The Department of Psychology, the Imaging Center for Integrated Body, Mind, and Culture Research at National Taiwan University, and the Graduate Institute of Mind, Brain and Consciousness at Taipei Medical University will host a Taiwan-UK collaborative symposium in conjunction with the School of Psychology at the University of Nottingham, UK. This event is scheduled to take place at the South Building (Room SB16) of the Department of Psychology at National Taiwan University on 16th March. Registration form: https://reurl.cc/OGagzA
臺灣大學心理系與身體心靈文化整合影像研究中心、台北醫學大學心智意識與腦科學研究所,以及英國諾丁漢大學心理學院將舉辦台灣與英國鏈結合作小型研討會與專題演講:
會議時間:3月16日(週六) 9:45 – 16:00
會議地點:臺灣大學心理系南館南地A教室 (https://maps.app.goo.gl/M3NB2KmiaU35LpT98)
報名方式:https://reurl.cc/OGagzA
主題演講 Keynote speech
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- Prof. Nicholas Myers, School of Psychology, University of Nottingham, UK
- Topic 1: Learning generalised neural codes for categorical judgments
(15th March in Teaching building 801, Shuangho Campus, Taipei Medical University)
- Topic 2: Neural basis of attention shifts in working memory
(16th March in South Building SB16, Department of Psychology, National Taiwan University)
- Prof. Matias Ison, School of Psychology, University of Nottingham, UK
- Topic 1: Combining Methodologies for Brain Exploration: Insights from M-EEG, Eye Movements, and Single Neuron Recordings
(15th March in Teaching building 801, Shuangho Campus, Taipei Medical University)
- Topic 2: Understanding Cognitive Operations in Free Viewing: A Multimodal Approach
(16th March in South Building SB16, Department of Psychology, National Taiwan University)
研究分享 Symposia
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- Ph.D. candidate, Chien-Ming Lo (駱建銘), Graduate Institute of Mind, Brain and Consciousness, Taipei Medical University, Taiwan
- Topic: Interneuron gradients and their impact on cortical excitability and large scale brain dynamics
- Ph.D. candidate, Wen-Sheng Chang (張文乘), Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, National Central University, Taiwan
- Topic: The association between working memory precision and the nonlinear frontal and parieto‑occipital EEG activity