16-18 April 2004

Dunedin, New Zealand

 

 

PROGRAMME

Keynote Speaker
Symposia
Draft Programme




KEYNOTE SPEAKER

Professor Michael Corballis
Department of Psychology
University of Auckland

"From hand to mouth--and back again"

Professor Michael Corballis is New Zealand's most famous cognitive psychologist. He took his PhD in Psychology from McGill University in Montreal, Canada, and taught there from 1968 to 1978. He then returned to a Chair in Psychology at the University of Auckland. He has worked in a number of areas in cognitive neuroscience, including perception, memory, laterality, and interhemispheric relations, and more recently on the evolution of language. His most recent books are The Lopsided Ape (1991) and From Hand to Mouth (2002).


SYMPOSIA
Symposia are now closed. If you and some colleagues are working on similar topics, we strongly encourage you to organise a symposium. Symposia will run in 90-minute or two-hour slots. You will need to coordinate submission of abstracts along with a 150-word abstract for the entire symposium stating its rationale, aims, and the names of proposed speakers and discussant. Please let us know as early as possible before 30 January 2004 if you are planning a symposium.

Current symposia include:

Face and Object Processing (Gill Rhodes and Janice Murray)

Binocular Rivalry (David Alais) - 16 or 17 April

Constraints on Perception and Action (Keith Davids) - 18 April

Eye Movements and Attention (Tony Lambert)

Implicit processes in Social Interaction (Lucy Johnston)

Stereoscopic Vision (Barbara Gillam and Julie Harris)

Temporal Dynamics of Visual Attention (Philip Smith)



DRAFT PROGRAMME

On-site registration will between 5 pm and 8 pm on Thursday 15 April 2004 in Room 2.07 of the Commerce Building.



Friday programme

Saturday programme

Sunday programme


 

 

 

 
 

Contact: epc@psy.otago.ac.nz

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This page was last updated on 22 December 2004.