The Symposium for Cognitive Auditory Neuroscience (SCAN) was planned for 2020 as a forum in which to develop intellectual community among those interested in human auditory cognitive neuroscience in a lively gathering in Pittsburgh, PA. Of course, 2020 had other things planned.

With uncertainty persisting into 2021 we are hoping that you will join us in the Symposium for Cognitive Auditory Neuroscience ‘Un-Conference’ to take place over the course of 2021.

With an eye toward Zoom fatigue, we are planning four themed special sessions (April 16, May 21, September 24, October 29). 

Each will take place from 11am-2pm EST on a Friday to accommodate a wide variety of time zones and will involve three invited talks followed by an online gathering to encourage interaction. We will have ‘unconference’ provocateurs to make the event as interactive as possible in the virtual world.

A major goal of SCAN is to offer trainees the prospect of interacting with leaders in the field. To accomplish this at a distance, there will be four SCAN Early Career Roundtables, scheduled a week after each mini-symposium. This will allow a group of early career researchers selected from an application process have a chance to interact with the speakers in a more intimate online setting. 

Registration is Free.
Please complete the following form to register and to submit interests in round table discussions.

We are excited to announce SCAN Early Career Roundtables that will take place a week after each mini-symposium. 

A key SCAN goal is to increase opportunities for early career researchers to engage with leaders in the field of Auditory Cognitive Neuroscience. To facilitate this, we will host an hour-long networking roundtable event involving the speakers from each SCAN mini-symposium and six early career researchers (doctoral students, post-doctoral fellows, or early-stage faculty applicants (within three years of a faculty position)).

SCAN Early Career Roundtables will take place virtually exactly a week after each mini-symposium. SCAN is highly committed to inclusiveness: we encourage applications from individuals historically under-represented in the neurosciences. The organizing committee will select awardees based on the candidates’ letter of intent, alignment with mini-symposium themes, and qualifications.

Trainees can choose any one of the four roundtables below:

SCAN Early Career  Roundtable 1: April 23 noon-1 pm EST 

Roundtable with “Cognitive and Neurobiological Approaches to Speech & Music” SCAN speakers Anirudh Patel, Ingrid Johnsrude, Jonathan Peelle

SCAN Early Career  Roundtable 2: May 28 noon-1 pm EST

Roundtable with “Entraining the Brain” SCAN speakers Jessica Grahn, Molly Henry, and Jonathan Simon

SCAN Early Career  Roundtable 3: October 1 noon-1 pm EST

Roundtable with “Auditory Plasticity & Learning” SCAN Speakers Patricia Kuhl, Huan Luo, and Emily Coffey 

SCAN Early Career  Roundtable 4: November 5 noon-1 pm EST

Roundtable with “Cracking the Code for Talker Identity in Speech” SCAN Speakers Emma Holmes, Carolyn McGettigan, and Sung-Joo Lim

To participate, submit a single PDF file that includes the following on the Registration Form:

  • Brief statement of what intent (what you hope to gain from the experience, your research alignment with the mini-symposium themes; ½ page to 1 page)
  • Brief description of your research (½ page to 1 page)
  • CV

Deadlines

Roundtable 1 and 2: March 31

Roundtable 3 and 4: August 31

Invited Speakers

April 16, 2021 @ 11 a.m.-2 p.m. EST

Ingrid Johnsrude
Western University

Aniruddh Patel
Tufts University

jonathan peelle

Jonathan Peelle
Washington University

Cognitive and Neurobiological Approaches to Speech & Music

April 23 @ noon-1 p.m. EST

beier-eleonara

Eleonora Beier a PhD student at the University of California, Davis, working with Professor Fernanda Ferreira. She has explored topics across psycholinguistics and music cognition. She is particularly interested in prosody, speech and musical rhythm, cortical tracking of speech, and cross-cultural perspectives in music cognition.

boebinger-dana

Dana Boebinger is a PhD student in the Harvard program in Speech and Hearing Bioscience and Technology, working with Professor Nancy Kanwisher and Professor Josh McDermott at MIT. Her research uses fMRI and computational methods to understand the neural mechanisms that underlie human perception of complex sounds, like speech and music.

chang-andrew

Andrew Chang, PhD, is a postdoctoral researcher working with Professor David Poeppel at the Department of Psychology, New York University. His current research focuses on the fundamental differences between speech and music at the acoustic, perceptual, and neural levels. 

fitzhugh-megan

Megan Fitzhugh, PhD, is a NIA post-doctoral fellow at the University of Southern California. Her research broadly focuses on human brain-behavior relationships in typical aging. Her recent work explores how age-related hearing loss impacts brain structure and function and how hearing loss may serve as a biomarker for pathological brain aging.

lacroix-arianna

Arianna LaCroix, PhD / CCC-SLP, is an Assistant Professor in the Speech-Language Pathology Program at Midwestern University-Glendale. Her research focuses on understanding visual and auditory attention abilities in persons with aphasia and how each relates to language. She is additionally interested in understanding the role of music in aphasia rehabilitation.

sankaran-narayan

Narayan Sankaran, PhD, is a postdoctoral scholar in Dr. Edward Chang’s lab at UCSF. He uses electrocorticography to examine the extent to which music and speech perception leverage domain-general versus specialized cortical encoding mechanisms. His PhD research tracked the dynamics with which higher-level musical representations emerge in the cortex during music-listening. 

May 21, 2021 @ 11 a.m.-2 p.m. EST

Jessica Grahn
Western University

Molly Henry
Max Planck Research Group, Neural and Environmental Rhythms

Jonathan Simon
University of Maryland

Entraining the Brain

May 28 @ noon-1 p.m. EST

aparicio-raquel

Raquel Aparicio Terrés graduated in Psychology and earned an MS in Research in Behavior and Cognition at the University of Barcelona. During those years she worked on motor-auditory interactions. She is currently a PhD student in the Artsoundscapes project exploring the interplay between entrainment by music and altered states of consciousness.

fiveash-anna

Anna Fiveash, PhD, is a postdoctoral researcher within the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique in Lyon, France with collaborative work via Vanderbilt University. She is interested in the diverse connections between music and language, and what these connections can reveal about underlying cognitive processes in the brain. Her research has focused on hierarchical structure building, rhythm, prediction, and memory in music and language, using insights and methods from experimental psychology and cognitive neuroscience.

maggu-akshay

Akshay Maggu, PhD, is a postdoctoral researcher at Duke University whose research is geared towards understanding the effects of auditory experiences of speech, language, music, and their disorders, on sound processing in the brain. He primarily uses subcortical and cortical electroencephalography techniques and has a long-term goal is to guide translational research in communication disorders.

oganian-yulia

Yulia Oganian, PhD, is a postdoctoral researcher in the Department of Neurosurgery at UCSF, where she studies how the human brain extracts linguistic information from sensory inputs across languages. Most recently, her focus is on the cortical representation of speech temporal dynamics, in particular syllable structure and stress patterns.

solli-sandra

Sandra Solli is a PhD Fellow in Cognitive Neuroscience at RITMO Center for Interdisciplinary Studies in Rhythm, Time, and Motion at the University of Oslo. She has a background in Acoustics (MSc), Musicology (BA), and Cognitive Psychology (BA). Her ongoing research focuses on the neural mechanisms underlying temporal prediction.

zhao-tian

Tian Christina Zhao, PhD, is an early stage PI, directing the Lab for Early Auditory Perception (LEAP) at the University of Washington. She is passionate about understanding how the human brain learns complex sounds, such as speech and music, and how early experience may influence these neural processes in development.

September 24, 2021 @ 11 a.m.-2 p.m. EST

Patricia Kuhl
University of Washington

Emily Coffey
Concordia University

Huan Luo
Peking University

Auditory Plasticity & Learning

October 1 @ noon-1 p.m. EST

aparicio-raquel
Anna Kasdan is a fourth year Ph.D. candidate in the Neuroscience Graduate Program at Vanderbilt University working with Dr. Reyna Gordon and Dr. Stephen Wilson. Broadly, her research explores musical rhythm and language in the brain with a focus on various clinical/neurological populations.
fiveash-anna

Marta Puertollano is a Ph.D. student in Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience at the Brainlab – Cognitive Neuroscience research group at the University of Barcelona, Spain. She sees language as the basis for adaptive development and with her research expects to contribute in setting up early diagnostic tools for cognitive development difficulties

maggu-akshay

Kelsey Mankel is a postdoc at the University of California, Davis Center for Mind and Brain. She recently earned a Ph.D. in Communication Sciences and Disorders from the University of Memphis. Her research examines how listening experience, learning, and individual perceptual/cognitive differences contribute to the neural processing of speech and music.

oganian-yulia
Christina Vanden Bosch der Nederlanden, Ph.D. is a postdoctoral researcher at Western’s Brain and Mind Institute. This January she will transition to the University of Toronto – Mississauga to begin building the Language, Attention, Music, and Audition lab, focused on the neural and behavioural development of auditory processing skills within and across music and language domains.
solli-sandra

Sonia Arenillas-Alcón is a psychologist specialyzed in neuropsychology. She is part of the Brainlab-Cognitive Neuroscience Research Group at the Institute of Neurosciences of the University of Barcelona (Spain). Her scientific interests focus on studying speech sound encoding mechanisms in newborns.

zhao-tian

Ryan Rhodes is an assistant teaching professor at the Rutgers University Center for Cognitive Science (RuCCS). Rhoades has a Ph.D. in linguistics from the University of Delaware, where he served as lab manager of Arild Hestvik’s EEG lab. His research focuses on phonological representation and phonotactic learning.

October 29, 2021 @ 11 a.m.-2 p.m. EST

Emma Holmes
University College London

sung-joo_lim

Sung-joo Lim
SUNY-Binghamton

Carolyn McGettigan
University College London

Cracking the Code for Talker Identity In Speech

November 5 @ noon-1 p.m. EST

carla-griffiths

Carla Griffiths is a third-year PhD student in the Bizley Lab at UCL. Her doctoral research aims to determine if and how perceptual invariance is represented in the auditory cortex and whether the temporal coherence principle aids in auditory streaming. Her work requires combining electrophysiological recording and behavior in ferrets.

jasmine-hect

Jasmine Hect is a G1 MD/PhD student in Neurobiology at the University of Pittsburgh Medical School. She studies the neural representation of human speech in the human auditory cortex using intracranial EEG under the mentorship of Dr. Taylor Abel and Dr. Lori Holt. She is originally from Detroit, MI, where she earned her Bachelor of Science in Psychology from Wayne State University.

omnia-ibrahim

Omnia Ibrahim is a PhD student at department of computational linguistics, University of Zürich and department of the language science and technology department, Saarland University, working with prof. Bistra Andreeva, prof. Bernd Möbius and Prof. Volker Dellwo. She investigates within-speaker’s variability as a function of channel and listener variability.

pavo-orepic

Pavo Orepić is a postdoc at University of Geneva, Switzerland, where he is investigating speech production in human intracranial data, from the perspective of dynamical systems. In his PhD, he used robotics to induce self-voice misperceptions in healthy individuals, thereby mimicking auditory-verbal hallucinations (i.e., “hearing voices”).

ben-richardson

Ben Richardson is a first-year Ph.D. student in Neural Computation at Carnegie Mellon. He is interested in developing novel signal processing/neural interfacing techniques to improve the treatment of hearing disorders and understand the interaction of peripheral and central signaling in the auditory system, specifically in the context of the cocktail-party problem.

Organizers – Provocateurs

Lori L. Holt
Carnegie Mellon University

Organizer

Barbara Shinn-Cunningham
Carnegie Mellon University

Organizer

Bharath Chandrasekaran
University of Pittsburgh

Organizer

Maria Chait
University College London

UnConference Provocateur

Frederic Dick
Birkbeck College, University of London

UnConference Provocateur

Symposium Sponsors

We thank the generous support of the following sponsors:

Contact Us

If you have any questions, please contact us.

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