Pointers to Presentations and Other Items of Interest on
Metacognition
Unless otherwise noted, presentations are an hour at noon in conference room 3258 of
A. V. Williams
on the campus of the University of Maryland, College Park. The seminars are on Fridays
approximately every other month. Brown bag lunches are encouraged.
Presentations
Future Talks
June 8, 2012, David Aha, Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, DC
Autonomous Goal Reasoning: Status and challenges (abstract)
July 13, 2012, Paul Bello, Office of Naval Research, Arlington, VA
Toward a Computational Cognitive Model of Mindreading (abstract)
August 23, 2012, Antonio Chella, Department of Computer Engineering, University of Palermo, Italy
Toward Robot Consciousness (abstract)
Past Talks
March 4, 2011, Don Perlis,University of Maryland, Computer Science Department
Metacognition - A Biased Overview, Presentation (abstract)
May 13, 2011, Sergei Nirenburg, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Institute for Language and Information Technologies
Aspects of Metacognition in OntoAgent, Presentation (abstract)
July 8, 2011, Michael T. Cox, University of Maryland, UMIACS
Toward an Integrated Metacognitive Architecture, Presentation (abstract)
November 18, 2011, Darsana Josyula, Bowie State University, Department of Computer Science
Metacognition for Effective Deliberation in Artificial Agents, Presentation (abstract)
December 9, 2011, Peter Carruthers, University of Maryland, Department of Philosophy
Metacognition as Kludge, Presentation (abstract)
January 27, 2012, Kalyan Gupta, Knexus Research, National Harbor, MD
Communicative Agents For Spatio-temporal Reasoning (abstract)
March 2, 2012, Marjorie McShane, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Metacognition for Decision Support Presentation (abstract)
April 6, 2012, David Miele, University of Maryland, Department of Human Development
Interpreting Metacognitive Experiences (abstract)
May 4, 2012, Yiannis Aloimonos, University of Maryland, Department of Computer Science
The Cognitive Dialogue: A new architecture for cognition (abstract)