[BIC-announce] FW: Killam lecture tomorrow - Corticocentric Myopia: Social Darwinism and Victorian Bias in Modern Neurosciences
Jennifer Chew, Ms.
jennifer.chew at mcgill.ca
Mon Sep 27 15:28:23 EDT 2010
PLEASE DISCARD IF THIS IS A DUPLICATE. THANK YOU. JENNIFER
Jennifer Chew
McConnell Brain Imaging Centre
MNI - WB317
3801 University Street
Montreal, Qc H3A 2B4
Telephone: 514-398-8554
Fax: 514-398-2975
________________________________
From: MNISTAFF - Montreal Neurological Institute Staff [mailto:MNISTAFF at LISTS.MCGILL.CA] On Behalf Of Enza Ferracane, Ms.
Sent: Monday, September 27, 2010 3:09 PM
To: MNISTAFF at LISTS.MCGILL.CA
Subject: Killam lecture tomorrow
Importance: High
Killam Lecture
Speaker: Josef Parvizi, PhD
Laboratory of Behavioral and Cognitive Neurology
Stanford University
Title: Corticocentric Myopia: Social Darwinism and Victorian Bias in Modern Neurosciences
Date: Tuesday, September 28, 2010
Time: 4:00 pm
Place: de Grandpre Communications Centre
==================================
Dear Colleagues:
Josef Parvizi will be the speaker in the Killam lecture series tomorrow (Tuesday) at 4 o'clock in the De Grand Pre Communication center. The title of his talk is "Corticocentric Myopia: Social Darwinism and Victorian Bias in Modern Neurosciences".
Abstract of the talk:
Traditionally, the cerebral cortex is seen to have the most important role in 'higher' functions of the brain, such as cognition and behavioral regulation, whereas subcortical structures are considered to have subservient or no roles in these functions. This talk will cover the historical basis for this conceptual bias, and will emphasize its negative implications in current practices in the cognitive and clinical neurosciences.
Josef Parvizi graduated from the University of Oslo with MD Cum Laude and earned his PhD in neurosciences from the University of Iowa. His PhD thesis received the Spriestersbach Award for the best PhD dissertation in Biological Sciences at The University of Iowa in 1999. During his post-doctoral years, he embarked on a series of neuroanatomical tracing studies in nonhuman primates and mapped the connectivity of the posteromedial cortex and the temporal pole with cortical and subcortical structures. He completed his medical internship at Mayo Clinic Rochester, and Neurology Residency at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center - Harvard Medical School before joining the Epilepsy group at UCLA for fellowship training in Clinical Epilepsy and Neurophysiology. He has been an assistant professor and practicing neurologist at Stanford University since July 2007.
M. Jones-Gotman, Ph.D.
Professor
McGill University
Montreal Neurological Institute
Telephone: (514) 398-8907
Secretary: Annie Le Bire (514) 398-2579
e-mail: marilyn.jonesgotman at mcgill.ca
http://apps.mni.mcgill.ca/research/jonesgotman/
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