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UID:20260628T042913EDT-6883nbpOF7@132.216.98.100
DTSTAMP:20260628T082913Z
DESCRIPTION:The Feindel Brain and Mind Seminar Series will advance the visi
 on of Dr. William Feindel (1918–2014)\, Former Director of the Neuro (1972
 –1984)\, to constantly bridge the clinical and research realms. The talks 
 will highlight the latest advances and discoveries in neuropsychology\, co
 gnitive neuroscience\, and neuroimaging.\n\nSpeakers will include scientis
 ts from across The Neuro\, as well as colleagues and collaborators locally
  and from around the world. The series is intended to provide a virtual fo
 rum for scientists and trainees to continue to foster interdisciplinary ex
 changes on the mechanisms\, diagnosis and treatment of brain and cognitive
  disorders.\n\n\nRegister for In-Person\n\nTo watch online\, click here\n
 \nHost: Xiaoqian Chai\n\n\nStudying Memory for Natural Events Across Multi
 ple Timescales\n\nAbstract: What will you remember about this moment? Some
  details of our lives are destined to be forgotten\, while others are reta
 ined in memory for seconds\, minutes\, hours\, or even years. Information 
 from these different eras of our memories continually influences our thoug
 hts and actions in the present. Furthermore\, events in the experiential s
 tream are deeply connected to each other by factors such as shared feature
 s and causal influence\; this network of connections guides how we engage 
 encoding and retrieval processes during ongoing experience\, as well as sh
 apes the organization of episodic memories. I will discuss behavioral and 
 neuroscientific studies examining how the brain implements multiple timesc
 ales of memory\, and the prominent role that causal connections play in me
 mory for real-world events.\n\nJanice Chen\n\nAssistant Professor\, Depart
 ment of Psychological and Brain Sciences\, Johns Hopkins University\n\n\n
 \nJanice Chen's work aims to understand how we construct and retrieve memo
 ries of complex real-world episodes. Janice uses realistic stimuli (such a
 s movies and narratives) and behaviors (such as spoken recall) that contai
 n rich natural semantics and unfold continuously across multiple timescale
 s. Using novel between-brain temporal and pattern analysis methods\, Chen 
 asks how mnemonic and sensory systems operate together dynamically to crea
 te the present moment.\n
DTSTART:20260209T180000Z
DTEND:20260209T190000Z
LOCATION:De Grandpré Communications Centre\, The Neuro
SUMMARY:Feindel Brain and Mind Seminar Series: Studying Memory for Natural 
 Events Across Multiple Timescales
URL:https://www.mcgill.ca/neuro/channels/event/feindel-brain-and-mind-semin
 ar-series-studying-memory-natural-events-across-multiple-timescales-370581
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