Science on Screen: Trinity Faculty Member to Deliver Talk at Showing of My Octopus Teacher
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A Trinity College faculty member will share her expertise at a screening of the Academy Award-winning documentary My Octopus Teacher in Hartford.
Associate Professor of Psychology Elizabeth D. Casserly
Associate Professor of Psychology Elizabeth D. Casserly will present a talk about interspecies communication and non-human animal cognition as part of the “Science on Screen” series hosted by Real Arts Ways. The event will be held on Saturday, June 13, at the Connecticut Science Center at 3:00 p.m. Learn more here.
My Octopus Teacher is a 2020 Netflix documentary film directed by Pippa Ehrlich and James Reed that chronicles a yearlong relationship that filmmaker Craig Foster forged with a wild octopus near South Africa.
Casserly, who has been a Trinity faculty member since 2013, conducts research focusing on human cognition, particularly with respect to speech and communication. “These are inherently interdisciplinary topics,” she said in her faculty profile. “Understanding the mind requires knowledge from neuroanatomical connections and electrophysiology to schools of philosophical thought and contemporary computer science.” Her particular study of language has involved physics, engineering, formal linguistics, fieldwork on Scandinavian languages in the North Atlantic, computer science, psychology, and the speech and hearing sciences.
“I believe that it is only when we bring these diverse views together that we can hope to unpack the complexities of humanity’s cognitive underpinnings,” Casserly said. “Speech, for example, involves the mind, the brain, social pressures, the physics of sound transmission, and the particular language being spoken. Missing any of these pieces leaves us with a picture that is incomplete, at best, and misleading at worst.”
At Trinity, Casserly has an appointment in the Neuroscience Program, in addition to her position in the Psychology Department, and in 2020 she became the coordinator for the cognitive science minor, in which students can bring together courses from across the curriculum to create a rich scholarship surrounding the mind.
“I hope to inspire students—and colleagues—to see and appreciate connections across disparate specializations and scholarly work,” Casserly said.
The “Science on Screen” lineup also will include: Bringing Up Baby (Saturday, July 18), Point Break (Saturday, August 15), Agent of Happiness (Saturday, October 17), and Wall-E (Saturday, November 7). Each event includes a speaker who introduces current research or technological advances.
The June 13 event featuring Casserly’s talk begins at 3:00 p.m. at the Connecticut Science Center, located at 250 Columbus Boulevard in Hartford. Tickets and more information are available through Real Art Ways.
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