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Distinguished Lectures in Humanities: Perception, Language, and Knowledge Representation in the Human Brain (只有英文版本)

會議/講座

講者

Prof Yanchao BI

備註

The talk will be conducted in English.

摘要

Abstract

Human brain stores tremendous amount of knowledge about this world, which is the foundation of object recognition, language, thought, and reasoning. What’s the neural codes of semantic knowledge representation? Is the knowledge “roses are red” simply the memory trace of perceiving the color of roses, stored in the brain circuits within color-sensitive neural systems? What about knowledge that is not directly perceived by senses, such as “freedom” or “rationality”? I will present a set of studies from my lab that addresses this issue, including object color (and other visual) knowledge in several populations (congenitally blind humans, color blind humans, and typically developed macaques), and semantic neural representation in individuals with early language experience deprivation. The findings point to the existence of two different types of knowledge coding in different regions of the human brain – one conservative, based on sensory experiences, and one based on language-derived machinery that support fully nonsensory information. The relationship between these two types of knowledge coding will be discussed.


About the speaker

Yanchao BI is a ChangJiang professor and Boya professor. She received her PhD from the Department of Psychology, Harvard University in 2006. She serves as senior editors at Journals Elife and Neurobiology of Language. She has won various awards, scholarships or recognitions such as “The National Science Fund for Distinguished Young Scholars”, Sackler scholar of psychophysiology, Fulbright scholar, and “rising star” in the Observer by the APS. Her work focuses on the study of functional and neural architecture associated with knowledge representation, semantic memory and language.

講者

Prof Yanchao BI

Professor

School of Psychological and Cognitive Sciences, IDG/McGovern Institute for Brain Research, Institute of Artificial Intelligence, Peking University, and School of Psychology, Beijing Normal University

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