Difference between revisions of "CEMS 2024"

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==Schedule==
 
==Schedule==
<!-- ''If you are presenting and have scheduling conflicts, please let us know as soon as possible by emailing [mailto:context.symposium@gmail.com context.symposium@gmail.com]''-->
 
  
[[File:CEMS2024_Schedule.png|1050px|center|link=]]
+
{| width="95%"
 +
! colspan="2"| '''Thursday (5/30/23)'''
 +
! colspan="2"| '''Friday (5/31/23)'''
 +
|-
 +
| 8:20 || '''Breakfast & Registration''' || ||
 +
|-
 +
| 8:50 || '''Welcome and Opening Remarks:''' Michael Jacob Kahana (University of Pennsylvania) || 8:20 || '''Breakfast'''
 +
|-
 +
| || <div style="text-align: center;"> ''Spoken Session 1''|| || <div style="text-align: center;">''Spoken Session 1''
 +
|-
 +
| 9:00 || '''Christopher Baldassano''' ''(Columbia University)'': Accurate predictions facilitate robust memory encoding independently from stimulus probability  || 9:00 || '''Gordon D. Logan''' ''(Vanderbilt University)'': No Position-Specific Interference from Prior Lists in Cued Recognition: A Challenge for Position Coding (and Other) Theories of Serial Memory
 +
|-
 +
| 9:20 || '''Kate Nussenbaum''' ''(Princeton Neuroscience Institute)'': Reinforcement learning increasingly shapes memory specificity from childhood to adulthood || 9:20 || '''Jeremy B. Caplan''' ''(University of Alberta)'': Attentional subsetting theory: strength in small numbers
 +
|-
 +
| 9:40  || '''David J. Halpern''' ''(University of Pennsylvania)'': Study-Phase Reinstatement: Encoding Spontaneous Thoughts as Memories || 9:40 || '''Wei Tang''' ''(Indiana University Bloomington)'': A hidden Markov framework for brain representations of temporal regularity
 +
|-
 +
| 10:00 || '''BREAK'''  || 10:00 || '''BREAK'''
 +
|-
 +
| || <div style="text-align: center;"> ''Spoken Session 2''|| || <div style="text-align: center;">''Spoken Session 2''
 +
|-
 +
| 10:20 || '''James Antony''' ''(Cal Poly)'': Causal network properties predict memory organization for non-linear narratives  || 10:20 || '''Ashley Williams''' ''(University of Pennsylvania)'': Prefrontal Modulation of the Hippocampus Supports Successful Switching Between Opposing Task Goals
 +
|-
 +
| 10:40 || '''Youssef Ezzyat''' ''(Wesleyan University)'': Neural activity differentiates novel and learned event boundaries  || 10:40 || '''Sebastian Michelmann''' ''(New York University)'': Tracing the neural underpinnings of memory search across slowly unfurling states
 +
|-
 +
| 11:00  || '''Nicole Long''' ''(University of Virginia)'': Bottom-up or top-down? How to induce the retrieval state  || 11:00 || '''Qihong Lu''' ''(Columbia University)'': Episodic memory supports the acquisition of structured task representations
 +
|-
 +
| 11:20  || '''Rui Cao''' ''(Boston University)'': Ramping cells in rodent mPFC encodes time to past and future events via real Laplace transform || 11:20 || '''Samantha S Cohen''' ''(Temple University)''Pattern Completion and Pattern Separation during Early childhood
 +
|-
 +
| 11:40  || '''LUNCH'''  || 11:40 || '''LUNCH'''
 +
|-
 +
| 12:50  ||  '''Keynote Address: Anthony Wagner''' ''(Stanford University)'' || 12:50 || '''Poster Session 2'''
 +
|-
 +
| 1:50  || '''Group Photo'''  || 2:10 || '''Data Blitz:'''
 +
|-
 +
| 2:00  || '''BREAK''' ||  ||  1. Adam Broitman ''(University of Pennsylvania)'', EEG Spectral Features Capture Effects of Aging on Attention and Memory
 +
|-
 +
| 2:20  || '''Poster session 1''' ||  ||  2. Rolando Masís-Obando ''(Princeton University/Johns Hopkins University)'', How strong is your memory palace? Reliable room representations predict subsequent memory for placed objects
 +
|-
 +
| 3:50  || '''Data Blitz:''' ||  ||  3. Melisa Gumus ''(University of Toronto)'', Learning regularities and exceptions are supported by distinct hippocampal pathways as revealed by diffusion-weighted functional footprints
 +
|-
 +
|  ||  1. Qiong Zhang ''(Rutgers University - New Brunswick)'', Optimal Metacognitive Control of Memory Recall ||  ||  4. Andrei Amatuni ''(University of Texas at Austin)'', Probabilistic inference of latent causes develops through adolescence
 +
|-
 +
|  ||  2. Gabriel Kressin Palacios ''(Johns Hopkins University)'', Blocking Persistent Mental Content ||  ||  5. Wangjing Yu ''(Columbia University)'', Social and semantic relationships shape temporal memory in a virtual escape room game
 +
|-
 +
|  ||  3. Victoria Schelkun ''(Columbia University)'', Hippocampal context maintenance and temporal pattern separation support episodic memory ||  ||  6. Ian Bright ''(National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke)'', A Multi-scale Representation of Temporal Context in the Human Anterior Temporal Lobe
 +
|-
 +
|  ||  4. Eric Cole ''(Georgia Tech and Emory University)'', Stimulation-evoked connectivity predicts functional changes in the human temporal lobe ||  ||  7. Emily Cowan ''(Temple University)'', A computational model of replay-facilitated retroactive memory effects
 +
|-
 +
|  ||  5. Isabelle Moore ''(University of Virginia)'', Effects of aging on memory brain state dynamics || 3:10 || '''BREAK'''
 +
|-
 +
|  ||  6. Xian Li ''(Johns Hopkins University)'', Agency enhances individuality in memory for narratives ||  || <div style="text-align: center;">''Spoken Session 3''
 +
|-
 +
|  ||  7. Nelly Matorina ''(University of Toronto)'', Remote autobiographical memories have wider spatial scales and are more contextually rigid than recent memories || 3:30 || '''Raphael Kaplan''' ''(Universitat Jaume I)'': Relational Episodic Inference for Episodic Simulation
 +
|-
 +
|  ||  8. Ameeruddin Ghouse ''(Universitat Jaume I)'', The penumbra of social episodic content: Enhanced retention of irrelevant social information during episodic memory-guided decision-making || 3:50 || '''Derek J. Huffman''' ''(Colby College)'': Cognitive and neural representations of real-world spatial environments
 +
|-
 +
|  ||  9. Nathan Francis Gillespie ''(University at Albany, State University of New York)'', Using Natural Language Processing to Understand Individual Differences: Integrating Quantitative and Qualitative Approaches to Memory and Perception || 4:10 || '''Emily R. Weichart''' ''(Utah State University)'': Gaze as a direct input for encoding structure in models of human learning
 +
|-
 +
| 5:00 || '''End''' ||  4:30 || '''Gregory E. Cox ''' ''(University at Albany, State University of New York)'': Integration of Information Across Separate Events
 +
|-
 +
| ||  ||  4:50 || '''Closing Remarks'''
 +
|-
 +
| ||  || 5:00 || '''End'''
 +
|-
 +
|}
  
 
Here is the list of poster presenters:
 
Here is the list of poster presenters:
 
<!--
 
'''Keynote speaker: Anthony Wagner'''
 
 
'''Spoken presentation:'''
 
* Ashley Williams
 
* Christopher Baldassano
 
* David J. Halpern
 
* Derek J. Huffman
 
* Emily R. Weichart
 
* Gordon D. Logan
 
* Gregory E. Cox
 
* James Antony
 
* Jeremy B. Caplan
 
* Kate Nussenbaum
 
* Nicole Long
 
* Qihong Lu
 
* Raphael Kaplan
 
* Rui Cao
 
* Samantha S Cohen
 
* Sebastian Michelmann
 
* Wei Tang
 
* Youssef Ezzyat
 
 
'''Data blitz:'''
 
*Adam Broitman
 
*Ameeruddin Ghouse
 
*Andrei Amatuni
 
*Emily Cowan
 
*Eric Cole
 
*Gabriel Kressin Palacios
 
*Ian Bright
 
*Isabelle Moore
 
*Melisa Gumus
 
*Nathan Francis Gillespie
 
*Nelly Matorina
 
*Qiong Zhang
 
*Rolando Masís-Obando
 
*Victoria Schelkun
 
*Wangjing Yu
 
*Xian Li
 
-->
 
  
 
*Aakash Sarkar
 
*Aakash Sarkar
Line 139: Line 160:
 
*Uma Mohan
 
*Uma Mohan
 
*Xinming Xu
 
*Xinming Xu
 
 
{| width="100%"
 
! colspan="2"| '''Thursday (5/30/23)'''
 
! colspan="2"| '''Friday (5/31/23)'''
 
|-
 
| 8:20 || '''Breakfast & Registration''' || ||
 
|-
 
| 8:50 || '''Welcome and Opening Remarks:''' Michael Jacob Kahana (University of Pennsylvania) || 8:20 || '''Breakfast'''
 
|-
 
| || <div style="text-align: center;"> ''Spoken Session 1''|| || <div style="text-align: center;">''Spoken Session 1''
 
|-
 
| 9:00 || '''Christopher Baldassano''' ''(Columbia University)'': Accurate predictions facilitate robust memory encoding independently from stimulus probability  || 9:00 || '''Gordon D. Logan''' ''(Vanderbilt University)'': No Position-Specific Interference from Prior Lists in Cued Recognition: A Challenge for Position Coding (and Other) Theories of Serial Memory
 
|-
 
| 9:20 || '''Kate Nussenbaum''' ''(Princeton Neuroscience Institute)'': Reinforcement learning increasingly shapes memory specificity from childhood to adulthood || 9:20 || '''Jeremy B. Caplan''' ''(University of Alberta)'': Attentional subsetting theory: strength in small numbers
 
|-
 
| 9:40  || '''David J. Halpern''' ''(University of Pennsylvania)'': Study-Phase Reinstatement: Encoding Spontaneous Thoughts as Memories || 9:40 || '''Wei Tang''' ''(Indiana University Bloomington)'': A hidden Markov framework for brain representations of temporal regularity
 
|-
 
| 10:00 || '''BREAK'''  || 10:00 || '''BREAK'''
 
|-
 
| || <div style="text-align: center;"> ''Spoken Session 2''|| || <div style="text-align: center;">''Spoken Session 2''
 
|-
 
| 10:20 || '''James Antony''' ''(Cal Poly)'': Causal network properties predict memory organization for non-linear narratives  || 10:20 || '''Ashley Williams''' ''(University of Pennsylvania)'': Prefrontal Modulation of the Hippocampus Supports Successful Switching Between Opposing Task Goals
 
|-
 
| 10:40 || '''Youssef Ezzyat''' ''(Wesleyan University)'': Neural activity differentiates novel and learned event boundaries  || 10:40 || '''Sebastian Michelmann''' ''(New York University)'': Tracing the neural underpinnings of memory search across slowly unfurling states
 
|-
 
| 11:00  || '''Nicole Long''' ''(University of Virginia)'': Bottom-up or top-down? How to induce the retrieval state  || 11:00 || '''Qihong Lu''' ''(Columbia University)'': Episodic memory supports the acquisition of structured task representations
 
|-
 
| 11:20  || '''Rui Cao''' ''(Boston University)'': Ramping cells in rodent mPFC encodes time to past and future events via real Laplace transform || 11:20 || '''Samantha S Cohen''' ''(Temple University)''Pattern Completion and Pattern Separation during Early childhood
 
|-
 
| 11:40  || '''LUNCH'''  || 11:40 || '''LUNCH'''
 
|-
 
| 12:50  ||  '''Keynote Address: Anthony Wagner''' ''(Stanford University)'' || 12:50 || '''Poster Session 2'''
 
|-
 
| 1:50  || '''Group Photo'''  || 2:10 || '''Data Blitz:'''
 
|-
 
| 2:00  || '''BREAK''' ||  ||  1. Adam Broitman ''(University of Pennsylvania)'', EEG Spectral Features Capture Effects of Aging on Attention and Memory
 
|-
 
| 2:20  || '''Poster session 1''' ||  ||  2. Rolando Masís-Obando ''(Princeton University/Johns Hopkins University)'', How strong is your memory palace? Reliable room representations predict subsequent memory for placed objects
 
|-
 
| 3:50  || '''Data Blitz:''' ||  ||  3. Melisa Gumus ''(University of Toronto)'', Learning regularities and exceptions are supported by distinct hippocampal pathways as revealed by diffusion-weighted functional footprints
 
|-
 
|  ||  1. Qiong Zhang ''(Rutgers University - New Brunswick)'', Optimal Metacognitive Control of Memory Recall ||  ||  4. Andrei Amatuni ''(University of Texas at Austin)'', Probabilistic inference of latent causes develops through adolescence
 
|-
 
|  ||  2. Gabriel Kressin Palacios ''(Johns Hopkins University)'', Blocking Persistent Mental Content ||  ||  5. Wangjing Yu ''(Columbia University)'', Social and semantic relationships shape temporal memory in a virtual escape room game
 
|-
 
|  ||  3. Victoria Schelkun ''(Columbia University)'', Hippocampal context maintenance and temporal pattern separation support episodic memory ||  ||  6. Ian Bright ''(National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke)'', A Multi-scale Representation of Temporal Context in the Human Anterior Temporal Lobe
 
|-
 
|  ||  4. Eric Cole ''(Georgia Tech and Emory University)'', Stimulation-evoked connectivity predicts functional changes in the human temporal lobe ||  ||  7. Emily Cowan ''(Temple University)'', A computational model of replay-facilitated retroactive memory effects
 
|-
 
|  ||  5. Isabelle Moore ''(University of Virginia)'', Effects of aging on memory brain state dynamics || 3:10 || '''BREAK'''
 
|-
 
|  ||  6. Xian Li ''(Johns Hopkins University)'', Agency enhances individuality in memory for narratives ||  || <div style="text-align: center;">''Spoken Session 3''
 
|-
 
|  ||  7. Nelly Matorina ''(University of Toronto)'', Remote autobiographical memories have wider spatial scales and are more contextually rigid than recent memories || 3:30 || '''Raphael Kaplan''' ''(Universitat Jaume I)'': Relational Episodic Inference for Episodic Simulation
 
|-
 
|  ||  8. Ameeruddin Ghouse ''(Universitat Jaume I)'', The penumbra of social episodic content: Enhanced retention of irrelevant social information during episodic memory-guided decision-making || 3:50 || '''Derek J. Huffman''' ''(Colby College)'': Cognitive and neural representations of real-world spatial environments
 
|-
 
|  ||  9. Nathan Francis Gillespie ''(University at Albany, State University of New York)'', Using Natural Language Processing to Understand Individual Differences: Integrating Quantitative and Qualitative Approaches to Memory and Perception || 4:10 || '''Emily R. Weichart''' ''(Utah State University)'': Gaze as a direct input for encoding structure in models of human learning
 
|-
 
| 5:00 || '''End''' ||  4:30 || '''Gregory E. Cox ''' ''(University at Albany, State University of New York)'': Integration of Information Across Separate Events
 
|-
 
| ||  ||  4:50 || '''Closing Remarks'''
 
|-
 
| ||  || 5:00 || '''End'''
 
|-
 
|}
 
  
 
<!--
 
<!--

Revision as of 20:13, 3 May 2024


CEMS logoHD.png
CEMS 2019

This year's Context and Episodic Memory Symposium (CEMS) will take place at the Logan Hotel in Philadelphia, on May 30 and 31st, 2024.

We are not accepting abstract submissions for CEMS 2024 anymore.

If you have any questions, please contact: context.symposium@gmail.com

Venue and Hotel Reservations

The venue for CEMS 2024 will be The Logan Hotel, located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Click here to view the location on Google Maps.


Schedule

Thursday (5/30/23) Friday (5/31/23)
8:20 Breakfast & Registration
8:50 Welcome and Opening Remarks: Michael Jacob Kahana (University of Pennsylvania) 8:20 Breakfast
Spoken Session 1
Spoken Session 1
9:00 Christopher Baldassano (Columbia University): Accurate predictions facilitate robust memory encoding independently from stimulus probability 9:00 Gordon D. Logan (Vanderbilt University): No Position-Specific Interference from Prior Lists in Cued Recognition: A Challenge for Position Coding (and Other) Theories of Serial Memory
9:20 Kate Nussenbaum (Princeton Neuroscience Institute): Reinforcement learning increasingly shapes memory specificity from childhood to adulthood 9:20 Jeremy B. Caplan (University of Alberta): Attentional subsetting theory: strength in small numbers
9:40 David J. Halpern (University of Pennsylvania): Study-Phase Reinstatement: Encoding Spontaneous Thoughts as Memories 9:40 Wei Tang (Indiana University Bloomington): A hidden Markov framework for brain representations of temporal regularity
10:00 BREAK 10:00 BREAK
Spoken Session 2
Spoken Session 2
10:20 James Antony (Cal Poly): Causal network properties predict memory organization for non-linear narratives 10:20 Ashley Williams (University of Pennsylvania): Prefrontal Modulation of the Hippocampus Supports Successful Switching Between Opposing Task Goals
10:40 Youssef Ezzyat (Wesleyan University): Neural activity differentiates novel and learned event boundaries 10:40 Sebastian Michelmann (New York University): Tracing the neural underpinnings of memory search across slowly unfurling states
11:00 Nicole Long (University of Virginia): Bottom-up or top-down? How to induce the retrieval state 11:00 Qihong Lu (Columbia University): Episodic memory supports the acquisition of structured task representations
11:20 Rui Cao (Boston University): Ramping cells in rodent mPFC encodes time to past and future events via real Laplace transform 11:20 Samantha S Cohen (Temple University)Pattern Completion and Pattern Separation during Early childhood
11:40 LUNCH 11:40 LUNCH
12:50 Keynote Address: Anthony Wagner (Stanford University) 12:50 Poster Session 2
1:50 Group Photo 2:10 Data Blitz:
2:00 BREAK 1. Adam Broitman (University of Pennsylvania), EEG Spectral Features Capture Effects of Aging on Attention and Memory
2:20 Poster session 1 2. Rolando Masís-Obando (Princeton University/Johns Hopkins University), How strong is your memory palace? Reliable room representations predict subsequent memory for placed objects
3:50 Data Blitz: 3. Melisa Gumus (University of Toronto), Learning regularities and exceptions are supported by distinct hippocampal pathways as revealed by diffusion-weighted functional footprints
1. Qiong Zhang (Rutgers University - New Brunswick), Optimal Metacognitive Control of Memory Recall 4. Andrei Amatuni (University of Texas at Austin), Probabilistic inference of latent causes develops through adolescence
2. Gabriel Kressin Palacios (Johns Hopkins University), Blocking Persistent Mental Content 5. Wangjing Yu (Columbia University), Social and semantic relationships shape temporal memory in a virtual escape room game
3. Victoria Schelkun (Columbia University), Hippocampal context maintenance and temporal pattern separation support episodic memory 6. Ian Bright (National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke), A Multi-scale Representation of Temporal Context in the Human Anterior Temporal Lobe
4. Eric Cole (Georgia Tech and Emory University), Stimulation-evoked connectivity predicts functional changes in the human temporal lobe 7. Emily Cowan (Temple University), A computational model of replay-facilitated retroactive memory effects
5. Isabelle Moore (University of Virginia), Effects of aging on memory brain state dynamics 3:10 BREAK
6. Xian Li (Johns Hopkins University), Agency enhances individuality in memory for narratives
Spoken Session 3
7. Nelly Matorina (University of Toronto), Remote autobiographical memories have wider spatial scales and are more contextually rigid than recent memories 3:30 Raphael Kaplan (Universitat Jaume I): Relational Episodic Inference for Episodic Simulation
8. Ameeruddin Ghouse (Universitat Jaume I), The penumbra of social episodic content: Enhanced retention of irrelevant social information during episodic memory-guided decision-making 3:50 Derek J. Huffman (Colby College): Cognitive and neural representations of real-world spatial environments
9. Nathan Francis Gillespie (University at Albany, State University of New York), Using Natural Language Processing to Understand Individual Differences: Integrating Quantitative and Qualitative Approaches to Memory and Perception 4:10 Emily R. Weichart (Utah State University): Gaze as a direct input for encoding structure in models of human learning
5:00 End 4:30 Gregory E. Cox (University at Albany, State University of New York): Integration of Information Across Separate Events
4:50 Closing Remarks
5:00 End

Here is the list of poster presenters:

  • Aakash Sarkar
  • Abigail Mundorf
  • Adam Osth
  • Aditya Rao
  • Ami Falk
  • Anup Das
  • Augustin C. Hennings
  • Austin Greene
  • Blake L. Elliott
  • Brian Winston
  • Buddhika Bellana
  • Charlotte Cornell
  • Chenyu Wang
  • Chong Zhao
  • Christopher Hall
  • Cody Dong
  • Daniella Rafla
  • David Andrew Zarrin
  • David F Gregory
  • Devyn Smith
  • Elita Lee
  • Geoffrey Ward
  • Haydn Herrema
  • Hemali Angne
  • James Mochizuki-Freeman
  • Jennifer Fiedler
  • Jiang Mao
  • Jie Sun
  • Jordan Gunn
  • Joseph Kahana
  • Joseph Sommer
  • Katherine Aboud
  • Kelsey Sundby
  • Linda Hoffman
  • Luca D Kolibius
  • Lucy Owen
  • Luke Pemberton
  • Lynn Lohnas
  • Mason McClay
  • Max Weinstein
  • Maya Geva-Sagiv
  • Md Rysul Kabir
  • Michelle A. Dollois
  • Muhammad Bilal Khan
  • Nathaniel R. Greene
  • Neal W Morton
  • Neomi Mizrachi
  • Nick Ichien
  • Nikolaus Salvatore
  • Pierce C. Johnson
  • Rebecca Waugh
  • Riley DeHaan
  • Ryan A. Colyer
  • Ryan Kirkpatrick
  • Sameer Sabharwal-Siddiqi
  • Sean Polyn
  • Soroush Mirjalili
  • Tamara Gedankien
  • Taylor Chamberlain
  • Uma Mohan
  • Xinming Xu


Registration

Registration deadline: May 10th, 2024

Click here to register

We are thrilled to announce that registration is now open!

Registration prices are as follow:

$425 for non-faculty
$500 for faculty

Conference registration includes breakfast, lunch, and refreshments on all conference days.

Cancellations before May 1 will be refunded, subject to a 10% cancellation fee. We apologize that we will not be able to provide refunds after May 1.

Past Symposia

For information about past CEMS events, please click here.