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2006 Lecture Series
2005 Lecture Series
2004 Lecture Series
2003 Lecture Series
2002 Lecture Series
2001 Lecture Series
2000 Lecture Series
1999 Lecture Series
1998 Lecture Series
1997 Lecture Series
1996 Lecture Series
1995 Lecture Series
What Makes Human’s Smart? Lessons from Children
Although animals easily learn about biologically important events such as finding food and avoiding danger, only humans develop rich abstract knowledge in areas not tied to our biology, from learning how to cook to theorizing about the origins of the universe. Dr. Spelke's studies of how infants and children grasp numerical concepts suggest that human cognitive ability results from two basic features of our minds--a collection of "core" knowledge systems that we share with other animals, and a second more complex system, linked to human language, that is unique to us.
Sleep, Memory and Dreams: What are they good for?
We spend one-third of our lives in the mysterious state of sleeping and, perchance, dreaming. One of the critical functions of sleep is the "off-line" reprocessing of memories. Sleep researcher Stickgold will explain how this reprocessing can strengthen, integrate, and even analyze previously stored memories. The part that dreams play in all this remains uncertain, but new analyses of dream content provide clues into a phenomenon that is almost universally experienced but little understood.
Remembering Memory and the Brain:
To celebrate the tenth year of this acclaimed public lecture series, James L. McGaugh, the professor and researcher who has been called "Mr. Memory," returns to the Barclay stage by popular demand. He will share some of the major recent developments in brain and memory research and will then be joined by a panel of faculty fellows from UCI's world-renowned memory research institute for an extended open discussion of questions from the audience.
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