Heineken prize lecture by Nancy Kanwisher

24 September 2018 11:00 - 12:00
Colloquium
The Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences has awarded the 2018 C.L. de Carvalho-Heineken Prize for Cognitive Science to Nancy Kanwisher, Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience in the Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge (USA). The official prize lecture will take place at the Radboud University Nijmegen.

Title of lecture

Functional Imaging of the Human Brain: A Window into the Architecture of the Mind

Abstract

The last 20 years of brain imaging research has revealed the functional organization of the human brain in glorious detail. This work has identified a set of regions of the cortex, each of which is specifically engaged in a particular mental task, like the recognition of faces and places, perceving speech sounds, understanding the meaning of a sentence, and thinking about another person’s thoughts. Other brain regions play a more general role in intelligence, getting engaged when we perform nearly any difficult mental task at all. Each of these regions is present, in approximately the same location, in every normal person. I like to think of this initial rough sketch of the functional organization of the brain as a diagram of the major components of the human mind, a kind of picture of who we are as perceivers and thinkers. But at the same time this new map is just the barest beginning, revealing a vast landscape of unanswered questions. What other specialized regions exist in the cortex, and what are they specialized for? What exactly is computed and represented in each region? What are the structural connections of each region, and how does information flow among them? How do these regions arise in development, and how much of the organization of the brain is specified at birth?  How did brain regions specialized for uniquely human mental abilities evolve? Perhaps most fundamentally, why, from a computational point of view, is the brain organized the way it is, with this combination of highly specialized brain regions, along with very general-purpose systems? These open questions are much harder to answer, but I will mention a few tantalizing glimmers that are beginning to emerge from labs around the world.

More information about the prize: https://www.knaw.nl/en/awards/heineken-prizes/nancy-kanwisher

Where and when:

11:00-12:00 Sep 24, 2018

Aula Radboud University

 

Share this page