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SUMMARY:Vision Journal Club: Spatiotopic updating across eye movements - S
 ebastian Schneegans\, Dept Psych
DTSTART:20161104T113000Z
DTEND:20161104T123000Z
UID:TALK68982@talks.cam.ac.uk
CONTACT:Dr Will Harrison
DESCRIPTION:This week Sebastian Schneegans will be leading the discussion 
 of the following paper by Fabius et al reporting evidence for “spatiopic
  updating” across saccadic eye movements [note updated and correct paper
  link]: http://www.nature.com/articles/srep34488\n\nFabius\, J. H.\, Fraca
 sso\, A.\, & Van der Stigchel\, S. (2016). Spatiotopic updating facilitate
 s perception immediately after saccades. Scientific Reports\, 6\, 34488. h
 ttp://doi.org/10.1038/srep34488\n\nAbout the meeting: In the interest of f
 ostering communication\, collaboration and discussion between more members
  of the department we have decided to commence a Vision Journal Club (clic
 k here for our talks.cam page). The meeting is on Fridays and will begin p
 romptly at 11.30am at the Nick Macintosh room in the Psychology Department
 \, and run for an hour only. The idea of this weekly meeting is to provide
  an informal venue for vision-interested researchers to collectively mull 
 over various vision-related articles. Unlike other talks or colloquiums\, 
 the idea of these meetings is not to passively sit in the audience and be 
 informed about a topic of research by an expert in the field\, but instead
  to have a collection of people who have all read the article get together
  and work through the article\, clarify important points and discuss the i
 mplications. While each meeting will have a host – someone to keep thing
 s (roughly) on track – the emphasis will be on group discussion of the p
 aper.\n\nTo keep things informal and encourage as much interaction as poss
 ible we’ll actively discourage any kind of powerpoint or prepared presen
 tation and instead hope to just work off the paper in hand. The idea would
  be that – even if it’s an article you are having trouble with because
  you do not fully understand it – anyone can propose a paper and host wi
 th minimal preparation effort other than reading the paper themselves.
LOCATION:Nick Makintosh Room\, Dept. Psychology\, Downing Site
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