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List of Past Events
2019 Meeting of the Society of Experimental Psychologists
From Friday, March 22, 2019
To Saturday, March 23, 2019
Academic Building, room 1180 (East Wing)
Location
Academic Building, room 1180 (East Wing)
15 Seminary Place
New Brunswick, NJ 08903
(~15 min walk from Hyatt Hotel, New Brunswick and 10 min walk from NJ Transit train station, New Brunswick). (Need parking information? contact This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. a few days in advance)
Walking directions: Hyatt Hotel to site of the conference (Rutgers Academic Building, East Wing):
Leave the Hyatt main entrance and turn right. Walk to and across Albany Street and turn left. Walk one block to George Street and turn right. Continue under the train tracks, cross Somerset Street, and enter campus (slight left) through the Class of 1883 Memorial Gate. Continue on the path, passing the Alexander Hamilton historical plaque (on your right) and the Kirkpatrick Chapel (1873) (on your left). Take the path behind the chapel, walking along a slight downgrade and exiting through the Class of 1902 Memorial gate. Cross Hamilton Street. Continue walking straight, through the Vorhees Mall, ending at the statue of William the Silent. Cross Seminary Place to the Rutgers Academic Building west wing. Turn right to get to the East Wing of the RAB, and the conference room 1180.
Hyatt Hotel: 2 Albany Street, New Brunswick, NJ.
A portion of the walk from the Hyatt will take you past the original campus buildings, including the Schanck Observatory (1866), Kirpatrick Chapel (1873) and the statue of William the Silent (1533-1584).
See: https://www.libraries.rutgers.edu/scua/paths-to-historic-rutgers
Parking
For those visitors who are driving to SEP, visitor parking is available in Lots 26, 30 (behind the Student Center at 126 College Ave) and the College Avenue Deck (622 George Street). Visitors must use the link to register cars in advance:
https://rudots.nupark.com/events/Events/Register/46d6baad-6438-40d5-b4df-42a69b7cfa77
RSVP
Rutgers faculty, staff, students, and guests may RSVP here.
All talks will be 20 minutes (15 + 5 questions). Time limits will be strictly followed.
Friday, March 22, 2019
7:30-8:30 am | Registration and continental breakfast outside conference room. Coffee, tea, water and snacks, available during all breaks. |
8:30-8:45 am | Introduction and logistics |
Session 1 | |
8:45-9:05 am | Randy Gallistel, Contingency in conditioning |
9:05-9:25 am | Sharon Thompson-Schill, The dynamic nature of semantic memory: Using concepts can change them |
9:25-9:45 am | Kenneth Norman, Nonmonotonic plasticity: How memory retrieval drives learning |
9:45-10:00 am | Break |
Session 2 | |
10:00-10:20 am | Wilson Geisler, Local reliability weighting explains identification of partially-masked objects in natural images |
10:20-10:40 am | Mary Peterson, Two varieties of semantic influences on object detection |
10:40-11:00 am | George Sperling, Theory of the perceived motion direction of equal-spatial-frequency plaid stimuli |
11:00-11:15 am | Break |
11:15 am -Noon | Warren Medal Address |
Noon-1:30 pm | Lunch. LUNCH WILL BE PROVIDED OUTSIDE THE CONFERENCE ROOM |
Session 3 | |
1:30-1:40 pm | Reconvene |
1:40-2:00 pm | Tom Griffiths, Rational process models |
2:00-2:20 pm | Jessica Andrews-Hanna, The dynamics of thought: A window into wandering and sticky minds |
2:20-2:40 pm | Michael Kahana, A retrieved-context theory of mood and affective disorders |
2:40-3:00 pm | Stephen Link, Fact, context and judgment |
3:00-3:15 pm | Break |
Session 4 | |
3:15-3:35 pm | Michael Kubovy, Strands and the structure of lives |
3:35-3:55 pm | Barbara Knowlton, The effect of contextual interference on implicit sequence learning |
3:55-4:15 pm | David Huber, Testing the primary and convergent retrieval model of recall: Recall practice produces faster recall success but also faster recall failure |
4:15-5:00 pm | Lifetime Achievement Award |
5:00-5:15 pm | Business Meeting |
Dinner on your own (many options; details to be presented at the meeting)
Saturday, March 23, 2019
7:30-8:30 am | Registration and continental breakfast outside conference room. Coffee, tea, water and snacks, available during breaks. |
Session 5 | |
8:30-8:50 am | Jeremy Wolfe, We underestimated your capacity: Introducing multiple object awareness |
8:50-9:10 am | William Warren, The cognitive graph meets the impossible heptagon |
9:10-9:30 am | Irving Biederman, Why is it so difficult to recognize faces differing only moderately in orientation |
9:30-9:45 am | Break |
Session 6 | |
9:45-10:05 am | Saul Sternberg, Shapes of reaction-time distributions and the ex-Gaussian straitjacket |
10:05-10:25 am | Randall Engle, Measurement of attention control |
10:25-10:45 am | Jerome Busemeyer, Markov versus quantum dynamic models of belief change during evidence monitoring |
10:45-11:00 am | Break |
Session 7 | |
11:00-11:20 am | Caren Rotello, Validity of researcher inference in recognition memory: A blinded validation study |
11:20-11:40 am | Stephen Grossberg, Neural dynamics of autistic repetitive behaviors and fragile X syndrome |
11:40 am-Noon | Janet Metcalfe, Is the ‘Learning from Errors’ benefit due to episodic recollection or semantic mediation? |
Noon-2 pm | Lunch. Many options are available within easy walking distance of the conference room. Details will be available at the meeting. |
Session 8 | |
2:00-2:20 pm | Robert Sekuler, Audiovisual combination with temporal correlation and time pressure |
2:20-2:40 pm | James T. Townsend, Assay of mean shift integrality using GRT and SFT and the Hering illusion |
2:40-3:00 pm | Moshe Bar, Overarching states of mind |
3:00-3:15 pm | Break |
Session 9 | |
3:15-3:35 pm | Herbert Terrace, Why only us? |
3:35-3:55 pm | Richard Shiffrin, Sequential decision making by two selfish but rational agents, with or without communication |
3:55-4:15 pm | Richard Aslin, The importance of prediction in learning and development |
4:15-4:35 pm | Robert Nosofsky, Building a feature-space representation for a natural-science category domain |
Conference talks end 4:35 | |
6:00-9:00 pm | SEP Banquet at the Zimmerli Art Museum, 71 Hamilton Street, New Brunswick. 10 minute walk from hotel and 5 minutes from NJ Transit Station. Galleries will be open before and during the banquet. http://www.zimmerlimuseum.rutgers.edu/ Some spaces available. Those who wish to attend but did not already register for the banquet, please contact This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. by March 12. |
Acknowledgements
SEP gratefully acknowledges the support of the Rutgers Center for Cognitive Science and the help of Dr. Sara Pixley (Executive Director), Jo'Ann Meli (Senior Program Coordinator), Lynn Flannery (Center Administrator) and Chris Kourtev (Programming and tech support).