1st XSCAPE Workshop

Material Engagements

June 7th 2024

Gallery Room on Level 3 of Bramber House at the University of Sussex, Brighton, UK

SCHEDULE

9:00

Registration | Outside the Gallery Room, Bramber House Level 3

9:30

Welcome presentation | Andy Clark

10:00

Keynote | Lambros Malafouris | Chair: Laura Desiree Di Paolo

11:00

Coffee Break

11:30

Guest speaker | Ross Pain | Chair: Axel Constant

12:30

Panel discussion | Laura Desiree Di Paolo, Lambros Malafouris, Ross Pain, Bruno Vindrola

13:30

Sandwich Lunch (provided)

14:30

Guest speaker | John Sutton | Chair: Avel Guénin-Carlut

15:30

Break

16:00

Guest speaker | Abby Tabor | Chair: Ben White

17:00

Panel discussion | Axel Constant, John Sutton, Abby Tabor, Anna Ciaunica, Richard Menary, Karin Kukkonen

18:00

Poster session and reception

20:30

Conference Dinner*

*Wahaca, 160 - 161 North St, Brighton and Hove, Brighton BN1 1EZ.

The dinner is free for Speakers and Chairs

Others are welcome but the number of places is limited

Please contact Axel Constant at axel.constant.pruvost@gmail.com for availabilities

THEME

Material Engagement Theory (MET) invites us to understand thinking itself as continuous with our interactions with material forms.  Active Inference (also known as ‘predictive processing’) is a leading interdisciplinary model of mind and life that has recently started to address the role of material culture. The workshop explores potential synergies (and possible conflicts) between these two perspectives.

 Suggested topics

New forms of material engagement (e.g., LLM, VR/AR, etc.); Social interactions, communication, culture and cognition; Active inference as a model of material engagement; The limits of active inference as a model of material engagement; Embodiment and enaction; Cultural and cognitive niche construction; Material agency

LAMBROS MALAFOURIS

GUEST SPEAKERS

John Sutton

Abby Tabor

Ross Pain

  • Richard Menary

    Panelist | Macquarie University | I am Professor and Head of the Department of Philosophy. Between 2014 and 2018 I was an ARC Future Fellow at Macquarie University Sydney. I read for a BA in philosophy at the University of Ulster, an MSc in Cognitive Science at the University of Birmingham and then a PhD in philosophy at King's College London. I have taught philosophy at the University of Kent, Birkbeck College Faculty of Continuing Education and as a Senior Lecturer at the University of Hertfordshire and then at the University of Wollongong. I have published widely on extended, embodied and distributed cognition, neural plasticity, symbolic cognition – particularly reading and mathematical cognition, the cultural evolution of social cognition pragmatism and cognitive science and embodied narratives and the self. I am currently completing a new book on the enculturated mind.

  • Bruno Vindrola Padros

    Panelist | University of Kiel | Bruno is an anthropologist and archaeologist interested in understanding how broken objects, along with much of what we now call waste, shaped human practices in the past and continues to do so today, and how human interactions with these materials enable a different form of knowledge construction. He specialises in the study of pottery in prehistoric Europe and utilises a wide range of analytical methods from computational imaging techniques to materials science testing and experimentation. Following his BSc in anthropology, Bruno completed his master’s and doctoral research on Neolithic settlements in central and south-eastern Europe at the Institute of Archaeology, University College London. He currently integrates the ERC funded project XSCAPE at Kiel University, designing cross-cultural eye-tracking experiments to detect materially induced behavioural transformations in human societies across the globe.

  • Anna Ciaunica

    Panelist | University of Lisbon | Dr Anna Ciaunica is a Principal Investigator at the Technical Institute, University of Lisbon Portugal; and Research Associate at the Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London, the UK. Before that she was Research Associate at the Department of Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology, University College London; and postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Philosophy, University of Fribourg, Switzerland. She obtained her PhD from the University of Burgundy, Dijon, France on Physicalism and Qualia. Anna is currently PI on three interdisciplinary projects looking at the relationship between self-awareness, embodiment and social interactions in humans and artificial agents. Her approach is highly interdisciplinary, using methods from philosophy, experimental psychology, cognitive neuroscience, phenomenology and arts. More recently, Anna has deepened the concept of minimal selfhood in utero developing as a process of co-embodiment and co-homeostasis. She is also coordinator of the Network for Embodied Consciousness, Technology and the Arts (NECTArs) – a collaborative platform bringing together artists, researchers, stakeholders, policy makers and people with lived experiences, aiming at fostering creative solutions to timely questions such as self-consciousness and (dis)embodiment in our hyper-digitalized and hyper-connected world.

  • Karin Kukkonen

    Panelist | University of Oslo | Karin Kukkonen is Professor in Comparative Literature at the University of Oslo. She is Director of LCE - Centre for Literature, Cognition and Emotions and a member of the Academy of Europe. Kukkonen specialises in literary theory based on predictive processing and 4E approaches to cognition. Among other books, she has published Probability Designs: Literature and Preditive Processing (OUP, 2020) and is currently finalising a monograph entitled Creativity and Contingency in Literary Writing (under review). Her project JEUX (ERC Consolidator Grant, 2024-2028) investigates literary games, play and creativity.