dan lloyd ([email protected])foreword magazine “book of the year” gold medal award...
TRANSCRIPT
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Dan Lloyd, p. 1
Dan Lloyd ([email protected])
Thomas C. Brownell Professor of Philosophy
Professor, Program in Neuroscience
Trinity College 300 Summit Street
Hartford, CT 06106
EDUCATION: Columbia University Ph.D. Philosophy 1983
Dissertation: Picturing: The Aesthetics, Epistemology, and
Ontology of Pictorial Representation.
Arthur C. Danto, advisor.
Columbia University M.A. Philosophy 1977
Oberlin College B.A. Phi Beta Kappa
English & Philosophy 1975
EXHIBITIONS, INSTALLATIONS, PERFORMANCES, and ONLINE:
Under Control, video, selection, China International Conference of Science and Education
Producers, Beijing, forthcoming.
XXxXY, video, Annual Meeting of the Organization for Human Brain Mapping, Montreal,
June 5-12, 2020; selection, FESTIYAQ, Madrid, Spain, Jan 1 to Nov 1 2020;
selection, Sigma Xi 2020 Annual Meeting and Student Research Conference and
STEM Art & Film Festival, November 5-8, 2020; selection, China International
Conference of Science and Education Producers, Beijing, forthcoming.
A Stillness of the Mind (with Tanya Dawe, script and voiceover), Annual Meeting of the
Organization for Human Brain Mapping, Montreal, June 5-12, 2020.
The Dendritic Arboretum (with additional art by Amanpreet Badhwar), Annual Meeting of the
Organization for Human Brain Mapping, Montreal, June 5-12, 2020.
Listening between your ears: Sonification and the dynamic brain, selection, FESTIYAQ,
Madrid, Spain, 1/1 to 11/1/2020; selection, China International Conference of Science
and Education Producers, Beijing, forthcoming.
The Neuroanatomy Lesson, Video installation, Science Gallery Rotterdam, opening April 5,
2020.
Thinkerspace, Permanent video wall Installation, Innovation Hub, Hartford, CT, opening
April 2020
Digital photographic montages in:
Synkroniciti, Vol.2 Issue 2, June 2020;
“Mirrors and Reflections,” LoosenArt, Rome, Italy, April 15 to April 26, 2020;
“Textures and Layers: A Walk in the Woods,” ViewArts gallery, Old Forge, New York, February 1 to March 28, 2020 (Second prize);
“Medusa”, Envision Arts online gallery*, January 31 to February 28, 2020;
"Forward the Tradition”*, PH21 Photography Gallery, Budapest, December 19, 2019 to January 11, 2020;
9th Annual "Nature" Art Exhibition, Light Space & Time Online Art Gallery*, December 1 to December 31, 2019;
* denotes honorable mentions
XXxXY, video installation, ".01%" exhibition, NAVEL, Los Angeles, November 7-11,
2019.
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Dan Lloyd, p. 2
Listening between your ears: Sonification and the dynamic brain, video, Images from
Science 3 exhibition, RIT City Art Space, Rochester, NY, November 1 - 10, 2019,
and Johns Hopkins University, spring 2020. (Winner: jury choice award.)
Parallel Play, video, Imagine Science Film Festival, New School, New York, October 17,
2019.
Apart Together, video, Organization for Human Brain Mapping, Rome, June 9-13, 2019.
Music of the Hemispheres, video, Hémisphères ArtSci Exhibition, ETH Zurich, Switzerland,
April 29 to May 10, 2019.
Rest/full, video, CreateWorld 2018 conference and exhibition, Queensland College of Art, Brisbane,
Austrailia November 28-30, 2018.
Rest/full, video, Australian Science Communicators 2018 conference, Sydney, Australia, November
11-15, 2018.
Video to accompany "Notes toward a theory of sensory-motor understanding," Interalia
Magazine, December 2018 (https://www.interaliamag.org/audiovisual/dan-lloyd/ ).
Rest_Full, video, 6th Annual Conference on Resting State Brain Connectivity, Montreal, September
27, 2018.
Smart Patterns, video, Viten Filmfestival, Bergen, Norway, November 12, 2017.
User Illusion,video, SciArt Magazine (http://www.sciartmagazine.com/ ), April, 2017.
Smart Pattern, video animation and sonification of brain activity, featured in online video magazine
Imagine Science Labocine , December 2016.
Writer, Lecturer, Narrator, Co-producer, Co-videographer, The Conscious Mind: A Philosophical
Road Trip, MOOC, TrinityX and Edx, January - March 2016,
https://www.edx.org/course/conscious-mind-philosophical-road-trip-trinityx-t004x
Producer and actor, Shakespeare’s King John, a dramatic reading, Watkinson Library, Trinity
College, April 2015.
Smart Patterns II, video animation and sonification of brain activity, Imagine Science Film
Festival, New York (Columbia University), NY, March 2014.
A Sonic Tour of the Brain, sonification/installation based on brain activity, “Brain Banquet,”
produced by Guerilla Science, London, UK, March 2014.
Brain animation included in the documentary Alive Inside: A Story of Music and Memory, directed
by Michael Rossoto-Bennett, 2014.
Smart Patterns, video animation and sonification of brain activity (collected during a new
experiment in collaboration with Zoran Josipovic, NYU), appearing as an installation and
during a program of short films in conjunction with Pattern Power/ Superstripe,
Londonewcastle Project Space, London, April 2013.
Animation, Data, and Analysis to prepare and accompany Symphony of Minds Listening, composed
by Eduardo Miranda and premiered by Ten Tors Orchestra at the Peninsula Arts
Contemporary Music Festival, Plymouth University, U.K., February 23, 2013.
Re:Vision, A Symphony in Your Brain, video and music composition, State of Mind: A
Consciousness Expo, Sackler Center for Consciousness Science, Brighton, U.K., June 2012.
Music of the Hemispheres II: A Live Music, Film, and Science Event, Issue Project Room,
Brooklyn, New York, November 2011.
Music of the Hemispheres: composition, multi-media performance, and panel discussion, Issue
Project Room, Brooklyn, New York, April 2010.
Soundscape composition for Tony Oursler’s video installation, Lock 2, 4, 6, Kunsthaus Bregenz,
Bregenz, Austria, October 2009 - January 2010.
Installation Editor, Inside Out: Visual work and artists' statements by inmates in the Connecticut
Prison Association's Correctional Art Program, Artworks Gallery, Hartford, June 15-July
10, 1993. (The installation was designed to spark reflection on the relation of freedom to
creativity. I collected and edited inmates' statements and designed panels juxtaposing those
statements with quotations from established artists.)
http://www.sciartmagazine.com/http://labocine.com/
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Dan Lloyd, p. 3
GRANTS, FELLOWSHIPS, AND HONORS:
Docent (Permanent Adjunct Professor), Department of Social and Moral Philosophy,
University of Helsinki, 2009-
Fulbright Fellowship, Lecture/Research Grant, Helsinki Collegium for Advanced
Studies, and Department of Social and Moral Philosophy, University of
Helsinki, Finland, 2008
“Urban Being” grant for student initiated community service projects, Figure
Foundations and Hartford Foundation for Public Giving, 2005-2007
Howard Hughes Medical Institute Faculty Development Grant, 2005
Kellogg Foundation, Kellogg Education Fund Project Award, for joint research and teaching
with Olin Neuropsychiatric Research Center, 2005
ForeWord Magazine “Book of the Year” Gold Medal Award (Philosophy), for Radiant Cool,
2004
Visiting Fellow, Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies, University of Helsinki, 2003
New Perspectives in Functional Brain Imaging Research Award, 2002 (awarded by the
functional MRI Data Center and Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience)
Trinity College Faculty Research Grants, 1993, 1997, 2000
NECUSE (New England Consortium for Undergraduate Science Education) Grant for
neuroscience course development (with Priscilla Kehoe, co-PI), 1993
American Council of Learned Societies Fellowship, 1990-91
Arthur Hughes Award for Special Achievement in Teaching at Trinity, 1990
Andrew W. Mellon Faculty Fellowship in the Humanities, Harvard University, 1986-87
Society of Fellows in the Humanities, Cornell University, 1986-87 (declined)
American Council of Learned Societies Fellowship for Recent Recipients of the Ph.D.,
1986-87 (declined)
University of California Regents' Junior Faculty Fellowships, 1984, 1985
Danforth Fellowship, 1980-82
Chamberlain Fellowship, 1980
Columbia University President's Fellowship, 1975-77
Christopher Dahl Award (Best Oberlin Philosophy Essay) 1975
PUBLICATIONS (excluding book reviews):
a. Books:
Subjective Time: The philosophy, psychology, and neuroscience of temporality (co-edited with
Valtteri Arstila, University of Turku, Finland). MIT Press, 2014.
Radiant Cool: a novel theory of consciousness. MIT Press, 2004.
Italian translation: Radiant Cool: Lo strano caso della mente umana (Sironi, 2006)
Japanese translation: マインド・クエスト 意識のミステリー (Kodansha Ltd., 2006)
Korean translation forthcoming.
Minds, Brains, and Computers: Perspectives in Cognitive Science and Artificial Intelligence, co-
edited with D. Anselmi, W. M. Brown, K. Haberlandt, and R. Morelli. Ablex Publishers,
1992.
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Dan Lloyd, p. 4
Simple Minds, a philosophical examination of scientific approaches to the mind and brain. Bradford
Books/MIT Press, 1989.
b. Articles:
The Musical Structure of Time in the Brain: Repetition, Rhythm, and Harmony in fMRI
During Rest and Passive Movie Viewing, Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience,
21 January 2020 (https://doi.org/10.3389/fncom.2019.00098)
Notes toward a theory of sensory-motor understanding, Interalia Magazine, December 2018
(https://www.interaliamag.org/audiovisual/dan-lloyd/ ).
Protention and Predictive Processing: The Wave of the Future, Constructivist Foundations,
13(1):408-409, October 2017.
Not-Quite-So Radical Enactivism, Constructivist Foundations, 11(2):361-362, March 2016.
Hearing, Seeing, and Music in the Middle, in Philosophy of Mind and Phenomenology:
Philosophical and Empirical Approaches, D. Dahlstrom, A. Elpidorou, and W. Hopp,
eds. (Routledge), 2016, pp. 205-223.
The Disunity of Time (with Valtteri Arstila), in Subjective Time: The philosophy, psychology, and
neuroscience of temporality, V. Arstila and D. Lloyd, eds. (Cambridge MA: MIT Press),
2014, pp. 658-663.
Subjective Time: From Past to Future (with Valtteri Arstila), in Subjective Time: The philosophy,
psychology, and neuroscience of temporality, V. Arstila and D. Lloyd, eds. (Cambridge MA:
MIT Press), 2014, pp. 309-321.
Miranda, E. R., Lloyd, D., Josipovic, Z. and Williams, D., Creative Music Neurotechnology with
Symphony of Minds Listening, in E. R. Miranda, J. Castet and B. Knapp, eds., Guide to
Brain-Computer Music Interfacing. (London: Springer) 2014.
The music of consciousness: Can musical form harmonize phenomenology and the brain?
Constuctivist Foundations, 8(3):330-337, 2013.
Time after time: temporality in the dynamic brain, in: Being in Time, Eds. Shimon Edelman,
Tomer Fekete and Neta Zach (John Benjamins), pp. 1-21, 2012.
Neural correlates of temporality: Default mode variability and temporal awareness,
Consciousness and Cognition, 21: 695-703, 2012
(doi:10.1016/j.concog.2011.02.016).
Many times over: A brief reply to Lee and Klincewicz, Consciousness and Cognition, 21:
711-712, 2012.
Through a Glass Darkly: Schizophrenia and Brain Imaging, Philosophy, Psychiatry, and
Psychology, 18(4):257-275, 2011.
Is "Cognitive Neuroscience" an Oxymoron?, Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology,
18(4):283-287, 2011.
Mind as music, Frontiers in Psychology 2:63. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2011.00063 , 2011.
Grand challenges in theoretical and philosophical psychology: after psychology? Frontiers in
Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 1:9. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2010.00009.
Lloyd, D., Calhoun, V., Pearlson, G., Astur, R., Functional Brain Imaging and the Problem of
Other Minds, in Theory of Mind and Literature, P. Leverage, H. Mancing, R.
Schweickert, and J. William, eds. (Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press), pp.259-
273, 2011.
Two cultures but one epistemology: novels and empirical science, in Language and the
Scientific Imagination : proceedings of the 11th Conference of the International
Society for the Study of European Ideas (ISSEI), Language Centre, University of
Helsinki, Finland, 2009.
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Dan Lloyd, p. 5
When time is out of joint: schizophrenia and functional neuroimaging, in Psychiatry as
Cognitive Neuroscience: Philosophical Perspectives, M. Broome and L. Bortolotti,
eds. (Oxford University Press), pp.173-192, 2009.
Outsourcing the Mind (book review of Andy Clark, Supersizing the Mind: Embodiment,
Action, and Cognitive Extension, and Alva Noë, Out of Our Heads: Why You Are Not
Your Brain, and Other Lessons from the Biology of Consciousness ), American
Scientist 97:340-342, July-August 2009.
Stream of Consciousness, Oxford Companion to Consciousness, T. Bayne, A. Cleeremans, P.
Wilken, eds., (Oxford University Press), pp. 612-614, 2009.
The Fringe, Oxford Companion to Consciousness, T. Bayne, A. Cleeremans, P. Wilken, eds.,
(Oxford University Press), pp. 300-303, 2009.
Garrity, A., Pearlson, G., McKiernan, K., Lloyd, D., Kiehl, K., Calhoun, V., Aberrant 'default
mode' functional connectivity in schizophrenia. American Journal of Psychiatry,
164:450-457, March 2007.
Civil Schizophrenia, in Distributed Cognition and the Will, D. Ross and D. Spurett, eds.
(Cambridge: MIT Press), 323-348, 2007.
Transcending Text: Magical Realism and Everyday Life, in Visions of value and
truth: understanding philosophy and literature, (Acta Philosophica Fennica
LXXVIII), L. Werner and F. Ruokonen, eds. (Helsinki: Suomen filosofinen yhdistys),
2006.
Imagining a Scientific Revolution: The Case of Consciousness Science (translated into
Finnish as “Tieteen uusi aluevaltaus: tajunnan tiede”), in Ihmistieteet tänään (Research
from the Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies, Helsinki: Gaudeamus), 2005.
More Than Meets the Eye (commentary), Psyche, 2004.
(http://psyche.cs.monash.edu.au/symposia/mangan/index.html).
His Last Postcard (short story), SEED Magazine, 11:104-118, Fall 2004.
Double Trouble for Gestält Bubbles, Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 26(4):417-418, 2003.
Representation, Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science (New York: MacMillan), 2003.
Functional MRI and the study of human consciousness, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 14:
818-831, 2002.
Studying the mind from the inside out, Brain and Mind, 3: 243-259, 2002.
Beyond ‘the Fringe’: A Cautionary Critique of William James, Consciousness and Cognition, 9:
629-637, 2000.
Terra cognita: From functional neuroimaging to the map of the mind, Brain and Mind, 1: 1-24,
2000.
Virtual lesions in the not-so-modular brain, Journal of the International Neuropsychological
Society, 6:627-635, 2000.
Popping the Thought Balloon, in The Philosophy of Daniel Dennett, a comprehensive assessment,
D. Ross, A Brook, D. Thompson, eds., MIT Press, 2000.
Unity, Association, and Dissociation in Temporal Consciousness in Recurrent Neural Networks,
Consciousness and Cognition, 9(2):17-18, 2000.
Multivariate meta-analysis of studies in the Brainmap archive, Neuroimage, 11(5):911, 2000.
Trinity College as a Site of Citizenship, in Universities as Sites of Citizenship, I. Harkavy, H.
Teune, F. Plantan, eds., University of Pennsylvania
(http://iche.sas.upenn.edu/reports/monographs.htm), 2000.
Sojourning in the Art World: Service Learning in the Philosophy of Art, in Philosophy and Service
Learning, D. Lisman, ed., American Association for Higher Education, 2000.
Consciousness should not mean, but be, Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 22(1):158-159, 1999.
Context, Conversation, Community, in Teaching Matters: Essays on Liberal Education at the
Millenium, M. McLaughlin, D. Hyland, and J. R. Spencer eds., Trinity College Press, 1999.
http://iche.sas.upenn.edu/reports/monographs.htm
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Dan Lloyd, p. 6
The Fables of Lucy R.: Association and Dissociation in Neural Networks, in Connectionism and
Psychopathology, D. Stein, ed., Cambridge University Press, pp. 247-272, 1998.
Consciousness and Its Discontents, Communication and Cognition, 30(3/4): 273-285, 1997.
Commentary on ‘Searle and the Deep Unconscious, Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology. 3(3),
September 1996
Brain Teasers: After-Hours Experiments in Cognitive Neuroscience, in Neuroscience Methods:
The Undergraduate Laboratory Experience, D. Blackburn, ed. Trinity College Press, 1996.
Commentary on Towards a Design-Based Analysis of Emotional Episodes, Philosophy, Psychiatry,
and Psychology, 3(2): 127-128, June 1996.
Consciousness, Connectionism, and Cognitive Neuroscience: A Meeting of the Minds,
Philosophical Psychology, 9(1):61-81, March 1996.
Access Denied, Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 18(2):261-262, June 1995.
Consciousness: A Connectionist Manifesto, Minds and Machines, 5(2):161-185, May 1995.
Connectionist Hysteria: Reducing a Freudian Case Study to a Network Model, Philosophy,
Psychiatry, and Psychology, 1(2):69-88, June 1994.
Toward an Identity Theory of Consciousness, Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 15(2):215-216, June
1992.
Are You a Cognitive Liberal? Take This Simple Quiz! in Minds, Brains, and Computers:
Perspectives in Cognitive Science and Artificial Intelligence, D. Anselmi, W. M. Brown, K.
Haberlandt, D. Lloyd, and R. Morelli, eds. Ablex Publishers, 1992.
Consciousness: Only Introspective Hindsight? Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 14(4):686-687,
December 1991.
Leaping to Conclusions: Connectionism, Consciousness, and the Computational Mind, in
Connectionism and the Philosophy of Mind, J. Horgan and J. Teinson, eds. Kluwer
Academic Publishers, 1991.
Loose Connections: Four Problems with Searle's Argument for the 'Connection Principle',
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 13(4):615-616, December 1990.
What is Representation? Behaviorism, 17(2):151-154, Fall 1989.
Cognition and Ideology, in Ideology and the Academy: Art, Knowledge, and the Curriculum, Miller
Brown, ed. Trinity College, 1989.
Extending the new hegemony of classical conditioning, Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 12(1):152-
153, March 1989.
Connectionism in the Golden age of cognitive science, Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 11(1):42-43,
March 1988.
Cognitive modeling: Of Gedanken-beasts and human beings, Behavioral and Brain Sciences,
10(3):442-443, September 1987.
Mental Representation from the Bottom Up, Synthese, 70(1):23-78, January 1987.
The Limits of Cognitive Liberalism, Behaviorism, 14(1):1-14, Spring 1986.
Frankenstein's Children: Artificial Intelligence and Human Value, Metaphilosophy, 16(4):3007-318,
October 1985. Reprinted in Computers and Ethics, ed. Terrell Ward Bynum (Oxford: Basil
Blackwell), 1985.
Philosophy and the Sea Snail: Building Minds from the Bottom Up, MBL Science, 1(1):7-13, 1984.
The Scope and Ingenuity of Evolutionary Systems, Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 6(3):368-369,
1983.
PRESENTATIONS:
The Making of Rest_Full, invited talk with video, 6th Annual Conference on Resting State Brain
Connectivity, Montreal, September 27, 2018.
Sensing the future: Anticipation as a basic feature of perception, conference presentation, 4th
International Conference on Time Perspective, Nantes, France, August 30, 2018.
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Dan Lloyd, p. 7
Discord and dysharmonia: Neural and phenomenal temporality in schizophrenia, invited lecture,
University of Vienna, May 23, 2018
The experience of anticipation is associated with widespread predictive activation of sensory
cortical areas, conference presentation, Association for the Scientific Study of
Consciousness, Krakow, Poland, June 27, 2018.
Predictability modulates onset of fMRI response to repeated stimuli, conference presentation, First
Annual Meeting of the Timing Research Forum, Strassbourg, France, October 24, 2017.
Things to come: with predictability sensory activation shifts toward precognition, invited lecture,
MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, Cambridge University, UK, June 26, 2017.
Neurophenomenology 2.0, Invited lecture, CUNY, March 24, 2017.
What is it like to be five minutes late?, keynote address, British Psychological Society Annual
Meeting, Bristol, UK, September 3, 2016.
Inside Daniel Dennett: The Temporal Connectome, poster presentation, Association for the
Scientific Study of Consciousness annual meeting, Buenos Aires, Argentina, June 2016.
You are music, invited address, New Ideas Symposium, Tufts University, March 5, 2016.
Discord and disconnection: A stethoscopefor schizophrenia? Invited presentation, Yale Philosophy
and Psychiatry Group, Yale University, November, 2014.
The Limits of Brain Imagining, panel discussion, Imagine Science Film Festival, New York
(Columbia University), NY, March 2014.
The Music of the Hemispheres: Does the brain talk to itself – or sing? “On the Shoulders of Giants”
lecture series, Talcott Mountain Science Center, October 4, 2012.
Consonance and consciousness: Harmonies in fMRI signals correlate with perceptual and motor
events in healthy subjects; dissonance characterizes schizophrenia, poster presentation,
Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness annual meeting, Kyoto, Japan, June
2011.
Love and Time in Shakespeare, invited lecture, College of Foreign Languages, Nankai University,
Tianjin, China, June 2011.
Musical form in functional brain image series: From heuristics to hypotheses, Neurotalk 2011,
Dalian, China, May 2011.
Beyond the Language of Thought: Musical form in functional brain imaging data, Invited
presentation, 9th Sino-German Workshop, Peking University, Beijing, China, May 2011.
Shakespeare as Philosopher, Invited Lecture Series (5 lectures: "Time"; "Being"; "Self" ; "Evil";
"Love" ), Nankai University, Tianjin, China, March-April 2011.
Does the resting brain talk to itself? Or sing? Invited lecture, Beijing Normal University, Beijing,
China, November 2010.
Concepts of Mind in Western Philosophy, Invited Lecture Series (5 lectures), Nankai University,
Tianjin, China, October-November 2010.
Music in the brain: a puzzle for aesthetics (on the general theme of the relationship between
aesthetics and neuroscience), International Congress of Aesthetics, Peking University,
Beijing, August 2010.
Brain dynamics as music: analysis of musical properties in fMRI and its conscious
correlates, Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness annual meeting, University
of Toronto, June 2010.
Mind as music: Does fMRI reveal the music of the hemispheres?, invited lecture, Mt. Holyoke
Department of Philosophy, April 2010.
Distributed brain activity and musical form?, presentation at the inaugural meeting of the New
England Music Cognition Interest Group, New York University, March 2010.
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Dan Lloyd, p. 8
Neural Correlates of Temporality: Default Mode Variability and State-Dependent
Temporal Awareness, Consciousness Online Conference, February 2010
(http://consciousnessonline.wordpress.com/program-2010/).
If we could listen to the brain, what would we hear?, invited lecture, Kunsthaus Bregenz,
Bregenz, Austria, November 2009.
The Music of Time: Prospects for a State-dependent Neurophenomenology of Temporality,
invited lecture, conference on ‘Intra- and Interpersonal Differences in the Experience
of Time,' European Platform for Life Sciences, Mind Sciences, and the Humanities,
University of Turku, Finland, September 2009.
So Many Voxels, so Little Time, invited plenary address, Conceptual Issues in fMRI
conference, University of Guelph, Ontario, May 2009.
Situating Sociality, or How to Lose Your Mind, invited lecture, Roots of Human Sociality
conference, Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Study, Finland, April 2009.
So Many Variables, So Little Time: Oversimplification in fMRI, invited talk, Dana/Hastings
Center Working Group on Interpreting Neuroimaging, University of Pennsylvania,
January 2009.
Thoughtful and Thoughtless Sounds from the Edge of Music, conference presentation (with
Salla Hakkola), Voices and Noises: Exploring the Materiality of Sound, Institute for
Art Research, University of Helsinki, November 2008.
Radical Temporality: From Husserl to Cognitive Neuroscience, invited lecture, conference on
'The clock's time, the brain's time and the mind's time,' European Platform for Life
Sciences, Mind Sciences, and the Humanities, Munich, October 2008.
Music of the Hemispheres: Listening to the Polyphonic Brain, Brownell Professorship
Inaugural Lecture, Trinity College, September 2008.
Two cultures but one epistemology: novels and empirical science, International Society for
the Study of European Ideas, University of Helsinki, August 2008.
Music of the Hemispheres, invited lecture, Fiera Editoria Scientifica Trieste (FEST), the
International Science Media Fair, Trieste, April 2008.
Time, Narrative and the Brain, “brown bag presentation,” Helsinki Collegium for Advanced
Studies, Helsinki, Finland, March 2008.
Philosophy and Literature, invited lecture, Association of Finnish Teachers of English, Helsinki,
January 2008.
Broadband Cognition, Brainreading, and Phenomenology, invited lecture, Foundations of Cognitive
Science working group, Hampshire College, October 2007.
The shifting streams of consciousness: an fMRI study of consciousness during a simulated
driving task (poster), Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness, Las
Vegas, June 2007.
Neurophenomenology: Toward a science of consciousness, invited lectures, Kyoto University
and Reitsumekan University, Japan, June 2007.
Narrative meets cognition in the brain (on Friday the 13th), invited lecture, Literature and
Cognitive Science Research Group, Yale University, May 2007.
From City to Map and Back Again: A Campus-Community Google Map Mash-up
[with Rachael Barlow and David Tatem], invited presentation, Northeast Regional Computer
Program. College of the Holy Cross, March 2007.
The brain is a story: a novel approach, invited lectures at University of Milan and
Bergamoscienza 2006, Italy, October 2006.
The neurophenomenology of time: functional neuroimaging in the past and future tense,
Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness, Oxford University, June 2006.
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Dan Lloyd, p. 9
Neuronarratology, Conference on Literature and Cognitive Science, University of Connecticut,
April 2006.
‘She Never Knew She Was a Rabbit’ and Other Epitaphs, Socrates Lecture, Individual Degree
Program, Trinity College, April 2006.
The Brain and Consciousness, Faculty Research Lecture, Trinity College, April 2006.
Schizophrenia and Functional Neuroimaging: Distributed Dysfunction and the Assumption of
Modularity, Society of European Psychiatrists annual conference, Nice, France, March
2006.
The End of the Story: Science as Fiction and Fiction as Science, invited lecture, Helsinki Collegium
for Advanced Studies, March 2006.
Ecological Psychology, Externalism, and the Two Dimensions of Time, International Conference on
Perception and Action, Monterey, CA, July 2005.
The Infrastructure of Reality: Temporality and Brain Imaging, invited lecture, Neurophilosophy:
the State of the Art, California Institute of Technology, June 2005.
Philosophical and Phenomenological fMRI, workshop faculty presentation, McDonnell Foundation
Neurophilosophy Workshop for Early Career Researchers, California Institute of
Technology, June 2005.
Mediated: Blobs, Blurbs, and the Responsibilities of Researchers, invited talk, Society for
Philosophy and Psychology, Wake Forest University, June 2005.
Civil Schizophrenia, invited lecture, Mind and World Conference, University of Alabama, March
2005; Also: Syracuse University Cognitive Science Invited Lecture, April 2005.
An Intensive Residential Sophomore Program at Trinity College, AAC&U Annual Meeting,
Atlanta, February 2005.
Perspectives on Representations in Artificial and Biological Systems, and Consciousness, Time, and
the Brain, invited lectures, Southern Connecticut State University, February 2005.
Carving Time at the Joints: Independent Component Analysis as a tool for exploring
functional brain imaging and Exploring the Temporal Structures of Consciousness
with Functional Brain Imaging, invited lectures, Institute for Cognitive Science,
University of Colorado, Boulder, January 2005.
The Thick Present: Magical Realism and Everyday Life, Invited Lecture, Reflections on Literature
and Philosophy Conference, University of Helsinki, Finland, August 2004.
Neuronarratology: Consciousness and the Depth of the Present, Association for the Scientific Study
of Consciousness, Antwerp, Belgium, June 2004.
Service Learning Pedagogy, and Service Learning Institutional Development, workshops (co-
facilitated with Todd Vogel and Elinor Jacobson), Institute for Service Learning, Trinity
College, June 2004.
Brains, Books, Borges, invited talk, Philosophy, Language, and Semiotics conference, University of
Hartford, April 2004.
Radiant Cool, a reading, “Living Writers” series, Trinity College, March 2004.
Radiant Cool: a neuro-noir journey to the centre of the mind, Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA)
Café Scientifique, Winchester Festival of Art and the Mind, Winchester, U.K., March 2004.
Functional MRI and the Fourth Dimension, invited lecture, Grand Rounds, Institute of Living,
Hartford, CT, December 2003.
The Feel of Time: Temporality and Experience, plenary talk, Space and Time Workshop: Between
Phenomenology and Neuroscience, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Brussels, November 2003.
The Physiology of Time: Neural Network Models and Brain Imaging of Temporality, plenary talk,
Space and Time Workshop: Between Phenomenology and Neuroscience, Vrije Universiteit
Brussel, Brussels, November 2003.
Probing Consciousness with fMRI, invited plenary lecture, Nordic Network for Consciousness
Studies, Turku, Finland, May 2003.
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Dan Lloyd, p. 10
How Should a Humanist Look at the Brain?, invited presentation, Helsinki Collegium for Advanced
Studies, University of Helsinki, May 2003.
Essential Structures as Empirical Hypotheses: the "neurophenomenology" of functional brain
scanning, invited lecture, Nordic Society for Phenomenology, Helsinki, April 2003.
Functional MRI and Distributed Processing in the Brain, invited plenary lecture, International
Symposium, "Neuroimaging: What are we really looking at?", Finnish Graduate School of
Neuroscience, University of Helsinki, April 2003.
Phenomenology as Cognitive Neuroscience: A case study in functional brain imagery, invited
lecture, Danish National Research Foundation, Center for Subjectivity Research,
Copenhagen, Denmark, February 2003.
Consciousness, Time, and the Brain, invited lecture, Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies,
University of Helsinki, Finland, October 2002.
Functional MRI and Temporal Awareness, invited lecture, University of Turku, Finland, October
2002.
The Worlds of Disney and the World of Linnanmäki, invited lecture, University of Jyväskyla,
Finland, October 2002, University of Turku, Finland, October 2002, University of Helsinki,
Finland, December 2002, University of Tartu, Estonia, April 2003.
Functional MRI and the study of human consciousness, New Perspectives in Functional Brain
Imaging Award Lecture, Dartmouth College, July 2002.
Consciousness and Functional Brain Imaging: Methods and Applications, Workshop presentation,
Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness, Barcelona, June 2002.
With time in mind: Explorations of the neural foundations of consciousness. Invited lecture,
Connecticut College Department of Philosophy, April 2002.
Vision, as seen from within, Boston Colloquium for the Philosophy of Science, Boston University,
March 2002.
Community Learning at Trinity College in Hartford: Faculty Perspectives (and other presentations),
National Community Learning Conference, Trinity College, October 2001.
Neural Networks for Everystudent, presentation and workshop, Project Kaleidoscope Conference,
Trinity College, June 2001.
’Canonical Subject Analysis’: Seeking the typical rather than the mean in multi-subject fMRI
studies, (co-authored with Elizabeth Chua and Vincent Clark), Cognitive Neuroscience
Society Annual Meeting, New York, March 2001.
Models of Association and Dissociation in Temporal Awareness, workshop presented at
Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness Annual Meeting, Brussels, Belgium,
June 2000.
Multivariate Meta-Analysis of Papers in the Brainmap Database, Human Brain Mapping Annual
Meeting, San Antonio, June, 2000.
Captivating Qualia, Society for Philosophy and Psychology Annual Meeting, New York, June,
2000.
Geometries of mind and brain, invited lecture, University of Connecticut Department of
Philosophy, March 2000.
Institutionalizing Community Service Learning, invited presentation, Connecticut Campus Compact
Annual State Conference, October, 1999.
A Meta-analysis of Topographic Brain Mapping Studies, invited presentation, seminar in functional
brain imagining, University of Connecticut Medical School, May 1999.
Discovering Discovery: Learning through Laboratories, Laboratories and Literacy: Mathematics and
Science in the Humanities, Trinity College, February 1999.
Terra Cognita: From functional neuroimaging to the map of the mind, invited talk, Connecticut
Neuropsychology Society, September 1998.
The functional neuroanatomy of mind: a preliminary survey, Society for Philosophy and
Psychology Annual Meeting, Minneapolis, June 1998.
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Dan Lloyd, p. 11
Reading the Brain to Map the Mind: A multi-variate approach to functional neuro-imaging,
University of Connecticut Department of Psychology Colloquium, April 1998.
Can Consciousness be Localized? Institute of Living, Grand Rounds, January 1998. Also presented
at the University of Connecticut fMRI research seminar, February 1998.
The Mystery of Consciousness, Trinity College Faculty Research Lecture, October 1997; Invited
colloquium, Hofstra University Department of Philosophy, November 1997.
Twilight of the Zombies, American Philosophical Association, Pacific Division, March 1997.
Toward a Functional Anatomy of Mind, invited talk, Philosophy, Neuroscience, and Psychology
Program, Washington University, St. Louis, April 1996.
Consciousness and Its Discontents, Toward a Science of Consciousness Conference, University of
Arizona, March 1996.
I, Zombie, American Philosophical Association, Eastern Division, December 1995.
Minds, Brains, and Neural Networks, four tutorial sessions for continuing certification,
Chiropractic Council for Interdisciplinary Studies, April 1995.
Distributed Representation in the Brain, invited talk, Institute for Research in Cognitive Science,
University of Pennsylvania, April 1995.
Connectionism and the Neuroses: Repressed Memory and the Stream of Consciousness, invited
address, American Psychoanalytic Society annual meeting, New York, December 1994.
Neural Network Modeling and Psychoanalysis: From Lucy R. to Lucynet, invited address, Society
for Philosophy and Phenomenology, Yale University, October 1994.
Connectionism and Consciousness, plenary session address, Society for Philosophy and Psychology
Annual Meeting, Memphis, TN, June 1994.
Consciousness, Connectionism, and Cognitive Neuroscience: A Meeting of the Minds, invited
lecture, UC San Diego, May 1994.
Consciousness, the Unconscious, and the Brain, invited talk, Leverett House, Harvard University,
May 1994.
What is it like to be a net? American Philosophical Association, Pacific Division, April 1994.
Thinking, Doing, and Knowing, invited talk, Society for Philosophy and Psychiatry, Yale
University, October 1993.
Hysteria in a Neural Network (with Karalyn Kinsella, 2nd author), Society for Philosophy and
Psychology Annual Meeting, Vancouver, June 1993, and American Psychological
Association Annual Meeting, Toronto, August 1993.
Cognition in the Classroom? The Perils of Introductory Cognitive Science, invited presentation,
NSF Conference on Undergraduate Cognitive Science Education, Washington, DC, May
1993.
Designs for Thinking: The Computational Neuroanatomy of Chris Cherniak, American
Philosophical Association, Pacific Division, March 1993.
Media and Politics, invited lecture, Noah Webster Foundation, West Hartford, March 1993.
The Mind: Still Representational After All These Years, invited presentation, Fourteenth Annual
Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, July 1992.
Carving Pictures at the Joints (commentary), American Philosophical Association, Eastern Division,
December 1991.
Consciousness, Representation, Computation, invited lecture, Wesleyan University, April 1991.
Rules and Realism (commentary), American Philosophical Association, Pacific Division, March
1991.
Leaping to Conclusions: Connectionism, Consciousness, and the Computational Mind, Connecticut
College Philosophy Colloquium, April 1990, and Virginia Polytechnic University
Philosophy Colloquium, September 1990.
Is There a Cognitive Unconscious? Grand Rounds, Institute of Living, Hartford, CT, January 1990.
Simple Representations for Simple Minds, invited lecture, Cognitive Science Program, University
of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, March 1989.
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Dan Lloyd, p. 12
Representation from the Bottom Up, invited lecture, Hampshire College Philosophy Colloquium,
Amherst, February 1989.
Are You a Cognitive Liberal? Take This Simple Quiz!, invited paper, Conference on
Representation, Realism, and Research, Columbia University, New York, December 1988.
Something Is Happening But You Don't Know What It Is, invited paper, Vassar College Philosophy
Talk, November 1988.
From Synthetic Brains to Embodied Minds, invited lecture, Department of Neuroanatomy, School
of Medicine, Washington University, St. Louis, April 1988.
The Languages of Thought, American Philosophical Association, Pacific Division, March 1988, and
University of Connecticut Philosophy Colloquium, February 1988.
The Rules of the Brain (commentary), American Philosophical Association, Eastern Division,
December 1987.
Cognition and Narration, University of New Hampshire Philosophy Colloquium, April 1987.
Parallel Distributed Processing and the Philosophy of Mind: Only Connect? invited address, Society
for Philosophy and Psychology, Johns Hopkins University, June 1986.
The Diary of a Transducer, invited talk, Five College Colloquium in the Philosophy of Mind,
University of Massachusetts, Amherst, May 1986.
Simple Representations in Simple Nervous Systems, invited talk, Systems Neurobiology
Symposium, University of California, San Diego, April 1986.
Content in Nature: Steps Toward Neurosemantics, invited paper, Conference on the Relevance of
Neuroscience to Philosophy, University of California, San Diego, April 1986.
Innervating Representation, Tufts University Philosophy Colloquium, November 1985, and
American Philosophical Association, Pacific Division, March 1986.
What is Connectionism? (commentary) American Philosophical Association, Eastern Division,
December 1985.
The Inevitability of Physiology in the Scientific Study of the Mind, American Philosophical
Association, Pacific Division, March 1985.
Mental Representation from the Bottom Up, American Philosophical Association, Eastern Division,
December 1984.
The Intentional Snail, or the Limits of Cognitive Liberalism, American Philosophical Association,
Pacific Division, March 1985.
Looking at Mental Images, invited paper, Five College Colloquium in the Philosophy of Mind,
Hampshire College, November 1981.
TEACHING:
Trinity College, Hartford, CT, Assistant Professor, 1987-1990, Associate Professor with tenure,
1991-1999; Full Professor, 2000-present
Visiting Professor, University of Helsinki, Finland, 2002-2003
Simmons College, Boston, Visiting Assistant Professor, 1985-1986
University of California, Santa Barbara, Assistant Professor, 1982-1985
SERVICE:
AT TRINITY:
Member, Neuroscience Coordinating Committee
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Dan Lloyd, p. 13
Member, Charter Committee for Social Reform, 2012.
Chair, Department of Philosophy (2005-2009)
Director, Tutorial College (2003-2005)
Faculty Coordinator, Community Learning Initiative (1994-2002)
Community Action Minor Coordinator
Cognitive Science Minor Coordinator
Community Learning Curriculum Development Committee
Chair, Community Learning Advisory Group
Trinity Urban Review Committee
Instructional Technologies in Education Committee
Neuroscience Coordinating Committee
New Faculty Orientation Planning Committee
Educational Studies Advisory Committee
Various departmental and administrative search committees
Various workshops for TAs, RAs, students, and faculty
Chair, Faculty Advisory Committee on Fraternities and Sororities
Urban Learning Task Force
Connecticut Campus Compact Founding Committee
Trinity Strategic Planning Task Force
First Year Program Council
Math Center Advisory Committee
Chair, Racial Harassment Grievance Committee
Curriculum Committee
Joint Subcommittee for review of the Educational Studies Program
Year One Implementation Committee
Institutional Advancement Committee
Director, Neuroscience Program
IN THE COMMUNITY:
Board of Directors, Connecticut National Organization for Women
Classical Magnet lecturer on philosophy and science in Hartford Middle Schools
Board of Directors, Community Partners in Action
Volunteer, Community Partners in Action Prison Arts Program
Steering Committee, Connecticut Campus Compact
Consultant, New England Resource Center for Higher Education
Board of Directors, Hartford Center for Creative and Critical Thinking
Volunteer, Institute of Living (Psychiatric Hospital)
Volunteer, St. Elizabeth’s House (Homeless Shelter)
OTHER PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES:
Organizing committee (arranging tutorials, plenaries; refereeing 400 submissions),
Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness annual meeting, Taipei, June 2008.
Member, Editorial Board, Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine
Member, Editorial Board, Philosophical Psychology
Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness
Associate, The Behavioral and Brain Sciences
Manuscript Reviewer for MIT Press, Oxford University Press, Laurence Erlbaum, Mayfield
Publishers, and various journals
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Dan Lloyd, p. 14
REFERENCES:
Patricia Smith Churchland
UC President's Professor of Philosophy
University of California San Diego
La Jolla CA 92093-0119
Daniel C. Dennett, Director
Center for Cognitive Studies
Tufts University
Medford, MA 02155-7059
(Updated 11/25/2019)
mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]