PEBS Neuroethics Roundup
http://kolber.typepad.com/ethics_law_blog/2012/05/pebs-neuroethics-roundup-jhu-4.html
Sent via Flipboard, your social magazine for iPad and iPhone.
The National Academy of Sciences did a great service to science early this week by holding a conference on "The Science of Science Communication." A centerpiece of the two-day meeting was a lecture titled "Thinking That We Know," delivered by Daniel Kahneman, the extraordinary behavioral scientist who was awarded a Nobel Prize in economics despite never having taken an economics class.
The talk is extraordinary for the clarity (and humor) with which he repeatedly illustrates the powerful ways in which the mind filters and shapes what we call information. He discusses how this relates to the challenge of communicating science in a way that might stick.
Please carve out the time to watch his slide-free, but image-rich, talk. It's a shorthand route to some of the insights described in Kahneman's remarkable book, "Thinking, Fast and Slow" (I'm a third of the way through).
Here's the video of the talk (which is "below the fold" because it's set up to play automatically):
.
As I noted via Twitter during the meeting, this talk and many other engaging presentations at the event illustrate the importance of adding a fresh facet to the popular notion that today's citizens, and particularly students, would do well to improve their capacity for critical thinking:
"Critical thinking has to include assessing one's own thinking."
There's more on the meeting at the Age of Engagement blog of Matthew Nisbet of American University, one of the presenters. And review Twitter traffic using the #Sackler tag set up for the conference.
Neurology Today
17 May 2012; Volume 12(10); pp 22-23
Valeo, Tom
"The axonal connections that link brain regions form a surprisingly regular grid that may someday yield insights into the pathology underlying schizophrenia, autism, and other disorders, according to researchers involved with the Human Connectome Project."
Continue reading: American Academy of Neurology
Conflict of interest note. I am an external consultant to IM as the Director of Science and Research
Untitled Document
Due to an unforeseen schedule conflict, the IM Conference 2012 dates have changed! Please mark your calendars for October 26 - 28. Date: October 26 -28, 2012
Place: Embassy Suites
Riverwalk-Downtown
125 E. Houston St.
San Antonio, TX 78205Registration will be online June, 1st
CALL FOR PAPERS:
Take your place behind the podium!
IM wants to hear your best practices and there's no better time to share them with other IM Providers than the 2012 IM Professional Conference. If your proposal is accepted your conference admission is absolutely FREE! So what are you waiting for?SUBMIT YOUR PROPOSAL TODAY!
The deadline for proposals is June 1, 2012APPLY ONLINE or DOWNLOAD FORM
Registration will be
available on June, 1st!
Untitled Document
Share your best practices at the
2012 IM Conference in
San Antonio, TXDate: October 12 -14, 2012
Place: Embassy Suites
Riverwalk-Downtown
125 E. Houston St.
San Antonio, TX 78205APPLY ONLINE or DOWNLOAD FORM
The deadline for proposals is June 1, 2012CALL FOR PAPERS:
Take your place behind the podium!
IM wants to hear your best practices and there's no better time to share them with other IM Providers than the 2012 IM Professional Conference. If your proposal is accepted your conference admission is absolutely FREE! So what are you waiting for?SUBMIT YOUR PROPOSAL TODAY!
The deadline for proposals is June 1, 2012
Information on Registration
will be COMING SOON!