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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20240118T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20240118T173000
DTSTAMP:20260425T174520
CREATED:20230118T132237Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240514T131038Z
UID:18007-1705593600-1705599000@www.scienceofintelligence.de
SUMMARY:POSTPONED: Richard McElreath\, "The Cultural and Ecological Nature of Intelligence"
DESCRIPTION:Abstract:\nHow do we reconcile the extraordinary success of the human species with the apparent stupidity of people and organizations? How can we understand the transformation of humans from foraging apes to urban clerks\, without any appreciable change in physiology? No one has definitive answers to these questions\, but we begin to answer them by appreciating the ways in which populations think over cultural and ecological time scales.\n\n\n\n\nThis talk will take place in person at SCIoI. \n  \n Photo by ALAN DE LA CRUZ on Unsplash. \n  \n***Want to attend one of our events? Sign up here.\nTo get regular updates\, subscribe to our mailing list from this page.
URL:https://www.scienceofintelligence.de/event/postponed-distinguished-speaker-series-richard-mcelreath-the-cultural-and-ecological-nature-of-intelligence/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20240222T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20240222T173000
DTSTAMP:20260425T174520
CREATED:20240110T140221Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250603T125146Z
UID:18020-1708617600-1708623000@www.scienceofintelligence.de
SUMMARY:Antonio Bicchi (University of Pisa)\, “What Is It Like To Be a Bot?”
DESCRIPTION:Abstract \nThe impressive evolution that artificial intelligence\, virtual reality\, and robotics have recently undergone reached a point where it is now possible to fuse these technologies and create another body for the self. This possibility poses new questions at the core of embodied intelligence. In this talk I will examine a few of the technical\, scientific\, and philosophical issues related to using robots as avatars and “being a bot.” \n\n\n\n\n\nThis talk will take place in person at SCIoI. \n  \nPhoto by Owen Beard on Unsplash. \n 
URL:https://www.scienceofintelligence.de/event/distinguished-speaker-series-antonio-bicchi-university-of-pisa-what-is-it-like-to-be-a-bot/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.scienceofintelligence.de/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/owen-beard-K21Dn4OVxNw-unsplash.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20240307T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20240307T170000
DTSTAMP:20260425T174520
CREATED:20240110T140607Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250603T125121Z
UID:18026-1709827200-1709830800@www.scienceofintelligence.de
SUMMARY:POSTPONED: Onur Güntürkün (Ruhr-Universität Bochum)\, “The Evolution of Brain and Cognition: A Wild Hypothesis”
DESCRIPTION:Onur Güntürkün is regarded as a pioneer of biologically based psychology. The aim of his work is to find out how perception\, thought and action arise in the brain.\nHe is interested in diverse topics\, such as motor learning\, fear\, risk-taking behavior and even kissing. In his research\, Güntürkün combines psychological\, biological and neuroanatomical aspects with concepts and findings from the comparative behavioral and neurosciences. Using magpies as an example\, he was able to show that birds recognize themselves in the mirror and are therefore able to develop a kind of self-concept. This finding is astonishing because they lack the cerebral cortex in their brains. This is precisely what controls this ability in primates. Building on this finding\, Güntürkün also succeeded in proving that the forebrain structures of birds and primates have converged in an evolutionary process. Despite their different structures\, they converge in their neurobiological basis and their behavioral performance.\n\n\n\n\nThis talk will take place in person at SCIoI. \nPhoto by Sammie Chaffin on Unsplash. \n 
URL:https://www.scienceofintelligence.de/event/postponed-distinguished-speaker-series-onur-gunturkun-ruhr-universitat-bochum-the-evolution-of-brain-and-cognition-a-wild-hypothesis/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20240321T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20240321T170000
DTSTAMP:20260425T174520
CREATED:20231220T134311Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240813T103536Z
UID:19037-1711008000-1711040400@www.scienceofintelligence.de
SUMMARY:Michael Beetz (Universität Bremen)\, "Empowering Robots with Digital Mental Models: Filling the Cognitive Gap for Everyday Tasks"
DESCRIPTION:In this talk I introduce Digital Mental Models (DMMs) as a novel cognitive capability of AI-powered and cognition-enabled robots. By combining digital twin technology with symbolic knowledge representation and embodying this combination into robots\, we tackle the challenge of converting vague task requests into specific robot actions\, that is robot motions that cause desired physical effects and avoid unwanted side effects. This breakthrough enables robots to perform everyday manipulation tasks with an unprecedented level of context-sensitivity\, foresight\, generality\, and transferability. DMMs narrow the cognitive divide currently existing in robotics by equipping robots with a profound understanding of the physical world and how it works.\n\n\n\n\nThis talk will take place in person at SCIoI. \n 
URL:https://www.scienceofintelligence.de/event/distinguished-speaker-series-michael-beetz-universitat-bremen-empowering-robots-with-digital-mental-models-filling-the-cognitive-gap-for-everyday-tasks/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20240418T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20240418T170000
DTSTAMP:20260425T174520
CREATED:20240118T144212Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240813T103441Z
UID:18052-1713456000-1713459600@www.scienceofintelligence.de
SUMMARY:Serge Belongie (University of Copenhagen)\, "Searching for Structure in Unfalsifiable Claims"
DESCRIPTION:Abstract:\nWhile advances in automated fact-checking are critical in the fight against the spread of misinformation in social media\, we argue that more attention is needed in the domain of unfalsifiable claims. In this talk\, we outline some promising directions for identifying the prevailing narratives in shared content (image & text) and explore how the associated learned representations can be used to identify misinformation campaigns and sources of polarization.\n\n\n\n\nThis talk will take place in person at SCIoI. \nPhoto by Michael Dziedzic on Unsplash. \n 
URL:https://www.scienceofintelligence.de/event/distinguished-speaker-series-serge-belongie-university-of-copenhagen-searching-for-structure-in-unfalsifiable-claims/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.scienceofintelligence.de/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/michael-dziedzic-aQYgUYwnCsM-uns-1-1024x1024-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20240530T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20240530T170000
DTSTAMP:20260425T174520
CREATED:20240110T143435Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240813T103209Z
UID:18036-1717084800-1717088400@www.scienceofintelligence.de
SUMMARY:Asifa Majid (University of Oxford)\, "Establishing Human Universals"
DESCRIPTION:Abstract:\nPsychology\, the “science of mental life”\, aims to provide models and theories that apply universally. However\, there is a growing concern that what we gather from studying humans in a particular place and time might not accurately reflect how humans behave in other contexts. This talk will consider how we can establish whether something is a psychological universal and provide examples of best practice\, taking examples from the cross-cultural research of percepts and concepts.\n\n\n\n\nThis talk will take place in person at SCIoI. \nPhoto by Stefano Bucciarelli on Unsplash. \n 
URL:https://www.scienceofintelligence.de/event/distinguished-speaker-series-asifa-majid-university-of-oxford/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.scienceofintelligence.de/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/stefano-bucciarelli-16IN3v0V12M-unsplash-1024x1024-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20240704T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20240704T170000
DTSTAMP:20260425T174520
CREATED:20240506T082222Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240606T083744Z
UID:19376-1720108800-1720112400@www.scienceofintelligence.de
SUMMARY:Marta Halina (University of Cambridge)\, "Intuitive Physics in Nonhuman Animals"
DESCRIPTION:Abstract:\nComparative psychologists have spent the last few decades examining whether nonhuman animals understand the physical world in a way that is similar to humans. Broadly\, human intuitive physics is thought to include a collection of abilities\, such as knowing that solid objects continue to exist even when no longer perceived and that objects tend to fall unless prevented from doing so. In this talk\, Marta introduces the empirical research program dedicated to investigating intuitive physics in nonhuman animals. She then shows how current research in this area encounters problems of underdetermination. Finally\, she proposes a route forward: computational modelling combined with signature testing.\n\n\n\n\nThis talk will take place in person at SCIoI. \n  \nPhoto by Adrien Converse on Unsplash.
URL:https://www.scienceofintelligence.de/event/marta-halina-university-of-cambridge/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.scienceofintelligence.de/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/adrien-converse-kCrrUx7US04-unsp-1024x1024-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20241205T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20241205T173000
DTSTAMP:20260425T174520
CREATED:20240911T085644Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250603T124505Z
UID:22187-1733414400-1733419800@www.scienceofintelligence.de
SUMMARY:Onur Güntürkün (Ruhr University Bochum)\, “The Evolution of Brain and Cognition: A Wild Hypothesis”
DESCRIPTION:Onur Güntürkün is regarded as a pioneer of biologically based psychology. The aim of his work is to find out how perception\, thought and action arise in the brain. He is interested in diverse topics\, such as motor learning\, fear\, risk-taking behavior and even kissing. In his research\, Güntürkün combines psychological\, biological and neuroanatomical aspects with concepts and findings from the comparative behavioral studies and neurosciences. Using magpies as an example\, he was able to show that birds recognize themselves in the mirror and are therefore able to develop a kind of self-concept. This finding is astonishing because they lack the cerebral cortex in their brains. This is precisely what controls this ability in primates. Building on this finding\, Güntürkün also succeeded in proving that the forebrain structures of birds and primates have converged in an evolutionary process. Despite their different structures\, they converge in their neurobiological basis and their behavioral performance. \nThis talk will take place in person at SCIoI (room 2.057). \n  \nPhoto created in DALLE by Maria Ott
URL:https://www.scienceofintelligence.de/event/onur-gunturkun-ruhr-university-bochum-the-evolution-of-brain-and-cognition-a-wild-hypothesis/
LOCATION:SCIoI\, Marchstraße 23\, 10587 Berlin\, Room 2.057
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250227T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250227T173000
DTSTAMP:20260425T174520
CREATED:20250108T103914Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250603T124155Z
UID:23037-1740672000-1740677400@www.scienceofintelligence.de
SUMMARY:Florian Engert (Harvard University)\, “Attentional Switching in Larval Zebrafish”
DESCRIPTION:Decision making strategies in the face of conflicting or uncertain sensory input have been successfully described in many different species.  Here we analyze large behavioral datasets of larval zebrafish engaged in a ‘coherent dot’ optomotor assay. We find that animal performance is bimodal and can be separated into two ‘states’\, an engaged state where performance is high and fish consistently turn into the direction of the coherent motion\, and a second\, disengaged state\, where performance drops to chance. We find that a simple HMM is sufficient to model these transitions and fits our experimental data well. We find that this addition can be incorporated into an existing DDM framework that has previously been used to model perceptual decision making in larval zebrafish.  \nFurther\, we leverage the large behavioral data sets to fit a mixture model of performance distributions and extract two latent variables which we term ‘focus’ and ‘competence’. Whereas ‘competence’ quantifies performance while the fish is in the engaged state\, the ‘focus’ variable captures the relative duration for which each animal persists in the engaged state. We show that ‘focus’ may be largely inherited from the parents\, while ‘competence’ is more likely to be influenced by environmental context. This quantitative framework for analyzing decision making can be used to screen genetic perturbations for their impact on these two aspects of performance\, and potentially help to identify a genetic basis\, and a neural mechanism for attention\, that extends across organisms. \nThis talk will take place in person at SCIoI (room 2.057). \nPhoto by Lance Anderson on Unsplash.
URL:https://www.scienceofintelligence.de/event/florian-engert-harvard-university-attentional-switching-in-larval-zebrafish/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.scienceofintelligence.de/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/lance-anderson-G2SDLsJp3rg-unsplash-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250509T141500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250509T154500
DTSTAMP:20260425T174520
CREATED:20250317T111247Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250603T123955Z
UID:23742-1746800100-1746805500@www.scienceofintelligence.de
SUMMARY:J. Kevin O’Regan (CNRS Paris)\, “How To Make a Machine That Is Conscious and Really Feels”
DESCRIPTION:Despite current advances in artificial intelligence\, many people remain convinced that machines are still far from being able to really experience\, for example\, the redness of a sunset\, the pain of a pinprick\, or what it’s like to be sad. This “phenomenal” or “felt” aspect of consciousness seems outside the realm of science and impossible to implement in machines. Philosophers say phenomenal consciousness is the “hard problem”. I will show that the “hard problem” dissolves if we think about experiences using a “sensorimotor” approach.  Like the abandonment of the “ether hypothesis” and the “vital spirit” at the beginning of the 20th century\, the sensorimotor approach requires making a metaphysical shift. Instead of thinking of experiences as “happening to us”\, we should think of experiences as “things we do”.  I will illustrate the idea by taking concrete examples from the study of vision and touch. With this approach it becomes potentially possible to explain everything that can be explained from a scientific point of view about what it’s like to have sensory\, bodily\, emotional and mental experiences. Phenomenal consciousness loses its mystery. There is no obstacle to making machines that really feel. They are coming very soon. \n  \nBio \nKevin O’Regan is emeritus ex-director of the Laboratoire Psychologie de la Perception\, CNRS\, Université Paris Descartes. After working on eye movements in reading he became interested in visual stability and discovered the phenomenon of change blindness. His current work concerns the sensorimotor approach to phenomenal consciousness and its applications to child development and robotics. See http://whatfeelingislike.net and http://kevin-oregan.net/. \n  \nFor those who are not in Berlin but would like to join virtually:\nhttps://tu-berlin.zoom-x.de/j/69207754612?pwd=IKxoTdY3dQWccHpce2nA0IsNkNxPHu.1 \n  \nThis talk is also part of Aravind Battaje‘s course “Mind\, Body\, Environment: An Interactive Seminar on Embodied Intelligence\,” a seminar introducing to key theories and research highlighting this shift in perspective through invited lectures from experts in the field and interactive sessions. \n  \nPhoto kindly provided by the speaker.
URL:https://www.scienceofintelligence.de/event/kevin-oregan-cnrs-paris/
LOCATION:SCIoI\, Marchstraße 23\, 10587 Berlin\, Room 2.057
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250620T141500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250620T154500
DTSTAMP:20260425T174520
CREATED:20250317T111505Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250616T132501Z
UID:23745-1750428900-1750434300@www.scienceofintelligence.de
SUMMARY:John Tsotsos (York University)\, "Attentional Mechanisms Bridge Seeing to Looking"
DESCRIPTION:David Marr wrote ‘What does it mean\, to see? The plain man’s answer (and Aristotle’s\, too) would be\, to know what is where by looking‘. Modern vision science has moved beyond Aristotle’s view as well as Marr’s\, although it certainly would not have advanced without the influence of both. Seeing and Looking are different and although related in a plain  manner\, at a deeper mechanistic level it is not plain at all: they are spatially\, temporally and causally connected.  \nWe examine Looking and Seeing and the roles they play in a rational visual agent that functions purposefully in a real three-dimensional world\, as a plain person\, Marr\, or Aristotle would behave during their lifetimes. The vast bulk of theoretical\, experimental and empirical research has focussed on how an agent views and perceives an image\, singly or in video sequence. We add to the small but growing literature that addresses how an agent chooses how to view a three-dimensional world in the context of a real world task. Looking is the result of a change of gaze while Seeing is what occurs during the analysis of what is being looked at and causes a particular next Looking act. Gaze change ranges over a full 6 degrees-of-freedom for head pose and 3 degrees-of-freedom for each of  two eyes within that head.  \nAlthough our past research has shown that sensor viewpoint planning has provably exponential complexity properties\, we propose that an array of attentional mechanisms\, as found in our Selective Tuning model\, tame the complexity of such behaviour and provides the bridge between Seeing and Looking. Through extensive human experiment (one of these is the pictured Same-Different Task) and foraging through the history of computational vision\, we are gradually constructing a picture of a complex blend of orchestrated attentional\, visual\, reasoning\, planning and motor behaviours required for real-world 3D visual tasks.  \nBio \nJohn Tsotsos (he/him) is Distinguished Research Professor of Vision Science at York University and also holds an Adjunct Professorship in Ophthalmology and Vision Sciences at the University of Toronto. Internationally recognized for his pioneering work on visual attention and active vision\, Prof. Tsotsos developed the influential Selective Tuning theory\, which has shaped understanding of both human and computational vision. His research spans computer vision\, computational neuroscience\, robotics\, and artificial intelligence\, with over 300 refereed publications and major contributions to areas such as motion interpretation\, visual search\, and medical image analysis. \nProf. Tsotsos has received numerous honors\, including Fellowships in the Royal Society of Canada\, IEEE\, and the Canadian Academy of Engineering\, as well as the Sir John William Dawson Medal for sustained excellence in interdisciplinary research—the first computer scientist to receive this distinction. He has held the NSERC Tier I Canada Research Chair in Computational Vision since 2003 and was the founding Director of York’s Centre for Vision Research\, which he led to international prominence. \n  \nFor those who are not in Berlin but would like to join virtually:\nhttps://tu-berlin.zoom-x.de/j/69207754612?pwd=IKxoTdY3dQWccHpce2nA0IsNkNxPHu.1 \nThis talk is part of Aravind Battaje‘s course “Mind\, Body\, Environment: An Interactive Seminar on Embodied Intelligence\,” a seminar introducing to key theories and research highlighting this shift in perspective through invited lectures from experts in the field and interactive sessions. \nPhoto provided by the speaker.
URL:https://www.scienceofintelligence.de/event/john-tsotsos-york-university/
LOCATION:SCIoI\, Marchstraße 23\, 10587 Berlin\, Room 2.057
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250627T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20250627T160000
DTSTAMP:20260425T174520
CREATED:20250402T102518Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250625T112746Z
UID:24016-1751032800-1751040000@www.scienceofintelligence.de
SUMMARY:Dario Floreano (EPFL)\, "Avian-Inspired Drones"
DESCRIPTION:In less than 20 years drones transitioned from research labs to the real world and had a major impact on inspection\, security\, rescue\, logistics\, and entertainment. However\, today’s drones do not match the agility\, endurance\, adaptability\, and intelligence of birds. Birds are not only the masters of the sky but are also at ease on the ground and in water. Stringent aerodynamical constraints shaped their bodies and brains to leverage morphological change to adapt to diverse locomotion conditions that are still poorly understood. I will show examples of abstracting principles of avian morphological design and flight control to design agile aerial robots that can also be used to test biological hypotheses and improve our understanding of embodied intelligence in avian vertebrates. \nBio \nProf. Dario Floreano is director of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne (EPFL). Between 2010 and 2022\, he was the founding director of the Swiss National Center of Competence in Robotics\, a research program that graduated almost 200 PhD students and more than 100 postdocs\, funded two professorships at EPFL and University of Zurich\, created the EPFL Master’s program in Robotics and the annual Swiss Robotics Day\,  helped launch Cybathlon\, and generated more than 15 robotics  spinoffs that created several hundred jobs. \nProf. Floreano holds an M.A. in Vision\, an M.S. in Neural Computation\, and a PhD in Robotics. He has held research positions at Sony Computer Science Laboratory\, at Caltech/JPL\, and at Harvard University. His research interests are Robotics and A.I. at the convergence of biology and engineering. Prof. Floreano made pioneering contributions to the fields of evolutionary robotics\, aerial robotics\, and soft robotics. He served in numerous advisory boards and committees\, including the Future and Emerging Technologies division of the European Commission\, the World Economic Forum Agenda Council\, the International Society of Artificial Life\, the International Neural Network Society\, and in the editorial committee of several scientific journals. In addition\, he helped spinning off three drone companies (senseFly.com\, Flyability.com\, Elythor.com) and a non-for-profit portal on robotics and A.I. (RoboHub.org). For more information\, visit his EPFL profile or Google Scholar page. \n  \nFor those who are not in Berlin but would like to join virtually:\nhttps://tu-berlin.zoom-x.de/j/69207754612?pwd=IKxoTdY3dQWccHpce2nA0IsNkNxPHu.1 \nThis talk is part of Aravind Battaje‘s course “Mind\, Body\, Environment: An Interactive Seminar on Embodied Intelligence\,” a seminar introducing to key theories and research highlighting this shift in perspective through invited lectures from experts in the field and interactive sessions. \nPhoto created with DALL-E by Maria Ott. \n 
URL:https://www.scienceofintelligence.de/event/dario-floreano-epfl/
LOCATION:SCIoI\, Marchstraße 23\, 10587 Berlin\, Room 2.057
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
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END:VEVENT
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