Programme
fosc_programme-final.pdf |
The workshop will run from 12pm on Thursday 14th June and will conclude at 5pm Friday 15th June.
Further details and a full programme will be available soon.
Lunch & refreshments provided.
Further details and a full programme will be available soon.
Lunch & refreshments provided.
Talks
Dr. Antonia Hamilton
University College London
Interactive brains: neural and cognitive mechanisms of two-person social interaction
Professor Miles Hewstone
University of Oxford
Intergroup contact theory from Allport 1954 to today, and beyond: The debt to social cognition
Professor Neil Macrae
University of Aberdeen
Whoever next? Stereotypes and person construal
Dr. Simone Schnall
University of Cambridge
Embodied Morality: Current Knowledge and Future Directions
University College London
Interactive brains: neural and cognitive mechanisms of two-person social interaction
Professor Miles Hewstone
University of Oxford
Intergroup contact theory from Allport 1954 to today, and beyond: The debt to social cognition
Professor Neil Macrae
University of Aberdeen
Whoever next? Stereotypes and person construal
Dr. Simone Schnall
University of Cambridge
Embodied Morality: Current Knowledge and Future Directions
Dr. Patric Bach
University of Plymouth
One step ahead: towards a predictive processing view of social perception
Dr. Eva Krumhuber
University College London
Emotion Detection in 2038: Will machines outsmart humans?
Dr. Rose Meleady
University of East Anglia
Intergroup contact as an agent of cognitive liberalization
Dr. Lynden Miles
University of Aberdeen
Is it time to get out of the head? Self-organization and the future of social cognition
Dr. Leonhard Schilbach
Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry
Second-person neuroscience as the future of social cognition
Dr. Julia Vogt
University of Reading
Towards a current relevance model of motivated attention
Dr. Mario Weick
University of Kent
Methods Paving the Way into a Bright Future for Social Cognition
Dr. Agnieszka Wykowska
Italian Institute of Technology
Examining human social cognition with the use of humanoid robots
University of Plymouth
One step ahead: towards a predictive processing view of social perception
Dr. Eva Krumhuber
University College London
Emotion Detection in 2038: Will machines outsmart humans?
Dr. Rose Meleady
University of East Anglia
Intergroup contact as an agent of cognitive liberalization
Dr. Lynden Miles
University of Aberdeen
Is it time to get out of the head? Self-organization and the future of social cognition
Dr. Leonhard Schilbach
Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry
Second-person neuroscience as the future of social cognition
Dr. Julia Vogt
University of Reading
Towards a current relevance model of motivated attention
Dr. Mario Weick
University of Kent
Methods Paving the Way into a Bright Future for Social Cognition
Dr. Agnieszka Wykowska
Italian Institute of Technology
Examining human social cognition with the use of humanoid robots