Presenter:

Filipe De Brigard, Duke University, The Imagination and Modal Cognition Lab [PUBS] [VIDEOS]

Readings:

Primary: De Brigard [1] [PDF], De Brigard [2] [PDF] Secondary: De Brigard et al [3] [PDF], Parikh et al [4] [PDF]

References:

[1]   Felipe De Brigard. Memory and the intentional stance. In Bryce Huebner, editor, The Philosophy of Daniel Dennett, pages 92-94. Oxford University Press, New York, NY, 2017.

[2]   Felipe De Brigard and Bryce S. Gessell. Time is not of the essence: Understanding the neural correlates of mental time travel. In Kourken Michaelian, Stanley B. Klein, and Karl K. Szpunar, editors, Seeing the Future: Theoretical Perspectives on Future-Oriented Mental Time Travel, pages 133-175. Oxford Scholarship Online, New York, NY, 2016.

[3]   Felipe De Brigard, R. Nathan Spreng, Jason P. Mitchell, and Daniel L. Schacter. Neural activity associated with self, other, and object-based counterfactual thinking. Neuroimage, 109:12-26, 2015.

[4]   N. Parikh, L. Ruzic, G. W. Stewart, R. N. Spreng, and F. De Brigard. What if? Neural activity underlying semantic and episodic counterfactual thinking. Neuroimage, 178:332-345, 2018.