October & November 2022
Arianna Zuanazzi presents her science/film collaborative project The Hidden Story at the Science New Wave Lab Kick-off (Imagine Science Film Festival). Dr. Zuanazzi also presents her research project Through the lens of sound (funded by NYU’s MARL Seed Award and the Diversity Innovation Grant) as part of the NYU MARL Talk Series. |
April 2022
Dana Bevilacqua was nominated as NYU’s Founder of the Month for April for co-founding ViBILLER. Partnered with co-founders Pablo Ripollés and Claire Pelofi, ViBILLER is a wearable & software package that can track physiological correlates to emotion in real time to use in triggering immersive audiovisual experiences in live music events. |
September 11 & 12, 2021
Suzanne Dikker presents her collaborative project this fall, Harmonic Dissonance, WestBeat ICK Amsterdam, an art/science experiment about human connectedness, supported by the Dutch Creative Industries Fund. |
June 17, 2021
CONGRATULATIONS to Omri Raccah for winning one of the “Best Talk” Awards at the Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness Meeting 2021 (Tel Aviv, Israel) for his work entitled “Does the Prefrontal Cortex Play an Essential Role in Consciousness? Insights from Intracranial Electrical Stimulation of the Human Brain” (paper co-authors Ned Block and Kieran C.R. Fox) |
February 5, 2020
CONGRATULATIONS to Francesco Mantegna & Omri Raccah for their amazing work presenting in NYU’s Cognition & Perception Mini-Convention today! |
David Poeppel presents “From vibrations in the ear to abstractions in the head”
Hosted by University of Dundee register here Tuesday, November 3, 2020 | 2pm CET Professor David Poeppel will present a talk that aims to describe some intuitively simple and fun but surprising results that illuminate the temporal structure of perceptual experience. From recognizing speech and melodies to building abstract mental structures, how the brain constructs and represents time reveals unexpected puzzles. The brain has rhythms – and so do music and speech. Recent research has revealed that the temporal structure of speech and music and the temporal organization of various brain structures align in systematic ways. The role that brain rhythms play in perception and cognition continues to be elucidated through studies of various types. |
Virtual Lecture-Recital
Join the Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics – NYU Center for Language, Music and Emotion (CLaME) for a lecture-recital, featuring renowned composer, pianist and professor Stefan Litwin. Inside, Outside, Private, Public — The Piano Sonata No. 28 in A Major, op. 101, marks the beginning of what is commonly referred to as Beethoven’s late style. Composed during the Vienna Congress in 1814/15 and published shortly thereafter, this work can be heard not only as ‘purely’ musical, but also as a kind of social commentary. In his online lecture-recital for CLaME, pianist and composer Stefan Litwin will uncover some of the sonata’s politically relevant layers and demonstrate how Beethoven changed his approach to composition. Date: Thursday, June 11, 2020 For any questions, feel free to reach out to us: clame@nyu.edu |
Please join us for CLaME‘s daylong workshop– “Language: Ideas and Provocations”
The workshop, the third since CLaME‘s founding, is part of a workshop series alternating between Frankfurt, Germany and New York City. Each workshop will thematically focus on specific domains within the interdisciplinary interests of the Center*.
The structure of the workshop is for each speaker to present for approximately 20 minutes, followed by at least 20-30 minutes of discussion, in a small group setting. It is supposed to be fun, lively, interesting, informative, worth attending!
When: Monday, March 9, 2020, 9 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Where: NYU Meyer Hall, 4 Washington Pl, Rm 102, New York, NY 10003
RSVP here
Featured Speakers:
Liina Pylkkänen (NYU), Jonah Katz (WVU), William Idsardi (UMD), Sam Bowman (NYU), Ailís Cournane (NYU), Janet Dean Fodor (CUNY), David Embick (UPenn), Alec Marantz (NYU)
For more information, please visit clame.nyu.edu
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3 PhD candidate positions are open in Movement Science/Social Psychology, Psychophysiology, and (Social) Neuroscience. Candidates will work in collaboration with a group of international researchers across multiple institutions to conduct movement, physiology, and hyperscanning EEG research during face-to-face communication.
** Recent M.A. or M.S. graduates with experience in mobile brain and body imaging and brain-computer-interface technology are especially encouraged to apply. ** The positions are based at the Department of Clinical Psychology at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Research and training will be carried out in collaboration with the Max Planck Center for Language, Music, and Emotion (CLaME, NYU | Frankfurt), Institut Pasteur (Paris), and Bar-Ilan University, among other institutions For a full link of details and how to apply please visit this link
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Congratulations to Henry for the Big Win!
Last weekend, Henry Valk showed up to a hackathon, found some other stragglers, and they WON the Hack the Machine: Data Science Challenge
The photo below is fellow team members presenting their “hack”…
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Congratulations, Florencia, Joan, & Pablo!
Our favorite corner– Florencia Assaneo, Joan Orpella, & Pablo Ripollés— were featured in an article for BBC Mundo: “Repite la sílaba ‘ta’ y te diremos cómos funciona tu cerebro” |
Welcome to the lab, Francesco!
Francesco Mantegna joins the Poeppel Lab in Fall 2019 as a graduate student. |
Best of Luck to our very own Laura Noejovich, who leaves us to pursue her next steps towards a career in Speech Pathology. You will be missed, Laura!
But we will see you November 2 for your debut album release concert. The Lab Fam’ll be there front and center. Tickets here! |