ISBN 2007: CRETE
**=Potential New Member
Tuesday, May 29th
7:30 PM Group dinner
Wednesday, May 30th
9 AM Half
day Symposium: Affect perception from bodies, faces and voices
Organizer: Pascal Belin, Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging, University of Glasgow and Laboratory for Brain, Music and Sound (BRAMS), Montreal
9-9:10 Introductory Remarks (Pascal Belin)
9:10-9:50 Exploring the emotional
face and body
Beatrice De Gelder, Martinos
Center for Biomedical Imaging, degelder@uvt.nl
9:50-10:30 Perceiving affect from human movement
Franck Pollick, University of Glasgow,
franck@psy.gla.ac.uk
10:30-11:10 Teenagers brain activity while viewing angry
faces or hand movements
Marie-Helene Grosbras, University of Glasgow, marieh@psy.gla.ac.uk
11:10-11:30 COFFEE BREAK
11:30-12:10 Neural substrates involved in processing
emotional vocal information
Shirley Fecteau**, Harvard University, sfecteau@bidmc.harvard.edu
12:10-12:50 Perception of affective voices in patients
with medial temporal lobe lesion
Severine Samson and Delphine Dellacherie, Universite
de Lille 3 et Hopital de la Salpetriere, severine.samson@univ-lille3.fr
4-4:20 PM
COFFEE
4:20-4:40 Effects of delay interval on emotional memory
Elizabeth A. Kensinger, Boston College
4:40-5
Testosterone modifies cognition and brain activity in aging
Jeri S.
Janowsky, Michelle Neiss, Laura Young, Mark Krause, Oregon Health &
Science University, Portland, Oregon. USA.
5 PM: Open paper Session
5-5:20 Individual differences in resistance to
attentional capture
Keisuke Fukuda & Edward K. Vogel, University of
Oregon
5:20-5:40 Concurrent BOLD and autonomic response recording to emotionally salient visual and
auditory stimuli.
Tom F.D. Farrow1**, Naomi K. Johnson1,
Michael D. Hunter1, Anthony T. Barker2, Iain D. Wilkinson3,
Peter W.R. Woodruff1.1SCANLab, Academic Clinical
Psychiatry, Section of Neuroscience, University of Sheffield, 2Department
of Medical Physics, Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, 3Academic
Unit of Radiology, University of Sheffield, UK.
5:40 – 6
When I remember your smiling face: Role of the amygdala and medial temporal
lobe regions in remembering facial expressions of emotion
Takashi Tsukiura1,2
and Roberto Cabeza1 1 Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Duke
University,USA, 2 Neuroscience Research Institute, AIST, Japan
Thursday, May
31st:
7 PM –Presidential Speaker and Dinner
Presidential
Speaker
Dr Helen Savaki
Medical School, University of Crete and
Institute of Applied and Computational Mathematics (IACM), Foundation of
Research and Technology, Hellas (FORTH)
SIMULATION OF
ACTION SERVES ACTION RECOGNITION
Friday, June 1st
9 AM: Half day symposium:
Relationships between the frontal cortex and the thalamus
Organizers: Mark
Baxter and Anna Mitchell
9-9:10 AM:
Introductory Remarks
9:10-9:40
Rethinking retrograde amnesia: a study of patients with medial temporal,
lateral temporal and frontal pathology
Peter Bright
(Dept. Psychology, Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge, UK), Joseph Buckman,
Alex Fradera, Haruo Yoshimasu, Alan C.F. Colchester and Michael D. Kopelman
9:40-10:10 The
role of frontal-temporal interaction in visual memory in monkeys
Philip G. F.
Browning, Dept. Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford, UK
10:10-10:40
Corticothalamic contributions to executive function
Yogita
Chudasama**, Dept. Psychology, McGill University, Canada (*potential new
member)
10:40-11:
COFFEE BREAK
11-11:30 The
mediodorsal thalamus and retrograde amnesia
Anna S.
Mitchell, Dept. Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford, UK
11:30-12 The
role of mediodorsal thalamus in devaluation tasks
Charles L.
Pickens, Behavioral Neuroscience Branch, National Institute on Drug Abuse,
USA
12-12:15
Discussion/ Conclusing remarks
4:40-5 Impact of temporal lobectomy on remote
memory
Suncica Lah1**,
Laurie Miller1, 2
1Psychology
Dept, University of Sydney, 2Neuropsychology Unit, Royal Prince
Alfred Hospital, Sydney, Australia
5-5:20 The emergence of Ônon-semanticÕ deficits in
semantic dementia: a longitudinal single-case study
Diana
Caine1**, Nora Breen2 and Karalyn Patterson3, 1University of Manchester,
Manchester, UK, 2Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney, Australia, 3MRC
Cognition & Brain Sciences Unit, Cambridge, UK
5:20-5:40
Self-Referencing and Memory with Age
Angela H.
Gutchess**, Harvard University & Massachusetts General Hospital
Elizabeth A.
Kensinger, Boston College & Massachusetts General Hospital
Daniel L.
Schacter, Harvard University & Massachusetts General Hospital
5:40-6 Remembering the Past and Imagining the Future: The
Constructive Episodic Simulation Hypothesis
Donna Rose Addis**, Alana T. Wong and Daniel L. Schacter, Dept. of Psychology, Harvard University; Athinoula A. Martinos Center for iomedical Imaging
Saturday, June
2nd
9:30-9:50 The unusual
symmetry of musicians: Musicians
have equilateral interhemispheric transfer for visual information
Lucy LM Patston, Ian J Kirk,, SMF Rolfe, Michael C Corballis, Lynette J Tippett, Department of
Psychology, The University of Auckland, New Zealand
9:50-10:10 Late maturation of auditory processing of
nonspeech sounds in the right superior temporal sulcus
Kate Watkins1 & Tomas Paus2,
1Dept. Experimental Psychology & FMRIB Centre, University of Oxford,
UK, 2Brain & Body Centre, University of Nottingham, UK, and
Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University, Canada
10:10-10:30
Auditory Hallucinations in Schizophrenia - What makes them real experiences?
Peter
W.R. Woodruff, MD Hunter, TF Farrow, DS Sokhi, S Eickhoff, ID Wilkinson
Sheffield
Cognition and Neuroimaging Laboratory (SCANLab), Department of Academic
Clinical Psychiatry, The University of Sheffield, U.K. P.W.Woodruff@sheffield.ac.uk
10:30-10:40 COFFEE BREAK
10:40-11 Top-down and Bottom-up Interactions in
Aging and AlzheimerÕs Disease
Mark Mapstone, Kathryn Dickerson, William J
Vaughn and Charles J Duffy
Department of Neurology, University of Rochester,
Rochester, New York
11-11:20 Prefrontal and striatal modulation during
executive processing in ParkinsonÕs disease
Antonio Strafella** MD PhD, Department of
Medicine/Neurology, University of Toronto,
Division of Brain Imaging & Behaviour Systems,
Toronto Research Institute, PET Imaging Centre, Center of Addiction and Mental
Health.
11:20-11:40 False Working Memory: rapid memory distortion and its
neural correlates
Patricia Reuter-Lorenz, Alexandra S. Atkins,
& Megan K. Walsh
University of Michigan
11:40-12
Surprising Symmetric Sensorimotor Somatotopy
1Department
of Psychology, Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, Ontario Canada, 2Department
of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, MIT, Cambridge, MA USA
4:30-5 COFFEE