[Biomedical-cybernetics] The #4 reason for submitting an abstract for the 25th Annual International SCTPLS Conference

Guastello, Stephen stephen.guastello at marquette.edu
Tue Apr 28 07:38:44 CEST 2015


  THE #4 REASON FOR SUBMITTING AN ABSTRACT FOR THE 25TH ANNUAL  
INTERNATIONAL SCTPLS CONFERENCE IS…

ALL THE SUNSHINE YOU COULD POSSIBLY WANT TO ESCAPE!

CALL FOR ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS, SYMPOSIA, AND POSTERS

Submissions deadline is April 30, 2015.

Submit your abstract(s) electronically at
http://www.societyforchaostheory.org/conf/2015/cfp

REGISTRATION for the conference and workshops is open
https://www.societyforchaostheory.org/conf/2015



The SCTPLS Executive Committee is excited that
Scott Kelso, PhD
will be one of our keynote speakers at the

25th Annual International Conference
29-31 July, 2015
University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA

Celebrate with us 25 consecutive years of nonlinear dynamics  
conferences!

Night Thoughts of a Dynamicist:
Key Concepts and Ideas behind Coordination Dynamics

Richard Feynman once said something like “We would not know where we  
are stupid until we stick our necks out.” In this talk I’ll discuss  
some of the key concepts and ideas behind coordination dynamics, the  
science of coordination, where they came from and why they matter.  
This will include some historical aspects including early conferences  
and interactions with certain prominent scientists. Then I’ll stick my  
neck out and make a linkage between consciousness and coordination.  
Rather than being a novel state of highly integrated information or  
matter, conscious agency will be seen to emerge as a disorder-order  
transition of a coordination dynamics defined in an appropriate space  
of relevant variables.

Scott Kelso holds the Glenwood and Martha Creech Eminent Scholar Chair  
in Science at Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton where he is  
also Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience, Biological Sciences and  
Biomedical Sciences. He is the (Visiting) Professor of Computational  
Neuroscience at University of Ulster's Intelligent Systems Research  
Centre in Derry, N. Ireland where he guides a young team of  
researchers. From 1978 to 1985 Kelso was Senior Research Scientist at  
Yale University’s Haskins Laboratories in New Haven, Connecticut. In  
1985 he founded the first Center for Complex Systems and Brain  
Sciences in the US at Florida Atlantic and also led a NIH-funded  
National Training Program in this new interdisciplinary field. For  
most of his scientific career Kelso has been trying to understand how  
human beings (and human brains)—individually and together—coordinate  
behavior on multiple levels, all the way from cellular to cognitive  
and social behavior. He is considered an originator of Coordination  
Dynamics, a theoretical and empirical framework geared to  
understanding the functional coordination of living things. Kelso is  
the recipient of a number of awards including the MERIT, Senior  
Scientist and Director's Innovation Awards from NIH, the Distinguished  
Alumni Research Achievement Award from the University of Wisconsin,  
Docteur Honoris Causa from the Republic of France and the University  
of Toulouse (est. 1228). In 2007 he was honored to be chosen as Pierre  
de Fermat Laureate and in 2011 he received the Bernstein Prize. Kelso  
is a Fellow of AAAS, APA, APS and SEP. Trained in a specifically  
interdisciplinary setting, his PhD students and Postdocs have gone on  
to careers in some of the top academic and research institutions in  
the world.

WE WANT TO HEAR ABOUT YOUR WORK, TOO!




  
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