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  • SCTPLS '97 Conference Update & Registration Form

    CALL FOR PAPERS & REGISTRATION
    ---------------------------------------------------------------
    SEVENTH ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF

    THE SOCIETY FOR CHAOS THEORY IN PSYCHOLOGY & LIFE SCIENCES
    July 31- Aug 3, 1997. Marquette University,
    Milwaukee, Wisconsin
    --------------------------------------------------------------
    Papers and programs are now requested pertaining to applications of chaos
    theory, fractals, nonlinear dynamics and related principles applied to any of
    the various psychological subdisciplines,neuroscience, biology, physiology
    and other areas of medical research, economics, sociology, anthropology,
    physics, political science, organizations and their management, other
    business applications, education, art, philosophy, and literature. Please
    indicate to which of the foregoing topics your paper applies.

    Submissions may be single papers, symposia, roundtable or salon programs.
    Subject matter may be theoretical, empirical or methodology oriented. Oral
    presentations will be 30 minutes in duration.

    Proposals should be submitted by APRIL 30, 1997 to:
    William Sulis, M.D. Ph.D., By e-mail: sulisw@mcmail.cis.mcmaster.ca;
    by FAX (to McMaster University): 905-521-7948;
    by snail-mail: 255 Townline Rd. E., RR5, Cayuga, Ontario, Canada, N0A 1E0.

    This year's conference will preceed the American Psychological
    Association's annual conference in Chicago, later in August.


    SPECIAL GUEST SPEAKERS:

    Julian Sprott, University of Wisconsin, Madison. WI
    David Campbell, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

    SPECIAL EVENT

    At the conclusion of the Thursday workshops, all conferees are invited to
    join the folks who have attended the Organizational Workshop for a special
    presentation of The Chaos Exercise. There everyone can experience the chaotic
    flow of work in a simulated hierarchical organization, and collect data.
    If all goes well enough, a data analysis and interpretative feedback will
    appear in the next available SCTPLS Newsletter.

    SCHEDULE

    July 31 Basic and Organizational Workshops
    Opening Night- Plenary Speaker
    Aug 1 Conference Day 1
    Banquet- Plenary Speaker
    Aug 2 Conference Day 2
    Plenary Speaker
    Aug 3 A.M. Business Meeting and Final Conference Sessions
    Start Clinical and Philosophy Workshops
    P.M. Conclusioin of Clincal and Philosophical Workshops



    WORKSHOPS

    Separate registration is required for those wishing to attend the workshops.
    See registration form at the end of this file.


    BASIC DYNAMICS WORKSHOP (Half day,AM) given by Keith Clayton, Ph.D., Vanderbilt
    University; membership secretary, Society for Chaos Theory in Psychology &
    Life Sciences). This workshop will cover basic concepts of nonlinear dynamics,
    including attractors, bifurcations, phase space, sensitivity to initial
    conditions, complexity, fractals, and dimensionality. Implications of these
    concepts for time series analysis and theory development in psychology and
    the life sciences will also be addressed.

    WORKSHOP: NONLINEAR DYNAMICS FOR ORGANIZATIONS (half day, PM) given by
    Stephen J. Guastello, Ph.D., Marquette University, Milwaukee, WI; Assoc.
    Professor Industrial-Organizational Psychology and Human Factors Engineering;
    past president, Society for Chaos Theory in Psychology & Life Sciences.
    This workshop will explore the best-substantiated contributions of nonlinear
    dynamics to the science and practice of management and organizational behavior.
    The medium will involve a mixture of lectures, discussion, and experiential
    exercises. The overall goal is to develop a conceptual and intuitive
    understanding of chaotic and other processes in organizations, and their
    implications for the strategic control and development of the system.

    Topics: 1. The dynamics that are of greatest use.
    2. Individual performance and organizational effectiveness.
    3. Motivational flow.
    4. Self-organization and other processes of organizational change.
    5. Creativity and problem solving.
    6. Leadership in a dynamical environment.
    7. Game theory and coordination.

    CLINICAL WORKSHOP (Full day) given by Alan Stein, Ph.D. NECET, New York.
    The Clinical Workshop will be divided into two parts, punctuated by a lunch break. During the
    morning, we will review several theoretical and practical matters that become clinically relevant only
    when we seek to understand mental processes as solely epiphenomenal to nonlinearly founded
    neurobiology. These include I. Prigogine's arguments against time reversibility in open, living systems
    which challenge regression and W. J. Freeman's opposition to stabile, internal representations which
    dispute both the reliability of memory and the appropriateness of interpretations based upon intentions.
    We will review and assess E. Thelen's and B. Beebe's efforts to formulate infant development in terms
    of nonlinear dynamics and its implications for treatment and will investigate W. R. Bion's, D. W.
    Winnicott's and R. Galatzer-Levy's attempts to work with epistemological uncertainty in the face of
    emerging conscious contents in clinical settings.
    After lunch, the workshop will become a clinical case seminar wherein participants can pursue
    applying the morning's theoretical work to actual cases. Everyone is encouraged to present cases
    (dyadic, couple, family, group and/or organizational) in the afternoon session.

    PHILOSOPHY WORKSHOP: Philosophy of Science Issues in Chaos and Complexity
    Theories: Emergence, Causality, and Explanation. (Full day, given by):
    Jeffrey Goldstein, Ph.D., Adelphi University, Garden City, NY; Past-
    president of the Society for Chaos Theory in Psychology & Life Sciences.
    Description: This workshop will address various issues in the philosophy of
    science and philosophy in general prompted by research into chaotic and
    complex systems. We will be focussing primarily on how scientific theories of
    chaotic and complex systems contain "pictures" of causality, order, change,
    and complexity. Specifically, we will be exploring issues arising from
    emergent, self-organizing phenomena. In that context we will inquire into
    patterns, order, and structure, complexifying operations, the emergence of
    new structures and patterns, and the issue of what is considered natural
    versus what calls for explanation. Topics include:

    I. Scientific Theories and Wittgensteinian "Pictures"
    A. Wittgenstein's idea of the "pictures" that captivate and mislead
    B. Explicit and Implicit "Pictures" in Scientific Theories
    II. History of the Idea of Causality
    A. Ancient and Medieval Notions
    B. Preformationism vs. Epigenesis
    C. Modern Ideas
    III. Emergentism
    A. Historical Background
    B. Santa Fe Institute Emergentism: Search for New Laws of Emergence
    IV. Causality and Emergence in the Logistic Equation
    A. May's and Feigenbaum's Work on the Logistic Equation
    B. Factors of Emergence in the Logistic Equation
    V. Issues in Emergence
    A. Novelty
    B. Emergent Properties
    C. Levels of reality, sciences, novelty, reducibility and deductibility
    C. Predictability in Nonlinear Dynamics, its limits, and randomness
    D. Epistemological and Ontological Issues
    VI. Scientific Explanation and the Natural
    A. Price's Ideas on Explanation and the Natural
    B. Wittgenstein's "On Certainty"
    C. The Search for a New Law of Self-organization



    LOCATION, ACCOMMODATION, REGISTRATION

    This year's conference will be held on the campus of Marquette University,
    about an hour's drive north of Chicago. Accommodation will be available in
    residence on campus. Please see the registration form attached to the end of
    this file for rates and selections. Please note: All presenters much register
    for the conference.

    Accommodation

    A 3 day package at Marquette University, single occupancy, $175, extra day
    $60. Double occupancy $100, extra day $55. A 10% discount offered if you
    find your own roommate. There is no meal plan this year. However the banquet
    on Aug 1 is included with your registration, as is continental breakfast each
    day of the conference.


    REGISTRATION FORM
    Society for Chaos Theory in Psychology & Life Sciences
    1997 Annual International Conference, Workshops, and Membership

    To ensure proper credit, please complete the following and return with your
    payment.


    Name______________________________________________ _____________________________


    Address __________________________________________________ _____________________


    City _______________________ State/Province/zip/postal code:___________________

    Country ____________________ e-mail: __________________________________________

    Tel: ________________________ FAX: ____________________________________________

    For student members/registrants: What is your institution and program of study?

    __________________________________________________ _____________________________

    Please check any and all your registration choices on the form below. Return
    with your payment to Keith Clayton, Ph.D., Membership Secretary, SCTPLS,
    Dept. Psychology,Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37240 USA.
    E-mail: claytokn@ctrvax.vanderbilt.edu. Make check payable in US dollars to:
    Society for Chaos Theory in Psychology & Life Sciences (or SCTPLS). For
    personal checks drawn in unconconverted non-US currencies, see option 5 below.
    For wire transfer information, contact Keith Clayton.

    1. Membership

    _____ $60 Regular

    _____ $50 Student

    2. Conference Registration

    _____ $110 Regular members

    _____ $85 Student members

    _____ $160 Non-members

    3. Workshops

    BASIC
    _____ $80 Regular

    _____ $50 Student

    ORGANIZATIONAL
    _____ $80 Regular

    _____ $50 Student

    CLINICAL
    _____ $150 Regular

    _____ $75 Student


    PHILOSOPHY

    _____ $150 Regular

    _____ $75 Student

    4. Lodging

    _____ $60 Extra night July 30th (only)

    _____ $175 3-day pkg SINGLE occupancy

    _____ $100 Double occupancy. Please find me a roomate roommate

    _____ $90 Double. My roommate is:

    ___________________________

    5. Unconverted non-US Currencies

    _____ $15 Personal check made out in US dollars from
    a bank outside the USA.


    6. TOTAL -- Please total your selections:

    US$ _______________________
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