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METHOD:PUBLISH
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T080901Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20130625T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20130626T180000
SUMMARY:Minds in Common
UID:20260611T151639Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Paris
LOCATION:Paris\, France
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>Speakers</strong><br></p>\n<p>Estela Bicho (University of Munho)\; Guy Kahane (University of Oxford)\; Etienne Koechlin (Ecole Normale Sup&eacute\;rieure)\; Ivana Konvalinka (Technical University of Denmark)\; Christina Pawlowitsch (University Paris 2)\; Michael Bang Pedersen (University of Aarhus)\; Martin Pickering (University of Edinburgh)\; Nicholas Shea (King&rsquo\;s College London)\; Luc Steels (Vrije Universiteit Brussel)\; Tad Zawidzki (George Washington University).<br><br><strong>Central Research Questions</strong><br></p>\n<p>The second Aarhus - Paris conference in social ontology and social cognition addresses the role of coordination and common ground in the constitution of the social reality\, as well as their relations within the architecture of human social cognition. Coordination of behaviour depends on common ground at multiple levels: a shared understanding of who is coordinating with whom\, what their goals and strategies are\, what objects\, people and events are relevant to the shared goal. Common ground may include things as different as physical bodies\, artefacts\, spaces\, linguistic contexts\, mutual knowledge and the background of human-like biological propensities. On the other hand\, coordination also creates and sustains common ground\, e.g. by means of bodily synchronization\, conversational and mental alignment\, the sharing of conventional worlds and situation models.&nbsp\;<br><br>What psychological\, neural\, cultural\, evolutionary processes facilitate the cultivation and maintenance of common ground as a condition for coordinated interaction? How are such processes related to each other? How are we to model top-down and bottom-up interactions among these processes? What is the role played by development in easing coordination through common ground? How have dual processes of biological evolution and of cultural acquisition contributed to the mutual interplay of coordination and common ground?<br><br><strong>Registration</strong><br>Attendance is free of charge\, but space is limited. Please register by sending an email to:<em>mattia.gallotti@gmail.com</a></em>.<br><br><strong>Scientific Organization</strong><br>Mattia Gallotti (Jean Nicod Institute\, Paris) &amp\; John Michael (University of Aarhus)<br><br>This conference is jointly funded by the Interacting Minds Centre at the University of Aarhus (http://interactingminds.au.dk/</a>)\, and by the Jean Nicod Institute at the Ecole Normale Sup&eacute\;rieure in Paris</p>
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