Center for Mind, Brain, and Culture
Un pódcast de Emory College, Emory Center for Mind, Brain and Culture (CMBC)
293 Episodo
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McCauley Honorary | Charles Nussbaum "Why Normative Ethics Is Natural and Metaethics Is and Is Not"
Publicado: 21/11/2023 -
Lecture | Oliver Rollins | "Towards an Anti-Racist Neuroscience: Possibilities and Problematics with Scientific Progress"
Publicado: 27/9/2023 -
Lecture | Sashank Varma | "Mathematical Concepts in Humans and Machine Learning Models"
Publicado: 13/9/2023 -
Lecture (co-sponsored) | Larry Young & Rev Patti Ricotta "Using the Science of Love and Bonding...(see below)"
Publicado: 20/4/2023 -
Lecture (co-sponsored) | David Haskell | Can “Wild” Sounds Teach Us What it Means to be Human?
Publicado: 27/3/2023 -
Lecture | Michael Goldstein | "Simple Interactions Construct Complex Communication in Songbirds and Human Infants"
Publicado: 2/3/2023 -
Workshop | Joyce Ho + John Lindo | NSF Early Career Development (CAREER) grant workshop
Publicado: 27/1/2023 -
External Lecture | Dietrich Stout | The Evolution of Technology
Publicado: 8/12/2022 -
Lecture | Vernelle A. A. Noel | Craft + Computation: Culture, Design, Cognition
Publicado: 15/11/2022 -
Lecture | Karen Adolph | How Behavior Develops from Perceiving, Planning, and Acting
Publicado: 10/11/2022 -
Lecture | Tobias Overath | Acoustic and Linguistic Processing of Temporal Speech Structure
Publicado: 27/10/2022 -
Lecture | Andrew Buskell | Kinds of Cumulative Cultural Evolution
Publicado: 25/10/2022 -
Frans de Waal | CMBC Discussion with Lynne Nygaard and Dietrich Stout
Publicado: 16/9/2022 -
"Inside the Lab" | Kathryn Kadous interviewed by Lynne Nygaard
Publicado: 16/9/2022 -
"Inside the Lab" | Robert Liu interviewed by Dietrich Stout
Publicado: 16/9/2022 -
Lecture | Ran Barkai | The Elephant in the Handaxe: Lower Paleolithic Ontologies and Representations
Publicado: 27/4/2022 -
Lecture | Sonya Pritzker | Embodiment, Emotion, and Intimacy at the Intersection of Linguistic and Biocultural Anthropology
Publicado: 31/3/2022 -
Lecture | Molly Crockett | Digital Outrage: Mechanisms and Consequences
Publicado: 29/3/2022 -
Lecture | Elise Piazza | Interpersonal Synchrony: A Framework for Understanding the Dynamics of Everyday Communication and Learning
Publicado: 24/3/2022 -
Lecture | Tara White | Dignity Neuroscience: Connected Action
Publicado: 22/3/2022
What is the nature of the human mind? The Emory Center for Mind, Brain, and Culture (CMBC) brings together scholars and researchers from diverse fields and perspectives to seek new answers to this fundamental question. Neuroscientists, cognitive psychologists, biological and cultural anthropologists, sociologists, geneticists, behavioral scientists, computer scientists, linguists, philosophers, artists, writers, and historians all pursue an understanding of the human mind, but institutional isolation, the lack of a shared vocabulary, and other communication barriers present obstacles to realizing the potential for interdisciplinary synthesis, synergy, and innovation. It is our mission to support and foster discussion, scholarship, training, and collaboration across diverse disciplines to promote research at the intersection of mind, brain, and culture. What brain mechanisms underlie cognition, emotion, and intelligence and how did these abilities evolve? How do our core mental abilities shape the expression of culture and how is the mind and brain in turn shaped by social and cultural innovations? Such questions demand an interdisciplinary approach. Great progress has been made in understanding the neurophysiological basis of mental states; positioning this understanding in the broader context of human experience, culture, diversity, and evolution is an exciting challenge for the future. By bringing together scholars and researchers from diverse fields and across the college, university, area institutions, and beyond, the Center for Mind, Brain, and Culture (CMBC) seeks to build on and expand our current understanding to explore how a deeper appreciation of diversity, difference, context, and change can inform understanding of mind, brain, and behavior. In order to promote intellectual exchange and discussion across disciplines, the CMBC hosts diverse programming, including lectures by scholars conducting cutting-edge cross-disciplinary research, symposia and conferences on targeted innovative themes, lunch discussions to foster collaboration across fields, and public conversations to extend our reach to the greater Atlanta community. Through our CMBC Graduate Certificate Program, we are training the next generation of interdisciplinary scholars to continue this mission.
