Mind & Brain Prize

The Mind & Brain Prize was established in 2003 and aims at honouring the most relevant researchers in the field of cognitive science, as well as to recognize outstanding achievement in advancing knowledge about mind and brain by persons whose work contributed to the growth and development of the discipline.[1][2] It is awarded by the University and Polytechnic of Turin.

Laureates

Giacomo Rizzolatti, first Mind & Brain Prize laureate

[3][4]

gollark: I doubt in practice you would actually get a normal distribution, but sure.
gollark: I guess.
gollark: No. You still only have one mean, which is going to be somewhere between the peaks.
gollark: Not *necessarily*, a distribution can have multiple peaks.
gollark: Equivalently, if you take a random person you know nothing about, the probability that their height is between, say, μ-3σ and μ-2σ (154cm to 164cm) is lower than the probability of it being between μ-2σ and μ-σ (164cm to 173cm).

See also

References

  1. Psychologies nel mondo Archived 2011-09-23 at the Wayback Machine (2006)
  2. Mente e cervello (rivista mensile) Archived 2011-11-05 at the Wayback Machine
  3. Mind & Brain Prize – Center for Cognitive Science (PDF format).
  4. http://www.mentecervello.it/home/node/55


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