Event

The organised mind: thinking straight in the age of information overload - CAMBRIDGE

28 January 2015, 6pm

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Daniel J Levitin, James McGill Professor of Psychology and Behavioural Neuroscience, McGill University, Montreal

REGISTRATION HAS NOW CLOSED AS WE ARE OVER-SUBSCRIBED
Wednesday, 28 January 2015 (18:00 - 19:15 + drinks). Registration opens at 17:30
School of Divinity Lecture Theatre, St John's College, Cambridge

This talk is organised in collaboration with, and hosted by, Cambridge Neuroscience. To register your attendance, please click here.

The information age is drowning us in a deluge of data, and it is becoming increasingly difficult to separate facts from pseudo-facts, objective from biased sources, and at the same time, we’re all being asked to do more at home and at work. Yet some highly successful people are able to stay highly efficient and productive.

Daniel Levitin runs the Laboratory for Music Cognition, Perception and Expertise at McGill University in Montreal. He is the author of three books: This Is Your Brain on Music, The World in Six Songs and The Organized Mind.

As a cognitive neuroscientist specialising in music perception and cognition, he is credited for fundamentally changing the way that scientists think about auditory memory, showing through the Levitin Effect, that long-term memory preserves many of the details of musical experience that previous theorists regarded as lost during the encoding process. He is also known for drawing attention to the role of cerebellum in music listening, including tracking the beat and distinguishing familiar from unfamiliar music.

In his talk, Daniel will review the cognitive neuroscience of attention and memory, and how recent findings can help all of us to become more productive. His talk will address the myth of multi-tasking, advice for how to better structure our time, and how to better organise decision making using examples from health care contexts. He will also share secrets from some of the highly successful people he spoke to in doing research for the book: CEOs of some of the largest corporations in the world, artists, scientists, nobel prize winners, generals, admirals, governors, senators, and U.S. cabinet members.

How to register

Registration has now closed.

Please note that this is a repeat of the talk given by Daniel Levitin on 27 January in London, hosted by GO Science.

Professor Zoe Kourtzi

Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge