In the Department of Cognitive Science in the College of Arts and Sciences at Case Western Reserve University, we’re proud to host forward-thinking scholars to share their insights with our campus community.
Upcoming Colloquia
Stay up to date with upcoming events we’ll be hosting.
The Neural Orchestra: Instruments of Mind
Francesca Brittan Associate Professor, Department of Music | Case Western Reserve University Crawford Hall, Room 618 Abstract: In the last several decades, research (both professional and public-facing) across the cognitive neurosciences has drawn increasingly frequently on the figure of the “…
Recent and Past Colloquia
Learn about recent colloquia we’ve hosted in the department below. A PDF of past colloquia events older than the past three years are available for download below. Event records date back to 2006.
- 2014 Past Colloquia - Department of Cognitive Science
- 2013 Past Colloquia - Department of Cognitive Science
- 2012 Past Colloquia - Department of Cognitive Science
- 2011 Past Colloquia - Department of Cognitive Science
- 2010 Past Colloquia - Department of Cognitive Science
- 2009 Past Colloquia - Department of Cognitive Science
- 2008 Past Colloquia - Department of Cognitive Science
- 2007 Past Colloquia - Department of Cognitive Science
- 2006 Past Colloquia - Department of Cognitive Science
Demo of the Red Hen Lab Rapid Annotator 2.0
Presented by Peter Uhrig
The Evolution of Language: A Gesture-First Approach and its Relevance to Cognitive Science at CWRU
Presented by Todd Oakley
Artificial Creativity
Presented by Timothy Beal, Distinguished University Professor, Florence Harkness Professor of Religion, CWRU Location: Case Western University; Crawford 618
Fine-grained Semantic Representations for Multimodal Data Analysis
Presented by Tiago Torrent, Federal University of Juiz de Fora – FrameNet Brasil
Modeling the multimodal flow: gesture and semantics
Presented by Cristóbal Pagán Cánovas, Ramón y Cajal Assistant Research Professor, Department of English Philology, University of Murcia; Alexander von Humboldt Fellow, Quantitative Linguistics, University of Tübingen