A list of tutorials and symposia has already been selected! Please find below the exciting topics that will be presented by a diverse array of research teams.
Accepted Tutorials
- Beyond pairwise correlations: an introduction to higher order statistical interactions and their application in cognitive and affective neuroscience
- Broadening Horizons in Neuroscience: Engaging Non-WEIRD Populations in Field Research
- Introducing DuckSoup, a platform to perform social interaction experiments online while manipulating participants’ voice and face.
- Introduction to psychophysiological modelling
- Normative modelling for affective and cognitive neuroscience: applications and a hands-on tutorial
- Real-time functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging & Neurofeedback
- Thinking differently: Practical guidance for research and allyship with neurodivergent populations
- Use of functional near-infrared spectroscopy among infant samples
- Using functional near-infrared spectroscopy for real world neuroscience and social neuroscience
Accepted Symposia
- Artificial agents as tools to explore the (human) Self
- Assessing socio-emotional sensitivity across various modalities, developmental stages, and clinical populations using frequency-tagging electroencephalography
- Biopsychosocial Perspectives on Stress: Indicators, Consequences, and Interventions
- Cracking the code of the social cognition of face and voice with the CLEESE Python toolbox
- Decoding mental states and predicting phenotypes using brain signatures: current advances and challenges
- Effects of fluctuating female sex hormones on neurocognitive and affective functioning
- Embodied Emotions: Exploring the Dynamic Interplay of Bodily Sensations and Feelings
- Enhance associative neural plasticity through innovative protocol of non-invasive brain stimulation: cortico-cortical paired associative stimulation
- Exploring complex brain mechanisms underlying maladaptive emotion regulation through advanced neuroscience techniques
- Exploring the effects of stress on social decision-making and learning
- From self-priority to mentalising about others: New insights in experimental, clinical, psychopharmacological and neuroimaging research.
- Gut-Brain Interaction shaping decisions
- How the way we move shapes social perception and interaction
- Interoception: From fundamental research to clinical applications
- Interoception: From the Cradle to the Clinic
- Loneliness and mental health: neurocognitive mechanisms and interventions
- Modulatory effects of emotion on attention: recent contributions from human neurophysiology
- Navigating psychosocial stress: understanding its impact and exploring possible pathways to well-being
- Neurobehavioral insights through cognitive and affective tasks in psychiatric patients receiving deep brain stimulation
- Neurocomputational Representations of Learning Behavior in Social Interactions.
- New trends in political neuroscience
- Novel approaches to study self-other distinction in different domains and in both typically developed and clinical populations
- Opioidergic and dopaminergic modulation of reward processing and decision-making: insights from pharmacological studies in healthy individuals
- Recent developments in the Social and Emotional cerebellum
- Representing Outgroup Minds
- Social and bodily foundations of the self
- The crossroads of conflict: Modulating decision-making, inhibitory control, and their neural signatures in social, moral, and intertemporal scenarios
- The Drive to Survive: A new look at cognitive and neural mechanisms that support successful avoidance.
- The formation and modulation of empathy in the brain
- The neurochemistry of motivation: a computational lens to understand psychopathology.
- The power of social influence on decision-making, and what it takes to say ‘No’
- Touching perspectives: A multidisciplinary exploration of vicarious touch and social interaction across diverse populations and techniques
- Understanding persuasive communication using brain responses
- Virtual reality as a tool to study threat responses in humans