posted by organizer: tamburynek || 1508 views || tracked by 1 users: [display]

NBIIM 2016 : Neurocultures: Brain Imaging and Imagining the Mind

FacebookTwitterLinkedInGoogle

Link: http://neurocultures2016.wordpress.com/
 
When Sep 26, 2016 - Sep 28, 2016
Where Bielsko-Biala
Submission Deadline Apr 30, 2016
Notification Due May 15, 2016
Categories    sciences   humanities
 

Call For Papers

Neurocultures: Brain Imaging and Imagining the Mind – Second international and interdisciplinary conference organised by the Department of English Studies at the University of Bielsko-Biala.
26-28 September 2016
Keynote Speakers:
Patricia Pisters, Professor of Film Studies at the University of Amsterdam.
Fernando Vidal, Research Professor at ICREA (Catalan Institution for Research and Advanced Studies).
The Brain — is wider than the Sky —
For — put them side by side —
The one the other will contain
With ease — and You — beside —
(Emily Dickinson)

How do our brains give rise to minds? – is a question that has fascinated many generations of scientists, artists and writers. The aim of our interdisciplinary conference is to bring together specialists from various fields (humanities, social sciences, arts, medicine etc.) in order to explore mental processes and their relation to brain physiology and neural activity. We want to create a dialogue across different academic disciplines so we encourage papers that will be accessible to non-experts.
Considering that, for a while now, natural sciences have been making forays into domains traditionally perceived as reserved for humanist research, with neurology increasingly determining issues of ethics, identity, memory or normativity, we feel justified in revolting against being made a periphery of human inquiry: admitting that brain in its materiality shapes the realities we inhabit, we find growing evidence, confirmed by brain scientists themselves, that the phenomenal organ is in turn – materially – shaped by its abstract constructs such as culture, art or history. It is therefore perhaps time to pose a complementary question: How do our minds shape our brains?
Therefore, while aware of our limited knowledge in the field of natural studies, we dare return to the subject of the role of humanities in managing the discoveries of science, and invite a debate between the two areas of human activity, or, to quote Victoria Pitts-Taylor’s Neurocultures Manifesto, an exploration into “the ineluctably social character of nature and the natural makeup of the social.” This text, which has been an inspiration for our endeavour, is in fact part of a broader reaction on the side of non-scientists to the focus on the material foundation of our cultures, postulating a collapsing – or at the very least complicating – of the division between biology and culture. Keeping in mind that the line between material reductionism and appropriations of neuroscience ungrounded in proper understanding of the research is indeed a fine one, we invite a consideration of what mind has to offer to the brain and vice versa.
We, therefore, invite papers that will engage in disputes centring on the issues listed below – but by no means exclusively those – to be discussed in twenty-minute long presentations:
- exploration of various mental processes (perception, memory, language, cognition, emotion) in literature, arts and sciences,
- the relation between the mind and the brain,
- literary and cultural representations of the mind,
- a history of ideas about the mind/brain,
- identity and the brain,
- neurocultures,
- collapsing divisions between biology and culture,
- animal minds, animal cognition: philosophy, culture and life sciences,
- appropriations of neuroscience in humanities and social sciences,
- gendering of the mind/brain,
- the embodied mind,
- neurological disorders and how they affect the learning process and the perception of reality,
- the bilingual/ multilingual brain.
We welcome scholars from various academic fields to submit their proposals by 15 June 2016. Abstracts of 300 words in English should be sent to neurocultures2016@gmail.com. Please include your name, email address, academic affiliation and a short biography.
Notifications of acceptance will be sent out by 20 June 2016.
The conference fee is 420 PLN (100 euro), and 350 PLN ( 80 euro) for students. The fee includes lunch, coffee breaks and conference materials.
A selection of papers will be published. Details of publication will be announced during the conference.
Find us on:
neurocultures2016.wordpress.com/
www.facebook.com/Neurocultures2016-440912389433239/?fref=ts

Best regards,
Conference organisers

Related Resources

ICANN 2024   33rd International Conference on Artificial Neural Networks
HUSO 2024   6th Canadian International Conference on Humanities & Social Sciences 2024
EAICI 2024   Explainable AI for Cancer Imaging
HAS 2024   International Conference on Humanities, Art and Social Studies
ETAI 2024   Emerging Topics in Artificial Intelligence
IJHAS 2024   International Journal of Humanities, Art and Social Studies
NovelIQA 2024   Novel Approaches to Image Quality Assessment
BCIIMC 2024   The 2024 Benedict College Inaugural International Multidisciplinary Conference
AMS 2024   Advanced Medical Sciences: An International Journal
Migrating Minds 2025   Migrating Minds. Journal of Cultural Cosmopolitanism, Issue 4, Spring 2025