Event Series Brown Bag Talks

Brown Bag Talk: Rennie Pasquinelli

111 Krieger Hall 3400 N Charles St, Baltimore, MD, United States

Associative Memory Contributes to Regular and Irregular English Past Tense Production: Evidence from Williams Syndrome Abstract TBA. Rennie Pasquinelli is a PhD candidate interested in cognitive and linguistic development in typically and atypically developing populations. Current work focuses on the intersection of language acquisition, development, and memory in Williams syndrome.

Event Series CogSci Colloquia

Colloquium: Chris Baker

111 Krieger Hall 3400 N Charles St, Baltimore, MD, United States

Making sense of the world: People, places, and THINGS. Abstract: Light falling on the retina triggers neural activity that is propagated along sub-cortical and cortical pathways to ultimately elicit the perceptual experience of a world that is full of people, places, and things. However, much prior research has focused on broad visual distinctions (e.g. scenes, […]

Event Series CogSci Colloquia

Colloquium: Jack Gallant

111 Krieger Hall 3400 N Charles St, Baltimore, MD, United States

The distributed conceptual network in the human brain. ABSTRACT: Human behavior is based on a complex interaction between perception, stored knowledge, and continuousevaluation of the world relative to plans and goals. Even seemingly simple tasks such as watching a movie orlistening to a story involve a range of different perceptual and cognitive processes whose underlying […]

Dissertation Talk: Rennie Pasquinelli

402 Ames Hall 3400 N Charles St, Baltimore, Maryland, United States

Do Rules Rule Tense Learning in People with Williams Syndrome?: Tense Knowledge in Typical and Atypical Development