Day Two
- 8h30 – 9h15 : Registration
- 9h15 – 10h15 : Keynote : B. Poucet : “Cognitive maps, spatial navigation and the hippocampus”
- 10h15 – 11h15 : Memory 1
- Suchan : Working memory, long term memory and perception
- Logie, Allasia, Niven & Wolters : Mental Imagery in Human and Digital Representations
- Piolino, Jebara, Zaoui, Orriols & Berthoz : Self-referencing in the real world: a virtual reality study of episodic memory
- 11h15 – 11h45 : Coffee Break
- 11h45 – 12h45 : Motor Imagery
- Di Rienzo, Debarnot, Daligault, Saruco, Delpuech, Doyon, Collet & Guillot : Magnetoencephalographic correlates of motor expertise during imagery: insights from an Olympic weight-lifting athlete
- Martins : Visual and motor imagery: a common origin, as revealed by participants with Cerebral Palsy
- Saruco, Saimpont, Di Rienzo, Durand, Mercier, Jackson, Malouin & Guillot : Influence of motor recovery on motor imagery ability in lower-limb amputees
- 12h45 – 13h05 : Poster Spotlight presentation
- 13h05 – 14h40 : Lunch Time & Poster Session
- 14h40 – 15h40 : Keynote : B. Tversky : “Thinking and Communicating with the Body and Space”
- 15h40 – 16h40 : Spatial Cognition 1
- Grison, Gyselinck, Burkhardt & Wiener : How do we visually explore transportation maps when we plan routes?
- Rizza & Olivetti : Recognition of a sonificated map after tactile navigation: a contribution to the hypothesis of the supramodal representation of space
- Dommes, Cœugnet & Montuwy : A vibrotactile wristband to improve navigation skills among older pedestrians
- 16h40-17h10 : Coffee Break
- 17h10 – 18h30 : Embodied Cognition
- Quesque & Coello : Towards an embodied approach to social cognition
- Giardino, Jamalian, Bradley & Tversky : Gestures for Self Promote Memory and Inference
- Coello & Iachini : The social dimension of peripersonal space
- Price, Mykland & Czub: Spatial reference frames in synaesthetic and non-synaesthetic visuospatial imagery.
Posters
- Arnold & Auvray : Blind and sighted people differ in the way they mentally represent space from different perspectives
- Nys, Gyselinck & Hickmann : The role of visuo-spatial abilities and working memory during the development of children’s spatial representation of a virtual route
- Anacta, Krukar, Imaddudin Humayun & Schwering : Visualizing salient features in spatial descriptions
- Chiesa, Tinti, Pia & Schmidt : Spontaneous spatial perspective taking in blind and blindfolded sighted people
- Mores, Gras & Gyselinck : Does the memory of a virtual route depend on the manipulation of spatial information during learning?
- Ruggeri, Meziane & Brandner : Memory processes and neural plasticity: an EEG study
- Dutriaux & Gyselinck : Posture and imagery in the memory of manipulable objects
- Pazzaglia & Meneghetti : Acquiring spatial knowledge through navigation: the role of landmarks, individuals differences and working memory
- Pantelides & Avraamides : Integration of visuo-spatial information
- Nguyen, Meziane, Ruggeri, Brandner, Pegna & Maurer : Sex differences in cortical rhythms during spatial transformation processes
- Blazhenkova : Individual Differences in Visual Imagery and Childhood Play Preferences
- Martins : Motion extrapolation implication of embodied mecanism
- Michaelides & Avraamides : Transformation of allocentric representation in school aged children and adults
- Boucheix & Lowe : Generative processing of animated partial depictions fosters fish identification skills: eye tracking evidence in a neuro-cognitive approach