The second day of CNS 2023 was packed with 6 stimulating symposia — on topics ranging from data science and electrophysiological studies of human memory to how the human brain forgets information and learning and generalization in people and machines — two poster sessions, a DEI workshop, and the George A. Miller Prize lecture by Sabine Kastner. Check out some highlights in photos and tweets below.
Poster Sessions B and C:
Hey #cns2023! Check out Valerie Klein’s poster (B102). She’ll tell you about how to use low-cost EEG and naturalistic shape matching tasks to study collaboration among novel teams. pic.twitter.com/zmGNtqlF9t
— Richard Huskey (@richardhuskey) March 26, 2023
Thanks to everyone who came to check out my poster today at @CNSmtg
If you have any questions about this meta-analysis feel free to send me a DM #CNS2023 pic.twitter.com/zAsEHk3GZh
— Stephanie Simpson (@stf_simpson) March 26, 2023
Hi #CNS2023 if you're curious about TMS and the role of the AnG in both objective and subjective memory, check out my poster (B66)! pic.twitter.com/pU31lCqc1t
— Andreea Zaman (@andreea_zaman) March 26, 2023
More of #IHN in action at #CNS2023 #neuroscience#neuroimaging pic.twitter.com/xNlPizANG5
— Institute for Human Neuroscience (@BoysTown_IHN) March 26, 2023
A little preview here from the poster sessions today #CNS2023: pic.twitter.com/vfG0gpSY06
— CNS News (@CogNeuroNews) March 27, 2023
Symposia:
Brilliant move to start the session with the sound system blasting "shake it off" to remind us of the everyday challenges of earworms 😆 #CNS2023
— CNS News (@CogNeuroNews) March 26, 2023
Learn more about Festini's and Banich's research in this new #CNS2023 press release: https://t.co/6lvCe9X6wG
— CNS News (@CogNeuroNews) March 26, 2023
AI networks appear to perform well on tasks that require abstraction, compositionality, and generalization. This is surprising, since their architectures alone lack the inductive biases which support these abilities – Ellie Pavlick @Brown_NLP #CNS2023
— Ellie Carpenter (@EllieCarpenter0) March 26, 2023
Colors of the Brain DEI workshop:
Christian Cazares discusses the challenges faced by first-gen students, people of color, and other minoritized individuals in STEM and how a lack of diversity in the neuroscience research workforce threatens scientific impact – @fleabrained @UCSD_COB #CNS2023 pic.twitter.com/I24QZdEv4q
— CNS News (@CogNeuroNews) March 26, 2023
From a thoughtful mentorship structure for the @UCSD_COB scholars to the stipend structure to the professional dev opps on offer (inc in #scicomm), @fleabrained concludes this excellent session, saying that while a lot may seem like common sense, it takes a lot of work #CNS2023
— Lisa M.P. Munoz (@lisampmunoz) March 26, 2023
Follow @UCSD_CoB to connect undergraduate and post-bacc students to summer research programs and for more information.
— Ellie Carpenter (@EllieCarpenter0) March 26, 2023
George A. Miller Prize lecture by Sabine Kastner:
In the Grand Ballroom now to close out a great day of talks: Sabine Kastner, winner of the George A. Miller Prize in Cognitive Neuroscience, about her work on visual perception and selective attention #CNS2023
Congratulations to Dr. Kastner! pic.twitter.com/C6kOtA6way
— CNS News (@CogNeuroNews) March 26, 2023
Learn more about Kastner's research on the rhythmic theory of attention, how she got started in cognitive neuroscience, and her outreach work in this Q&A: https://t.co/yehoB3XMOC #CNS2023
— CNS News (@CogNeuroNews) March 26, 2023
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