ICIS 2024 Speakers

World renowned researchers from multiple disciplines will join us at ICIS 2024. Keynote speakers, Invited speakers, and the Presidential Symposium comprise of only some of the presentations to be expected.

Invited Symposium

Invited Talks

Invited Workshop

Presidential Symposium

 

Mark Tomlinson

Mark Tomlinson

Universiteit Stellenbosch

Professor Mark Tomlinson is the Co-Director of the Institute for Life Course Health Research Stellenbosch University.  He is also Professor of Maternal and Child Health in the School of Nursing and Midwifery, Queens University, Belfast, UK.  His scholarly work focusses on how to improve early childhood development, child and adolescent mental health, maternal mental health, and developing life course approaches. He was elected as a member of the Academy of Science in South Africa in 2017.  He has published over 350 papers in peer-reviewed journals, edited four books and published numerous chapters

Amina Abubakar

Amina Abubakar

Aga Khan University

Dr. Amina Abubakar is a Kenyan research psychologist. She is a Professor and the Director of Institute for Human Development, Aga Khan University.  She is also a senior research scientist at the  Kenya Medical Research Institute/Wellcome Trust Research Programme and holds an honorary fellowship at the University of Oxford. Dr. Abubakar’s research focuses on developmental delays and impairments in children affected by health challenges such as HIV, malnutrition, epilepsy, Sickle Cell Disease, and malaria. She is keen to contribute towards developing culturally appropriate strategies to identify, monitor, and rehabilitate at-risk children. Recognized for her pioneering work, she received the prestigious Royal Society Pfizer Award in 2016 for her impactful research in East Africa and contributions to neurodevelopmental assessment.

Erum Mariam

Erum Mariam

BRAC University

Erum Mariam is the Executive Director of BRAC IED (Institute of Educational Development) BRAC University, in Bangladesh. Mariam completed her PhD in Education from University of Cambridge in 2008. She has extensive experience of scaling up education interventions both nationally and globally.

Invited Symposium

Diverse Approaches to Infant Language Development

Reiko Mazuka

Reiko Mazuka

RIKEN Center for Brain Science, Waseda University & Duke University

Dr. Reiko Mazuka received her PhD from Cornell University in developmental psychology in 1990 and joined the Department of Psychology at Duke University. In 2004, she joined RIKEN Brain Science Institute (currently RIKEN Center for Brain Science) and opened the Laboratory for Language Development. Her investigations center on how infants learn the sound system of languages, using behavioral, computational, and imaging techniques. Since March 2023, she is a senior visiting researcher at RIKEN CBS, where she continues to carry out her research, as well as a senior visiting researcher and visiting professor at Waseda University, and research professor at Duke University.

Tilbe Göksun

Tilbe Göksun

Koç University, Department of Psychology

Tilbe Göksun is an Associate Professor of Psychology at Koç University and the director of the Language & Cognition Lab (https://lclab.ku.edu.tr/). Her primary research involves language-thought interaction across developmental time, early language learning, and multimodal language processing and production in different populations. Her work employs interdisciplinary perspectives, focusing on multi-method and cross-linguistic research with multilevel analyses. She received many national and international awards (e.g., James S. McDonnell Human Cognition Scholar award, Young Outstanding Scientist Awards of Turkish Academy of Sciences and Science Academy of Turkey) and serves on the Cognitive Science Society Governing Board.

Caroline Rowland

Caroline Rowland

Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics

Caroline Rowland is Director of the Language Development Department at the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics and Professor of First Language Acquisition at Radboud University. Her research focuses on how children learn to communicate with language, how the developing brain supports this process, and how it is affected by cross-linguistic, cultural and individual variation. Her book, Understanding Child Language Acquisition, is an introduction to the most important research on child language acquisition over the last fifty years, and to some of the most influential theories in the field.

Invited Symposium

Artificial Intelligence

Denis Mareschal

Denis Mareschal

Birkbeck University

Jochen Triesch

Jochen Triesch

Frankfurt

Bonamy Oliver

Bonamy Oliver

University College London

Bonamy Oliver a developmental psychologist specialising in family relationships for children’s socio-emotional and behavioural adjustment and mental health. For many years, she has worked with large-scale, longitudinal cohort studies, as well as smaller-scale, detailed studies and intervention studies, collaborating with parenting and educational practitioners. Bonamy’s open-access online parent-child interaction task has been nominated for impact awards for the past three years by the UK’s Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health, and is used all over the world.

Tim Smith

Tim Smith

University of Stellenbosch, Cape Town

Caspar Addyman

Caspar Addyman

Birkbeck, University of London

Invited Talks

Mechanisms of Atypical Development

Emily Jones

Emily Jones

Birkbeck, University of London

Emily is a Professor at the Centre for Brain and Cognitive Development, Birkbeck, University of London. Her research interests centre on understanding the cognitive and neural mechanisms that drive variability in developmental trajectories. In this context, she runs a number of prospective longitudinal studies of typical and atypical neurodevelopment in infants and directs electrophysiological and eyetracking acquisition across several large-scale European and Global Health studies of children and adults with neurodevelopmental conditions.

Gender

Melissa Hines

Melissa Hines

University of Cambridge

Professor Melissa Hines directs the Gender Development Research Centre at the University of Cambridge. She investigates hormonal and sociocultural influences on gender development, including children’s toy and activity preferences, as well as gender identity, sexual orientation, personality, and cognition. She is interested not only in factors that influence gender development but also in how these influences interact to shape gender development. Ongoing projects include studies of androgen exposure during early infancy (mini-puberty) and later gender-related outcomes. Melissa is Past-President of the International Academy of Sex Research and author of over a hundred peer-reviewed journal articles, and the book, “Brain gender”.

Cross-Species Perspective on Social Cognition

Zanna Clay

Zanna Clay

Durham University

Zanna Clay is a Professor of comparative and developmental psychology at Durham University, where she leads the Comparative Cognition and Cross-Cultural Development Lab. Combining naturalistic observations and experimental methods, Prof.  Clay studies infants, young children across cultures and great apes in order to investigate the evolutionary and developmental basis of empathy, social cognition, language and communication. She is currently leading a large-scale project longitudinally investigating the comparative cross-cultural development of empathy in human infants and great apes.

Sleep and Memory Research

Sarah Berger

Sarah Berger

College of Staten Island and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York

Dr. Sarah Berger is a Professor of Psychology at the City University of New York (College of Staten Island and the Graduate Center). Dr. Berger was an American Association of University Women Research Fellow and a Fulbright Research Scholar. Dr. Berger studies the interaction between infants’ cognitive and motor development, particularly response inhibition and its implications for the organization of infants’ attention. She also studies the relation between sleep and motor development—how skill onset impacts the quality of infants’ sleep, as well as the impact of sleep on infant motor problem solving.

Manuela Friedrich

Manuela Friedrich

Humboldt University, Berlin

Dr. Sarah Berger is a Professor of Psychology at the City University of New York (College of Staten Island and the Graduate Center). Dr. Berger was an American Association of University Women Research Fellow and a Fulbright Research Scholar. Dr. Berger studies the interaction between infants’ cognitive and motor development, particularly response inhibition and its implications for the organization of infants’ attention. She also studies the relation between sleep and motor development—how skill onset impacts the quality of infants’ sleep, as well as the impact of sleep on infant motor problem solving.

Robotics

Angelo Cangelosi

Angelo Cangelosi

University of Manchester

Angelo Cangelosi is Professor of Machine Learning and Robotics at the University of Manchester (UK) and co-director and founder of the Manchester Centre for Robotics and AI. He holds an European Research Council (ERC) Advanced grant. He also is Turing Fellow at the Alan Turing Institute London. His research interests are in cognitive and developmental robotics, neural networks, language grounding, human robot-interaction and trust, and robot companions for health and social care. Overall, he has secured over £38m of research grants as coordinator/PI, including the ERC Advanced eTALK, the UKRI TAS Trust Node and CRADLE Prosperity, the US AFRL project THRIVE++, and numerous Horizon and MSCAs grants. Cangelosi has produced more than 300 scientific publications. He is Editor-in-Chief of the journals Interaction Studies and IET Cognitive Computation and Systems, and in 2015 was Editor-in-Chief of IEEE Transactions on Autonomous Development. He has chaired numerous international conferences, including ICANN2022 Bristol, and ICDL2021 Beijing. His book “Developmental Robotics: From Babies to Robots” (MIT Press) was published in January 2015, and translated in Chinese and Japanese. His latest book “Cognitive Robotics” (MIT Press), coedited with Minoru Asada, was recently published in 2022.

Shoji Itakura

Shoji Itakura

Kyoto University

Dr. Shoji Itakura is a Fellow Professor and the Director of the Center for Baby Science at Doshisha University in Japan and a Visiting Professor at Milan Catholic University in Italy. He obtained his BA in Psychology at Yokohama National University, and his Master’s degree and Ph.D. at the Primate Research Institute of Kyoto University. Dr. Itakura currently serves as the President of the Japanese Society for Baby Science, Executive Director of the Japan Society Developmental Neuroscience, and Editor of the Japanese Journal of Psychology. His research focuses on human development and explores infant cognition and behavior from ontogenetic, phylogenetic, and robotics perspectives. His works have been published in prominent journals such as Psychological Science, Nature Communications, and Developmental Science.

Media and Infant Development

Jenny Radesky

Jenny Radesky

University of Michigan Medical School

Dr. Radesky is the David G. Dickinson Collegiate Professor of Pediatrics at the University of Michigan Medical School. She is Director of the Division of Developmental Behavioral Pediatrics and focuses clinically on autism, neurodiversity, and advocacy. Her NIH-funded research examines the use of mobile and interactive technology by parents and young children, parent-child relationships, and child social-emotional development. She authored the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) policy statements Media and Young Minds and Digital Advertising to Children and is a co-Medical Director of the SAMHSA-funded AAP Center of Excellence on Social Media and Youth Mental Health.

Anne Wood

Anne Wood

Ragdoll Productions Ltd.

In 1984 Anne Wood founded Ragdoll Productions, an acclaimed, award-winning, and innovative independent TV production company, whose work, aimed at the youngest viewers, is loved worldwide.

Born in County Durham, Anne, a qualified secondary school teacher, was determined to encourage children to read and set-up children’s magazines and book clubs, so becoming a sought-after consultant embracing book publishing, radio, and television before founding Ragdoll Productions.

With award-winning programmes to her credit, particularly the phenomenally successful Teletubbies and In the Night Garden, Ragdoll has achieved international recognition and Anne has many accolades, including a CBE for services to Children’s Broadcasting.

Environmental Effects on Cognition/Complexity

Lenneke Alink

Lenneke Alink

Leiden University

Prof dr. Lenneke Alink is professor of Forensic Family Studies and Scientific Director of the Institute of Education and Child Studies at Leiden University. She obtained her PhD at Leiden University in 2006 and was a visiting scholar at the Center for Child Development, University of Minnesota from 2006-2008. Her research focuses on various aspects of adverse childhood experiences, parenting problems and child maltreatment, such as risk factors, causes, consequences, prevention, and decisions in child protection cases.

Natalie Brito

Natalie Brito

New York University

Dr. Natalie Brito is an Associate Professor in the Department of Applied Psychology and PI of the Infant Studies of Language and Neurocognition (ISLAND) lab. Dr. Brito’s research explores how social and cultural contexts shape the trajectory of brain and behavioral development, with the goal of better understanding how to best support caregivers and create environments that foster healthy development. Specifically, her ongoing studies examine how both proximal factors (i.e., maternal mental health, parent-child interactions) and distal influences (i.e., social policies) impact the development of attention, memory, and socioemotional skills during the first three years of life.

Historical Perspectives

Sally Shuttleworth

Sally Shuttleworth

St Anne’s College, University of Oxford

Sally Shuttleworth is Professor of English Literature at the University of Oxford. She has published widely on the intersections between culture and science and has a long-standing interest in the history of childhood. Her books include The Mind of the Child: Child Development in Literature, Science and Medicine, 1840-1900 (OUP, 2010), and the co-authored, Anxious Times: Medicine and Modernity in Nineteenth-Century Britain (Pittsburgh U. Press, 2019), the latter arising from an ERC project she directed, ‘Diseases of Modern Life: Nineteenth-Century Perspectives’ (2014-19).

Catriona Seth

Catriona Seth

All Souls College

Invited Workshop

Diversity in Publications

Yusuke Moriguchi

Yusuke Moriguchi

Graduate School of Letters, Kyoto University

Yusuke Moriguchi is a Japanese developmental psychologist who has two main research interests: (1) the developmental origins of cognitive control (executive function) during early childhood (2) young children’s consciousness and subjective experience, such as visual consciousness and imaginary companions. Currently, he is utilizing both behavioral experiments, eye tracking methods, and neuroimaging measurements to tackle these topics.

Lisa Oakes

Lisa Oakes

UC Davis

Lisa M. Oakes is a Distinguished Professor of Psychology and Faculty Researcher at the University of California at Davis. She has studied aspects of visual cognition in infancy, including categorization, visual short-term memory, and visual perception. Oakes has published over 100 books, chapters, and journal articles, and her research is funded by the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation and the James S. McDonnell Foundation. She is a fellow of the American Psychological Society and the American Psychological Association. She served as the president of the International Congress of Infant Studies from 2018 to 2020, and will begin her term as the Editor of Infancy in 2024.

Marigen Narea

Marigen Narea

Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile

Marigen Narea is an Associate Professor at the School of Psychology and Principal Researcher at the Center for Educational Justice (CJE) of the Catholic University of Chile. She is a psychologist and master’s in educational psychology from the Catholic University of Chile. In addition, she is a Master’s in Education and International Development from Boston University and Ph.D. in Social Policy from the London School of Economics (LSE). Her research focuses on the impact of public policies and educational programs on child development and family well-being, especially that of the most vulnerable families. Some topics of interest are parenting skills and practices, early adversity, and mental health.

Thank you to our 2024 Sponsors & Exhibitors!

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