CEMS 2021

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CEMS 2019

We are excited to inform you that we plan to host the 17th Annual Context and Episodic Memory Symposium (CEMS2021) to be held at The Logan Hotel, in Philadelphia, PA, on August 16th and 17th, 2021. The symposium provides a forum for the exchange of ideas among colleagues working on theoretical and empirical approaches to the study of context and episodic memory, broadly construed. While we are aware that travel remains a challenge for many in our community, we also believe in the value of CEMS, even at a more intimate scale, to disseminate outstanding research from a diverse array of perspectives. All presentations at this year’s meeting will be delivered in person.



Conference Registration

Registration for CEMS 2021 is now open! Registration fees are:

  • $385 for faculty
  • $285 for non-faculty

Conference registration includes breakfast, lunch, and snacks on both days of the conference.

Click here to register for CEMS 2021.

Please note that registration prices will increase by $50 after July 19th, 2021.

Location & Hotel

Venue

The venue for CEMS 2021 is at The Logan, located in downtown Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

The Logan hotel is located at 1 Logan Square, Philadelphia, PA 19103.

More information on The Logan can be found on their website. Click here to view this location on Google Maps.

Hotel

In addition to its role as the venue for CEMS 2021, The Logan will serve as the preferred hotel for the event. A limited number of rooms will be available at a special event rate.

To make use of our reduced rate, book your room(s) from our event page here. This link & code is only valid for August 15 - 16 and will expire on July 23, 2021.

To reserve by phone: Please call 215-963-1500 and press “1” for reservations. Follow the prompts to make a new reservation. Once connected with an agent, provide the group code GCMLA.

Please note that our room block includes the evenings of August 15 (Sunday into Monday) and August 16 (Monday into Tuesday). If you attempt to book outside of these dates, you will not be granted the discounted rate for additional nights.


Abstract Submission

Abstract Submission for CEMS 2021 is now CLOSED. Thank you for your submissions.


Schedule

The complete schedule for CEMS2021 will be posted in the upcoming weeks.


Spoken Presentations to be Delivered at CEMS2021

  • Sudeep Bhatia, University of Pennsylvania, "A Cognitive Model of Free Association"
  • Rui Cao, Boston University, "Internally Generated Time in the Rodent Hippocampus is Logarithmically Compressed"
  • Yvonne Chen, University of Pennsylvania, "Stability of ripple events during task engagement in human hippocampus"
  • Gregory Cox, University of Albany, "An integrative account of serial position effects in recognition"
  • Kevin P. Darby, University of Virginia, "Seeking the source of confidence in memory-guided decisions"
  • Halle Dimsdale-Zucker, Columbia University, "CA23DG patterns are modulated by spontaneously retrieved encoding contexts"
  • Karl Healey, Michigan State University, "A Post-Encoding Pre-Production Reinstatement (PEPPR) Model of Dual-List Free Recall"
  • Noa Herz, University of Pennsylvania, "Hippocampal biomarkers of false recall"
  • Martin Ho Kwan Ip, University of Pennsylvania, "How A Word Is Produced Affects How It Is Remembered: Effects Of Prosodic Context On Word Learning And Memory"
  • James Kragel, Northwestern University, "Hippocampal theta oscillations rapidly map effective visual exploration"
  • Lukas Kunz, Columbia University, "A neural code for egocentric spatial maps in the human brain"
  • Neal W Morton, University of Texas at Austin, "Neural representations of temporal schemas in hippocampus and precuneus predict schema-based reasoning"
  • Vishnu P. Murty, Temple University, "Influences of Reward Motivation on Episodic Memory Structure and Free Recall Dynamics"
  • Michael Peer, University of Pennsylvania, "The human brain uses spatial schemas to represent segmented environments"
  • Salman E Qasim, University of Pennsylvania, "Gamma oscillations in the human hippocampus and amygdala support arousal-mediated memory"
  • John Sakon, University of Pennsylvania, "Hippocampal ripples signal contextually-mediated episodic recall"
  • Anna Schapiro, University of Pennsylvania, "Hippocampal replay as context-driven memory reactivation"
  • Cybelle M. Smith, University of Pennsylvania, "Learning context-dependent temporal associations across time-scales"
  • Sarah Solomon, University of Pennsylvania, "Humans and models leverage statistics across episodes to build structured category representations"
  • Wei Tang, Indiana University Bloomington, "Autocorrelated activity in the human hippocampus encodes transition patterns during visual statistical learning"
  • Zoran Tiganj, Indiana University Bloomington, "Learning temporal relationships with artificial neural networks inspired by computational models of memory"
  • Emily R. Weichart, The Ohio State University, "Common mechanisms support between- and within-trial learning dynamics"
  • Zhifang Ye, University of Oregon, "Prior experiences bias memory decisions through global pattern similarity"


Past Symposia

For information about past CEMS events, please click here.