2017 Scientific Program
The Ninth Annual Meeting of the Society for the Neurobiology of Language will feature four keynote sessions, an invited symposium and a special talk on marine communication.
Keynote Sessions
Road Blocks in Brain Maps: Learning about Language from Lesions
Wednesday, November 8, 9:00 – 10:00 am, Chesapeake Ballroom
Argye Hillis
Professor of Neurology, Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, and Cognitive Science, Johns Hopkins University
Bridging the gap between brains, cognition and deep learning
Thursday, November 9, 8:30 – 9:30 am, Chesapeake Ballroom
Yoshua Bengio
Professor, Director of MILA, Department of Computer Science and Operations Research and Canada Research Chair in Statistical Learning Algorithms, University of Montreal, Canada
The human infant brain: A neural architecture able to learn language
Thursday, November 9, 4:00 – 5:00 pm, Chesapeake Ballroom
Ghislaine Dehaene-Lambertz
Cognitive Neuroimaging Lab, Inserm, France
Dissecting the functional representations of human speech cortex
Friday, November 10, 8:30 – 9:30 am, Chesapeake Ballroom
Edward Chang
Professor of Neurosurgery, UC San Francisco
Invited Symposium: Computational and quantitative methods in understanding the neurobiology of language
Thursday, November 9, 1:30 – 3:30 pm, Chesapeake Ballroom
Modeling brain responses to natural language stimuli
Leila Wehbe
Postdoctoral researcher in the Gallant Lab University of California, Berkeley
Insights into the cognitive processes underlying speech processing in the presence of background noise
Odette Scharenborg
Associate professor at the Centre for Language Studies, Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands, and a research fellow at the Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University Nijmegen
The spatio-temporal dynamics of language comprehension: combining computational linguistics and RSA with MEG data
Barry Devereux
Senior research associate, Centre for Speech Language and the Brain, University of Cambridge
Assistant professor, Cognitive Signal Processing at Queen’s University, Belfast
Word-by-word neuro-computational models of human sentence processing
John Hale
Associate professor in the Department of Linguistics, Cornell University, New York
Marine Communication Lecture
Wednesday , November 8, 4:30 – 5:30 pm, Chesapeake Ballroom
Reflecting on Dolphin Communication & Cognition
Diana Reiss
Professor in the Department of Psychology at Hunter College and the Animal Behavior and Comparative Psychology Doctoral program at The Graduate Center, CUNY