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ICCM 2013 Schedule

Download the complete schedule here

Important Note: ICCM is co-located with BRIMS this year. On Friday, there are two separate sessions of talks going on, one for ICCM and one for BRIMS. On all other days there is no overlap. If you are registered at ICCM you can also attend the BRIMS talks. The BRIMS schedule is available here.

Each session for talks is 90 minutes in length, with four talks in that time. Speakers should aim for a 15 minute presentation with 5 minutes left over for questions.

Thursday, July 11: Tutorials

Sign up for tutorials here!

09:00-5:00 John Laird: The Soar Cognitive Architecture (206 TB)
09:00-12:15 Walter Warwick: Modeling Human Performance in C3TRACE (204 TB)
09:00-12:15 Thora Tenbrink: How to analyze verbal protocols to support cognitive modeling (213 TB)
1:45-5:00 Jerome Busemeyer, Zheng Wang: Quantum models of cognition and decision (213 TB)
1:45-5:00 Warren Thorngate: Measuring simulation-observation fit: An introduction to ordinal pattern analysis (204 TB)

Friday, July 12

  • Registration, Coffee breaks, and the poster sessions will be held in the River Building Atrium
  • All talks will be held in River Building room 2200
  • The parallel BRiMS sessions will be held in River Building room 1200
8:00-9:00 Registration
9:00-10:30 Keynote: Chris Eliasmith
10:30-11:00 Coffee break
11:00-12:30 Jelmer Borst: A data-driven mapping of five ACT-R modules on the brain
Marieke van Vugt: Towards a dynamical view of ACT-R's electrophysiological correlates
Deryle Lonsdale: Modeling speech errors by analogy
Brendan Johns: Using cognitive models to investigate the temporal dynamics of semantic memory impairments in the development of Alzheimer's disease
12:30-1:30 Lunch
1:30-3:00 Niels Taatgen: Diminishing return in transfer: A PRIM model of the Frensch (1991) arithmetic experiment
Paul Rosenbloom: Learning via gradient descent in Sigma
David Pierre Leibovitz: Emergence of border and surface completion (both spatial and temporal) in a flowcentric model of narrow slit viewing
Matthew Kelly: Decision making in a dynamically structured holographic memory model: Learning from delayed feedback
3:00-3:30 Coffee break
3:30-5:00 Carter Kolbeck: A biologically plausible spiking neuron model of fear conditioning
Vieri Giuliano Santucci: Intrinsic motivation signals for driving the acquisition of multiple tasks: A simulated robotic study
Francis Jeanson: Dynamic memory via delay coincidence detection for robot maze navigation
Robert Thomson: A balanced Hebbian algorithm for associative learning in ACT-R
5:00-5:30 Coffee break
5:30-7:00 Poster session 1

Saturday, July 13

  • Registration, Coffee breaks, and the poster sessions will be held in the River Building Atrium
  • All talks will be held in River Building room 2200
8:00-9:00 Registration
9:00-10:30 Keynote: Jerome Busemeyer
10:30-11:00 Coffee break
11:00-12:30 Shane Mueller: A model of constrained knowledge access in crossword puzzle players
Arpan Chakraborty: Modeling the concentration game with ACT-R
Eli Stickgold: Modeling trust in multi-agent systems
12:30-1:30 Lunch
1:30-3:00 Symposium: The Challenge of Robotics for Cognitive Architectures
Antonio Chella, Unmesh Kurup, John Laird, Greg Trafton, Jerry Vinokurov, B. Chandrasekaran
3:00-3:30 Coffee break
3:30-5:00 Emmett Tomai: Simulating aggregate player behavior with learning behavior trees
Frank Ritter: Declarative to procedural tutors: A family of cognitive architecture-based tutors
Shiwali Mohan: A computational model for situated task learning with interactive instruction
Sangeet Khemlani: Deduction as stochastic simulation
5:00-5:30 Coffee break
5:30-7:00 Poster session 2

Sunday, July 14

  • Registration, Coffee breaks, and the poster sessions will be held in the River Building Atrium
  • All talks will be held in River Building room 2200
8:00-9:00 Registration
9:00-10:30 Keynote: Michael Jones: Enfolding Multiple Information Sources in Vector Space Models of Lexical Semantics
10:30-11:00 Coffee break
11:00-12:30 Jim Davies: The role of artificial intelligence research methods in cognitive science
Wouter Lotens: Architectural considerations for modeling cognitive-emotional decision making
Eli Stickgold: Trust definitions and metrics for social media analysis
Mike Byrne: How many times should a stochastic model be run? An approach based on confidence intervals
12:30-1:30 Lunch
1:30-3:00 Symposium: Vector Symbolic Architectures
Chris Eliasmith, Mike Jones, Douglas Mewhort