202510.16
[Symposium] Understanding Mind and Society
Posted in EVENT
With the rapid development of computational science and psychological theory, researchers now have an increasingly diverse set of tools to explore the human mind and social phenomena. However, new opportunities also come with new challenges: how can we effectively integrate emerging technologies into our own research? This symposium focused on methodological innovation, exploring multiple ways to apply new approaches in research—including novel experimental paradigms, advanced data-analytic methods, and theoretical frameworks. By combining theoretical, experimental, and computational perspectives, we aimed to deepen and integrate our understanding of the human mind within its social context.
Program
Prof. HU Chuan-Peng: Self-Bias and Its Boundaries: a Computational Perspective
Dr. DING Yi: Rethinking Self-Evaluation: a Socially Grounded Framework
Dr. LIU Chunlin: Conversing with AI inside the Scanner: a Novel fMRI Paradigm for Studying Real-Time Human–AI Dialogue
Organized: Cognitive Neuroscience Application Center (CogNAC)
With the rapid development of computational science and psychological theory, researchers now have an increasingly diverse set of tools to explore the human mind and social phenomena. However, new opportunities also come with new challenges: how can we effectively integrate emerging technologies into our own research? This symposium focused on methodological innovation, exploring multiple ways to apply new approaches in research—including novel experimental paradigms, advanced data-analytic methods, and theoretical frameworks. By combining theoretical, experimental, and computational perspectives, we aimed to deepen and integrate our understanding of the human mind within its social context.
Program
- Prof. HU Chuan-Peng: Self-Bias and Its Boundaries: a Computational Perspective
- Dr. DING Yi: Rethinking Self-Evaluation: a Socially Grounded Framework
- Dr. LIU Chunlin: Conversing with AI inside the Scanner: a Novel fMRI Paradigm for Studying Real-Time Human–AI Dialogue
Organized: Cognitive Neuroscience Application Center (CogNAC)