Thursday Morning Talk

Daniela Vallentin (MPI for Biological Intelligence), “Neural mechanisms of vocal learning and production in songbirds”

MAR 2.057

Daniela Vallentin is a neuroscientist and currently the Lise Meitner Reseach Group Leader at the Max Planck Institute for Biological Intelligence, heading the 'Neural Circuits for Vocal Communication' Group whose objective is to explore the neural circuits driving skilled motor learning and orchestrating the coordination of precise movements by working with songbirds. Due to the

PI Lecture

Pawel Romanczuk (Science of Intelligence), “Collective behavior – quid est?”

MAR 2.057

Collective behavior is a generic term used across many different fields and context, and thus it can refer to very different kind of collective phenomena exhibited by animal and human collectives, such as collective locomotion, collective decision making or behavioral contagion processes. In this lecture, I will try to give a classification of different types

Thursday Morning Talk

Aravind Battaje and Vito Mengers, “Principles at Play: What is Intelligence?”

MAR 2.057

What is intelligence? We delve into the collaborative efforts at SCIoI, where we aim to understand intelligence through the identification of commonalities. Inspired by ongoing research and historical parallels, we present candidate principles, inviting the audience to contribute insights and discuss their alignment with ongoing projects. This talk marks a step towards refining our understanding

Thursday Morning Talk

Asieh Daneshi (Science of Intelligence), “Behavioral contagion in human and artificial multi-agent systems”

In this talk, Asieh will explore the dynamics of decision-making and risk-taking within social contexts and how everyday decisions, often laden with potential negative outcomes, are influenced not only by individual judgment but significantly by the surrounding social environment. Her research employs the "Balloon Analogue Risk-Taking" experiment in a controlled setting applying VR-technology in order

Distinguished Speaker Series

POSTPONED: Richard McElreath, “The Cultural and Ecological Nature of Intelligence”

Abstract: How do we reconcile the extraordinary success of the human species with the apparent stupidity of people and organizations? How can we understand the transformation of humans from foraging apes to urban clerks, without any appreciable change in physiology? No one has definitive answers to these questions, but we begin to answer them by

Thursday Morning Talk

Oren Forkosh (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem), “Behavior, Personality, and Affective States of Freely Behaving Groups of Mice and Other Animals”

Behavior, Personality, and Affective States of Freely Behaving Groups of Mice and Other Animals In recent years, the study of animal behavior in neuroscience has seen a significant shift towards more naturalistic and less intrusive methods. It is under these conditions that the true spectrum of animal behavior can be exhibited, free from the artificial