquisition but not Execution of Skills.
Susan Courtney, Neuropsychology, NIH. Functional MRI Studies of Visual
Perception and Working Memory.
Ovid Tzeng, Taiwan. Language Processing in Chinese Aphasics.
Adina Roskies, Washinton U., St. Louis. PET Studies of Semantic Processing.
Ken Paap, Psychology, New Mexico State U, Los Cruces. Functional Neuroimages
do not Constrain Cognitive Models of Language Processing.
John George, Los Alamos National Lab. Integrating fMRI and MEG.

* * * Brief Business Meeting * * *

Friday, February 7: 4:00 - 8:00 pm Attention and Memory

Ruth Rosenholtz, NASA Ames. Visual Search among Heterogeneous Distractors.
Tom Busey, Indiana U. Location & Identification Rely on Different Temporal
Frequencies: Implications for Cognitive Architecture.
John Palmer (+Jennifer McLean & Geoff Loftus), Psychology, U. Washington, WA.
Divided Attention: Measuring the Capacities of Perception and Memory.
Tim McNamara, Psychology, Vanderbilt. How is Three-Dimensional Space
Represented in Human Memory?
Lael Schooler, Psychology, Indiana U. The Role of Process in the Rational
Analysis of Memory.
Rich Shiffrin, Cognitive Sciences, Indiana U. Memory.

POSTERS

Clark Ohnesorge, Jr., Middlebury College, VT. Backward Masking as a Tool for
Investigating Lexical Competition.
Misha Pavel, Oregon Graduate Inst.; Daphna Weinshall, NYU & Hebrew U.,
Jerusalem. Non-Rigid Perception of Motion in Depth.

* * * 8:00 Fireside Banquet at The Inn * * *

Other Participants

Donald Glaser, UC Berkeley.
Ernest Greene, USC.
David Huber, Indiana U.
Holly Jimison, Oregon Health Sci. U.
Haruyuki Kojima, Vanderbilt U.
Jennifer McLean, U. Washington
Bennet Murdock, U. Toronto
Roger Ratcliff, Northwestern U.
Lynne Reder, Carnegie Mellon U.
Mark Steyvers, Indiana U.
George Wolford, Dartmouth U.

Revised, December 16, 1996
For more information, see http://www.socsci.uci.edu/HIPLab/AIC