Join us and take a deep dive into the subject matter and themes of Beyond Words. Central Conversations offers patrons introductions to world class scholars, scientists, humanists, community leaders, activists and other people who are shaping the world that we live in.
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Past events
March
Imagining "Beyond Words"17mar4:15 pm4:15 pm(GMT-04:00)
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Imagining Beyond Words: Playwright Laura Maria Censabella and Director Cassie Chapados on bringing the play to life. Join us for a conversation with the playwright
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Imagining Beyond Words: Playwright Laura Maria Censabella and Director Cassie Chapados on bringing the play to life.
Join us for a conversation with the playwright and director of Beyond Words as we discuss the adventure of creating a play based on the life of a living scientist. How does the playwright choose what to include from the life of the scientist, and how does the director collaborate to create an authentic work of art?
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Speakers for this event
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Cassie Chapados
Cassie Chapados
Cassie Chapados, (she/her) is a production manager, director, intimacy choreographer, educator, and designer from Wisconsin, who has lived in the Boston area for the past ten years. In addition to her work with Central Square Theater she has worked locally with Hub Theater Company, Watertown Children’s Theater, Flat Earth Theater, Fresh Ink Theater and others. She is passionate about new work, particularly work that centers young, queer folks who are coming into their own and exploring who they can be. She is a graduate of Boston College with a B.A. in Theater Arts and served as the Director of Production at CST prior to becoming the Technical Director at Harvard University.
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Laura Maria Censabella
Laura Maria Censabella
Laura Maria Censabella (playwright) is happy to be back at Central Square Theater where her IRNE Award winning Best New Play (Small Stage Category) Paradise made its world premiere as part of CST’s Catalyst Collaborative@MIT program. Paradise has been produced by numerous theatres since then, most notably in Los Angeles at the Odyssey Theatre with Viola Davis and Julius Tennon as producers. She then wrote the screenplay for Vicangelo Films and JuVee Productions and an audio version of the play opened L.A. Theatre Works’ 2021/2022 season (available on Audible). Ms. Censabella is the recipient of the $10,000 Saroyan/Paul Human Rights Playwriting Prize for her play Carla Cooks The War, three grants in Playwriting and Screenwriting from the New York Foundation for the Arts, and two Daytime Emmy Awards. Other plays and musicals have been developed or produced at the O’Neill National Playwrights Conference, Philadelphia Festival Theatre for New Plays, WP Theater, Ensemble Studio Theatre, Portland Stage, the New Harmony Project, Gulfshore Playhouse, Lyric Stage Company of Boston, The Playwright’s Laboratory in London, Northlight Theatre, The Working Theatre, Luna Stage, Passage Theatre, Mendocino Theatre Company and Urban Stages, among others. She directs the Ensemble Studio Theatre Playwrights Unit and teaches at the New School for Drama where she received the Distinguished University Wide Teaching Award. A graduate of Yale College with a B.A. in Philosophy, she is a proud member of Honor Roll! an action and advocacy group of women+ playwrights over 40. Ms. Censabella was a writer-in-residence at Hedgebrook in 2023.
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Join us for a journey through the intersection of linguistics and evolutionary biology in a discussion based on four decades of groundbreaking research. Be there as we explore
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Join us for a journey through the intersection of linguistics and evolutionary biology in a discussion based on four decades of groundbreaking research. Be there as we explore the training of African Grey Parrots using English speech as a communication code and engage as we unravel insights into avian intelligence. Learn how we connect the linguistic and evolutionary realms through patterns of speciation, genome evolution, and adaptation in birds and their relatives with Dr. Irene Pepperberg and Dr. Scott V. Edwards in this very special post-show conversation.
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Speakers for this event
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Dr. Irene M. Pepperberg
Dr. Irene M. Pepperberg
Irene M. Pepperberg, SB (MIT), MA (Harvard), PhD (Harvard) is an adjunct Research Professor at Boston University and an affiliate in the Animal Behavior and Conservation Program, Hunter College, CUNY. She has been a Research Associate and Lecturer at Harvard and Purdue University, a visiting Assistant Professor (Northwestern University), tenured Associate Professor (University of Arizona), visiting Associate Professor (MIT Media Lab, where she studied animal-human-computer interfaces), and adjunct Associate Professor (Brandeis). For over forty-five years she has trained Grey parrots to use English speech referentially, then employs this communication code to examine their intelligence; the birds score at the level of 6-8-year-old children on many of the same cognitive tasks used to test humans. She received John Simon Guggenheim, Selby, and Radcliffe Fellowships, is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, American Psychological Association, Association for Psychological Science, Psychonomic Society, Animal Behavior Society, American Ornithologists’ Union, and Midwest and Eastern Psychological Associations. She has been funded by and served on grant review panels for NSF. She won the Christopher Clavius, S.J. Award, Sigma Xi (Saint Josephs University, Spring 2013), the Comparative Cognition Society Research Award (2020) and several awards for teaching and mentoring. She lectures world-wide and has authored over 170 peer-reviewed journal articles, reviews, and book chapters, The Alex Studies, and the NY Times bestseller Alex & Me. She serves on the editorial board of several journals, was an associate editor of the Journal of Comparative Psychology, and a board member of APA (Divs 3,6), EPA, and the American Ornithological Union.
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Dr. Scott V. Edwards
Dr. Scott V. Edwards
Scott Edwards is Alexander Agassiz Professor of Zoology and Curator of Ornithology in the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University. He came to Harvard in December 2003 after serving as a faculty for 9 years in the Zoology Department and the Burke Museum at the University of Washington, Seattle. His research focuses on diverse aspects of avian biology, including evolutionary history and biogeography, disease ecology, population genetics and comparative genomics. He has conducted fieldwork in phylogeography in Australia since 1987 and conducted some of the first phylogeographic analyses based on DNA sequencing. He did a postdoctoral fellowship in immunogenetics at the University of Florida and gained experience with studying the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) of birds, an important gene complex for interactions of birds and infectious diseases, pathogens and mate choice. An important system for studying these issues is the ongoing epizootic involving House Finches (Haemorhous mexicanus) and the bacterial pathogen Mycoplasma gallisepticum. His work on the MHC led him to study the large-scale structure of the avian genome and informed his current interest in using comparative genomics to study the genetic basis of phenotypic innovation in birds. In the last 10 years Dr. Edwards has helped develop novel methods for estimating phylogenetic trees from multilocus DNA sequence data. His recent work uses comparative genomics in diverse contexts to study macroevolutionary patterns in birds, including the origin of feathers and the evolution of flightlessness.From 2013-2015 Scott served as Division Director of the Division of Biological Infrastructure at the US National Science Foundation, where he oversaw a staff of 22, an annual research budget of $120M (USD), and managed funding programs focused on undergraduate research, postdoctoral fellowships, natural history collections and field stations, and cyber- and other infrastructure for all areas of biology, from molecular to ecosystem science. He has served as President of three international scientific societies based in the US: the Society for the Study of Evolution, the Society of Systematic Biologists, and the American Genetic Association, each of which publishes a scientific journal and has memberships ranging from 500 – 2500 scientists and students. He has served on the National Geographic’s Committee for Research and Exploration, the Senior Advisory Boards of the NSF-funded US National Evolutionary Synthesis Center (NESCent) and the National Institute for Mathematical and Biological Synthesis (NIMBioS), and on the Advisory Boards of the National Museum of Natural History at the Smithsonian and the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. He oversees a program funded by the National Science Foundation to increase the diversity of undergraduates in evolutionary biology and biodiversity science. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (2009), a Fellow of the American Association of the Advancement of Science (2009), and a member the National Academy of Sciences (2015).
What Do Our Pets Think About?23mar7:00 pm7:45 pm7:00 pm - 7:45 pm(GMT-04:00)
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What do Our Pets Think About? A Special Conversation with Deborah Davidson of Catalyst Conversations and Dr. Angie Johnston. Get ready for a dive into the world of canine
Event Details
What do Our Pets Think About? A Special Conversation with Deborah Davidson of Catalyst Conversations and Dr. Angie Johnston.
Get ready for a dive into the world of canine cognition and human language comprehension as we explore the ways in which our pets interpret and engage with their surroundings. Listen as we decipher the cues our pets give us in order to understand how they learn and respond to human language so that we can bridge the gap in interspecies communication.
Speakers for this event
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Angie Johnston
Angie Johnston
Angie Johnston is an assistant professor at Boston College where she directs the Canine Cognition Center and Social Learning Laboratory. She received her Ph.D. in Psychology from Yale University and her B.S. in Child Development from the University of Texas at Dallas. Her research on canine cognition and child development has received numerous awards from sources such as the National Science Foundation, and her work has been featured on NBC Nightly News, the Today Show, and Scientific American. When she’s not in the lab investigating how dogs and children learn about the world around them, you can find her at home getting new study ideas from her dogs, Vader and Finley. You can find more information at her personal website here: sites.bc.edu/angiejohnston
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Deborah Davidson
Deborah Davidson
Deborah Davidson is an artist, curator, and educator. She is founder and director of Catalyst Conversations, devoted to the dialogue between art and science. She is part of the core faculty in the MFA program at Lesley University, maintains a studio practice and directs the Suffolk University Gallery. She was the featured artist in Agni 61, the BU literary magazine. Davidson is also featured on the Mass Cultural Council’s podcast Creative Minds Outloud.Catalyst Conversations events have explored topics at the forefront of science and art-making today such as theoretical mathematics, watershed conservation, public art, STEAM education, neuroscience, and more. These events are a unique opportunity for participants of all ages and educational backgrounds to access new knowledge. Ideas are not only presented to the public, they are held open for extended conversation allowing a unique entry to intellectual inquiry.
Artists and Audiences28mar9:45 pm10:15 pm9:45 pm - 10:15 pm(GMT-04:00)
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Join us for a talkback with the cast and creative team of Beyond Words as they discuss the process of bringing the career of
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Join us for a talkback with the cast and creative team of Beyond Words as they discuss the process of bringing the career of Dr. Irene Pepperberg to life on stage.
On The Origin of Language30mar7:00 pm7:45 pm7:00 pm - 7:45 pm(GMT-04:00)
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Ever wondered about the evolution of human communication and the development of over 7,100 modern languages? Join us for a discussion with Dr. Shigeru Miyagawa, an expert in
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Ever wondered about the evolution of human communication and the development of over 7,100 modern languages? Join us for a discussion with Dr. Shigeru Miyagawa, an expert in the evolution of languages, where we will talk about the transformation of prehistoric grunts into modern communication as well as how a dialect may become classified as an independent language.
Speakers for this event
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Shigeru Miyagawa
Shigeru Miyagawa
Shigeru Miyagawa is a linguist and an expert on online education. He has published widely in linguistics, including three recent books from MIT Press. Recently, he developed the Integration Hypothesis for human language evolution, which proposes that human language arose from the combination of simpler systems including those that are associated with birdsong and also primate alarm calls. This work was featured in a BBC Radio4 program, What the songbird said. The idea also was an inspiration for Pete Wyer’s choral composition, The song of the human, which premiered at the Winter Garden of the World Trade Center in New York. For this work, he was recently awarded the São Paulo Excellence Chair. Along with MIT, his home institution, he has held positions at the University of Tokyo, University of São Paulo, and Seikei University in Tokyo.
April
The Sky and the Sea04apr9:45 pm10:15 pm9:45 pm - 10:15 pm(GMT-04:00)
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The Sky and the Sea: A Discussion with Dr. Diana Reiss and Dr. Aniruddh Patel Join us for a discussion as we journey into the depths of marine animal
Event Details
The Sky and the Sea: A Discussion with Dr. Diana Reiss and Dr. Aniruddh Patel
Join us for a discussion as we journey into the depths of marine animal cognition and the evolutionary foundations of musicality in animals. Explore the intricacies of cross-species musicality and dolphin communication, including studies with interactive underwater keyboards, as we discuss the connections between music and cognition, from rhythmic processing to the evolutionary foundations of musicality in unexpected species like parrots.
Speakers for this event
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Aniruddh (Ani) Patel
Aniruddh (Ani) Patel
Aniruddh (Ani) Patel is a Professor of Psychology at Tufts University, where he studies the cognitive, neural, and evolutionary foundations of musicality. His areas of emphasis include music-language relations (the topic of his 2008 book, Music, Language, and the Brain, Oxford Univ. Press), rhythmic processing, and cross-species studies of music cognition. He and his colleagues have shown that parrots share the otherwise uniquely-human tendency to spontaneously move in synchrony with the beat of music, which offers clues to the evolutionary basis of this ability. Dr. Patel is a Fellow in the Brain, Mind, and Consciousness program in the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR), and is the writer and presenter of the “Music and the Brain” lecture series for The Great Courses. Recently Renée Fleming invited him to contribute a chapter on musicality, evolution, and animal responses to music to her 2024 book Music and the Mind: Harnessing The Arts for Health and Wellness, to be published on April 9.
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Dr. Diana Reiss
Dr. Diana Reiss
Dr. Diana Reiss is a marine mammal scientist, cognitive psychologist and a Professor in the Department of Psychology at Hunter College. She is the Director of the Animal Behavior and Conservation MA Program at Hunter College and on the faculty of The Graduate Center of the City College of New York. Her research focuses on dolphin cognition and communication and the evolution of intelligence. She pioneered the use of an interactive underwater keyboard system with dolphins to provide them with degrees of choice and control, to investigate their vocal learning and communicative abilities, and to gain insights for decoding their own forms of communication. She and her colleagues conducted studies demonstrating that dolphins and elephants share our ability for mirror self- recognition. Reiss was director of dolphin cognitive research programs at Marine World, Africa USA, New York Aquarium of the Wildlife Conservation Society, and the National Aquarium. She served as Chair of the Wildlife Conservation Society’s Animal Enrichment Program and was a member of the AZA’s Animal Welfare Committee. She is co-founder and chair of the board of directors of the Interspecies Internet Interspecies Internet, a think-tank to accelerate our understanding of interspecies and intraspecies communication. Her professional efforts also include the rescue and rehabilitation of stranded marine mammals working directly with stranded animals and as a science advisor to the California Marine Mammal Center. Her efforts include the rescue of Humphrey, a Humpback whale who wandered into the Bay area in1985 and captured international attention. Dr. Reiss is an advocate for the global protection for dolphins and whales and her work has been published in in numerous international and national journals, featured in science magazines, television programs, and newspaper articles. In her book The Dolphin in the Mirror, released in 2011, she shares her personal and professional experiences with what she calls “magnificent minds in the water.”