home
   ::: about
   ::: news
   ::: links
   ::: giving
   ::: contact

events
   ::: calendar
   ::: lunchtime
   ::: annual lecture series
   ::: conferences

people
   ::: visiting fellows
   ::: postdoc fellows
   ::: resident fellows
   ::: associates

joining
   ::: visiting fellowships  
     ::: postdoc fellowships
   ::: resident fellowships
   ::: associateships

being here
   ::: visiting
   ::: the last donut
   ::: photo album


::: center home >> events >> conferences >> other >> 2013-14 >>psx4

Philosophy of Scientific Experimentation 4 (PSX4)

11-12 April 2014
Center for Philosophy of Science
817 Cathedral of Learning
University of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, PA USA

 

     Friday    

9:00

Continental breakfast

9:30

Keynote speaker: Paula Grabowski (Biological Sciences, University of Pittsburgh)
Perspectives on RNA and the Evolution of Biological Catalysis and Proteomic Diversity

10:30

Nina Atanasova (Philosophy, University of Cincinnati)
Validating Animal Models

11:15

Coffee Break

11:30

Carl Craver (Philosophy, Washington University in St. Louis)
Thinking about Interventions: Optogenetics, Experiments, and Maker’s Knowledge

12:15

Irina Meketa (Philosophy, Boston University)
How Parsimony Biases Experimental Design In Comparative Cognition

1:00-2:30

Lunch on your own

2:30

Keynote speaker: Andrea Loettgers (Philosophy, University of Geneva)
Modeling/Experimenting? The Synthetic Strategy in the Circadian Clock Research

3:30

Melinda Fagan (Philosophy, Rice University)
Crucial Stem Cell Experiments? An Objection to the Uncertainty Principle for Stem Cells

4:15

Coffee Break

4:30

Sandra Mitchell (History and Philosophy of Science, University of Pittsburgh)
On Relations Between Experimental and Representational Models

5:15

Spencer Hey (Biomedical Ethics, McGill University)
Uncertainty, Underdetermination, and the Units of Clinical Translation

 

 

     Saturday     

9:00

Continental Breakfast

9:30

Keynote speaker: Paolo Palmieri (History and Philosophy of Science, University of Pittsburgh)
What Makes a Good Experimentalist? Among Other Things, Good Senses…

10:30

Peter Distelzweig (Philosophy, Western Michigan University)
William Harvey’s Really Good (Aristotelian, Socratic, Whewellian) Experiments

11:15

Coffee Break

11:30

John Norton (History and Philosophy of Science, University of Pittsburgh)
Is the Replicability of Experiment a Principle of Inductive Logic?

12:15

Nora Boyd (History and Philosophy of Science, University of Pittsburgh)
Equivalence Principle Tests

1:00-2:30

Lunch on your own

2:30

Keynote speaker: Margaret Morrison (Philosophy, University of Toronto)
Bridging the Great Divide: Simulation, Experiments, and Validation Experiments

3:30

Emily Parke (Philosophy, University of Pennsylvania)
Experiments, Simulations, and Surprises

4:15

Coffee Break

4:30

Kathleen Creel (Philosophy, Simon Fraser University)
Machine Learning as Experiment

5:15

Sherri Roush (Philosophy, University of California, Berkeley)
The Epistemic Superiority of Experiment to Simulation

 

Organizing Committee

Allan Franklin, Chair (University of Colorado Boulder; allan.franklin@colorado.edu)
Deborah Mayo (Virginia Tech; dmayo@vt.edu)
John Norton (University of Pittsburgh; jdnorton@pitt.edu)
Wendy Parker (Ohio University; Durham University; parkerw@ohio.edu)
Slobodan Perovic (University of Belgrade; perovic@pitt.edu)
Samuel Schindler (Aarhus University; samuel.schindler@ivs.au.dk)
Marcel Weber (University of Geneva; Marcel.Weber@unige.ch)

For any questions concerning the conference, please contact Slobodan Perovic or any of the members of the Organizing Committee.

Sponsor

Center for Philosophy of Science, University of Pittsburgh

 
 
Revised 4/8/14 - Copyright 2012