CFP: ASSC5 - The Contents of Consciousness

Patrick Wilken patrickw at cs.monash.edu.au
Wed Dec 27 22:48:28 EST 2000


         ASSOCIATION FOR THE SCIENTIFIC STUDY OF CONSCIOUSNESS

                        5TH ANNUAL MEETING 
                   CALL FOR PAPERS & WORKSHOPS
         

                  THE CONTENTS OF CONSCIOUSNESS
             Perception, Attention, and Phenomenology

                          May 27-30, 2001
                          Duke University
                    Durham, North Carolina, USA


Consciousness has rich and diverse contents, from sensory experiences
such as vision, audition, and bodily sensations such as pain, to
non-sensory aspects such as volition, emotion, memory, and thought. All
of these conscious states can be seen as part of the contents of
consciousness.  Furthermore, most conscious states can be seen as having
representational contents of their own, in the sense that they are about
something: objects and states of affairs in the world, or states of our
own body.  The contents of these states are all presented to us, in
William James's powerful metaphor, as part of a "stream of
consciousness".

The contents of consciousness raise many important questions: Just how
rich is the content present in conscious experience?  Do the contents of
attention exhaust the contents of consciousness, or is there
consciousness outside attention?  What is the neural basis of the
representation of conscious content?  How does consciousness of our own
body differ from consciousness of the external world?  What methods are
available to monitor the contents of consciousness in an experimental
context?  What is the relationship between consciousness and
representation?  All of these questions have been actively discussed in
recent years by neuroscientists, psychologists, philosophers, and other
researchers.

The fifth conference of the Association for the Scientific Study of
Consciousness will bring together researchers from numerous disciplines
to discuss the contents of consciousness through an intensive series of
workshops, plenary lectures, symposia, paper presentations and poster
contributions extending over four days from May 27 through May 30, 2001.
 The meeting will take place in Durham, North Carolina, on the campus of
Duke University.

Topics that will be addressed include (among many others):

  * The relationship between attention and consciousness
  * The neural basis of attention and consciousness
  * The neural mechanisms of conscious representation
  * Current directions in inattentional and change blindness
  * The relationship between conscious and unconscious contents
  * Bodily awareness and pain perception
  * The relationship between consciousness, qualia, and representation
  * First-person and third-person methods for monitoring conscious contents


A partial list of plenary speakers (to be expanded) includes:

        Larry Weiskrantz (OXFORD, Experimental Psychology)
        Earl Miller (MIT, Brain and Cognitive Sciences)
        Greg McCarthy (DUKE, Brain Imaging and Analysis Center)
        Ralph Adolphs (IOWA, Neurology)
        Jeremy Wolfe (HARVARD, Center for Ophthalmic Research)
        Ron Rensink (UBC, Psychology and Computer Science)
        Owen Flanagan (DUKE, Philosophy)
        William Lycan (UNC, Philosophy)

For latest updates, please check our website:

        http://www.duke.edu/philosophy/assc5.html

The web site will be continually evolving, so please visit often for
updated information about the conference.


--------------------------
CALL FOR PAPER SUBMISSIONS
--------------------------

Although the main theme of ASSC5 is "The Contents of Consciousness"
and plenary sessions will deal largely with this theme, speakers in
concurrent sessions are invited to talk on any topic relevant to the
scientific study of consciousness. Submissions that include
physiological, psychological, philosophical, and computational
perspectives are welcome.

Submissions for both posters and talks will be accepted. Any
person may present only one submission, but may be co-author on
several. The first author should be the presenting author.  Oral
presentations will be limited to 20 minutes, to be followed by a
10-minute discussion period.

Plenary lectures, symposia, concurrent sessions, and poster sessions
will all be held on the Duke University campus.


---------------------------
CALL FOR WORKSHOP PROPOSALS
---------------------------

This is also a call for workshops. One of the aims of this meeting is
to allow researchers to gain a background in areas that they may know
little about. Towards that end a number of workshops are planned. Some
participants in the conference would be very interested in learning
about technical matters such as fMRI or other important brain imaging
techniques. Others might enjoy a seminar on a philosophical topic.  As
with papers, the focus of all workshops should naturally fit within
the overall theme of the conference. A non-exclusive list of possible
topics might include:

    -- Brain imaging techniques (e.g. fMRI, EEG, MEG, ERP)
    -- Blindsight, neglect, or other neuropsychological syndromes
    -- Computational and other theoretical models of conscious processes
    -- Conscious and unconscious processing
    -- Neural basis of attention and consciousness
    -- Current models of the visual system
    -- Consciousness and metacognition
    -- Criteria for the ascription of consciousness
    -- Philosophical issues concerning consciousness and representation
    -- Phenomenological methods for investigating consciousness

Workshops will be held in parallel sessions on the morning and
afternoon of May 27th. Each workshop is intended to last approximately
three hours. The sizes of workshops will vary between a minimum of 10
to a maximum of around 25 people. Workshops that do not achieve the
minimum enrollment of 10 people will not be offered. Workshop
presenters will receive a $500 honorarium.


-----------------------------------------
SUBMISSION OF PAPERS & WORKSHOP PROPOSALS
-----------------------------------------

WORKSHOP PROPOSALS MUST BE RECEIVED BY JANUARY 31, 2001.

Send Workshop  presentation abstracts to: metzinger at uni-mainz.de


PAPER SUBMISSIONS MUST BE RECEIVED BY FEBRUARY 15th, 2001.

Send Oral (paper) or Poster presentation abstracts to: assc5 at duke.edu


All submissions must include the following information in the order
listed below and MUST BE SUBMITTED ELECTRONICALLY.  Please note that there
are two different addresses for paper and workshop proposal submissions:

*** Note: Please reserve these addresses exclusively for submission of
abstracts.  Questions concerning the conference can be sent to:

                        fb3 at duke.edu


---------------------
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
---------------------

1. Conference ID (i.e., ASSC5), SURNAME of first author and descriptor
(WORKSHOP or PAPER/POSTER) in the "subject" field of the email header.

        e.g.:  ASSC5, Smith, WORKSHOP

2. Name (first line), affiliation (second line), and ASSC membership
status of each co-author indicated with asterisk (asterisk = member).

        e.g.:   Smith, A.B.* and Jones, C.D.
                University of Oxford, U.K.

3. An abstract of up to 200 words for paper and poster submissions or
   of up to 500 words for workshop proposals.

4. Complete contact information for the author with whom the scientific
   program committee will interact with about the submission:

        - Name
        - Institutional affiliation
        - Postal address
        - Email address
        - Telephone and fax numbers

In addition paper and poster proposals should include the following
information:

5. One or two keywords describing the domain of your contribution

6. An indication of whether an ORAL or POSTER presentation is requested.

7. An indication of your willingness to present in the other format if
   your proposal cannot be included in the program as per your stated
   preference.

8. If you do not receive confirmation of receipt of your submission in
   10 days, send an e-mail inquiry to: fb3 at duke.edu.


------------
REGISTRATION
------------

Deadline for early registration: April 1, 2001.

Registration fees:         Early                Late

Non-members:               $ 175                $ 225
ASSC members:              $ 140                $ 190
Students/Postdocs:         $  75                $ 125
Student ASSC members:      $  40                $  90

Note: All fees should be paid in U.S. dollars. Payment with credit cards
will be possible.

To register, please follow the instructions available from the
conference website as they become available:

        http://www.duke.edu/philosophy/assc5.html


-------------------
FURTHER INFORMATION
-------------------

All meetings and poster presentations will be held at the Duke
University campus. Accommodations will be available both at Durham
hotels at discounted rates and at air-conditioned single/double Duke
dormitories.

Please check the website for information about accommodation options, as
well as for further information about the paper and poster submissions;
registration and submission forms; information about travel to Durham,
North Carolina; and information about the scientific Program of the
meeting.

Tune in frequently -- the site will be constantly updated to reflect the
latest information. To inquire about any aspect of the conference,
please write to the local organizer at:

                        fb3 at duke.edu


To find out more about the Association for the Scientific Study of
Consciousness, and to apply for membership, please consult:

        http://assc.caltech.edu

The ASSC publishes two scientific journals about which further
information is available from the following websites:

        Consciousness & Cognition: http://www.apnet.com/www/journal/cc.htm

        PSYCHE: http://psyche.cs.monash.edu.au/


ASSC-5 Conference Committee:

Guven Guzeldere (Duke University, co-chair)
Ron Mangun (Duke University, co-chair)
David Chalmers (University of Arizona)
Philip Merikle (University of Waterloo)
Thomas Metzinger (Johannes Gutenberg-Universitat Mainz)




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