Paul B. Baltes Lecture

The Paul B. Baltes lecture is held annually by the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities. The lectures commenced in 2008 and are named after Paul Baltes, the German developmental psychologist.[1]

Each year the Academy selects a leading international scientist to present the lecture which commemorates Paul Baltes` achievements in psychological research and his contributions to psychology.

The Paul B. Baltes lecture is a joint initiative of the psychology institutes in Berlin and Potsdam (Freie Universität, Humboldt-Universität, Technische Universität, Universität Potsdam, Max Planck Institute for Human Development) and is supported by the Margret M. and Paul B. Baltes Foundation.

The Lectures

  • 2008 Michael Posner: "Executive attention: Its origins, development, and functions".[2]
  • 2009 Lynn Hasher: "Age-Related Consequences of Attention Regulation and Dysregulation".
  • 2010 John Nesselroade: "The Person-Oriented Perspective in Psychology".
  • 2011 Andrew Meltzoff: "The Development of Social Cognition: Imitation, Cultural Stereotypes and Identity Formation in Children".[3]
  • 2012 Jutta Heckhausen: "A Motivational Theory of Life-Span Development".
  • 2013 Wendy Rogers: "Human-Robot Interaction:Understanding the Potential of Robots for Older Adults".
  • 2014 Brent W. Roberts
  • 2015 Ray Dolan: "Circuits for Social Cognition".[4][5]
  • 2016 Diane Poulin-Dubois: "The developmental origins of selective trust".[6]
  • 2017 Kevin Warwick: "Neural implants for therapy and enhancement".[7][8]
  • 2018 Denny Borsboom: "Network approaches to psychopathology".[9]
  • 2019 David Poeppel: "The Auditory System and the Motor System, in Time".[10]
  • 2020 Nora Newcombe: "Affordances and Representations: Understanding Mental Rotation, Perspective Taking and Spatial Reorientation".[11]
  • 2021 Peter Hancock: “Time to Think of Time”.[12]
  • 2022 Stephan Lewandowsky: “Demagoguery, Technology, and Cognition: Addressing the Threats to Democracy”.[13]

References

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