An Online Conference and Edited Volume
October 21-22 and 28-29, 2022
Venue: Neural Mechanisms Online (https://www.neuralmechanisms.org/)
Submission deadline: Jun 30, 2022
Organizing Committee:
Fabrizio Calzavarini, University of Bergamo and LLC, University of Turin
Gualtiero Piccinini, University of Missouri – St. Louis
Marco Viola, University of Turin
We are pleased to announce an online conference entitled Neurocognitive Foundations of Mind on how cognitive neuroscience is advancing our understanding of the mind. We welcome cutting-edge contributions, with emphasis on foundational topics that affect much of our understanding of the mind. Some talks will be invited but most will be submitted. Each talk will provide an authoritative perspective on one or more important recent or novel contributions or advances. The conference will take place on October 21-2 and 28-9 at Neural Mechanisms Online, a platform that already runs a successful series on the philosophy of neuroscience.
Please use the online submission form: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=ncfm22. Submissions should be abstracts of up to 500 words listing a topic and explaining in what way neuroscience is advancing our understanding of that topic so significantly that any adequate account of the mind must take it into account. Contributions that summarize or build on an extensive body of previous work are especially welcome. Members of underrepresented groups are especially encouraged to participate (women, people of color, disabled and neurodivergent people, scholars from non-English speaking countries, scholars from developing nations, etc.)
Invited Participants:
Cameron Buckner
Mazviita Chirimuuta
Ophelia Deroy
Diego Marconi
Marcin Milkowski
Adina Roskies
Oron Shagrir
Frédérique de Vignemont
Wayne Wu
Possible topics include:
Levels (including Mechanisms)
Realization (Single and Multiple)
Functions
Evolution
Development
Information
Computation
Representation
Intentionality
Functions and Structures (Localization, Modularity, Neural Reuse)
Situatedness (Embodiment, Embeddedness, Enaction, Extended Cognition)
Affect (Rewards, Moods, Emotions, etc.)
Neurodiversity
Cognitive Ontology
Learning
Memory and Imagination
Inference and Reasoning
Perception
Concepts
Action and Motor Control
Language
Knowledge
Rationality
Attention
Introspection
Mindreading and Social Cognition
Moral Cognition
Consciousness
A volume edited by Gualtiero Piccinini, also entitled Neurocognitive Foundations of Mind, will collect the most significant conference contributions, aiming for must-read, authoritative coverage of the current cutting-edge in each area, introducing a wider audience to the way neuroscience advances our understanding of the mind. Inclusion in the volume will depend on both the importance of the topic and quality of submission. If more than one submission on a topic warrants inclusion in the volume, their authors might be invited to merge their submissions into a co-authored contribution, if they want (if they don’t want to merge their contribution, the most significant contribution will be selected). Peter Momtchiloff of Oxford University Press knows about this project and has expressed interest in publishing the edited volume, although a full book proposal will be prepared only after the conference.
If you have questions, please contact Gualtiero Piccinini at piccininig@umsl.edu.