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See previous years lectures on .

How do fish hear and communicate with each other? Why do some people learn and remember better than others? And can video games help improve our vision?

These questions will be explored during the 7th annual Allen L. Edwards Psychology Lecture Series hosted by the 91探花psychology department. With the theme “Understanding Brains and Behavior,鈥 the three-part series will showcase the 91探花psychology departments neuroscience expertise.

The lectures will be 7-9 p.m. on Feb. 22, Feb. 29 and March 7. is free and open to the public. The first wave of registrants filled the original lecture hall, and the lectures have been moved to a larger room 鈥 Kane Hall room 130 on the UWs Seattle campus.

, associate chair of research in the 91探花psychology department, organized this years series. He said that it is now widely accepted that understanding human behavior requires an understanding of how the brain works, and that the field of psychology is well-positioned to study both brains and behavior.

“We have the tools and training to characterize human and animal behavior and combine these studies with detailed measurements of brain function,鈥 he said.

Speakers at this years lecture series will talk about how the brain coordinates complex behaviors. At each of the three events, a 91探花speaker will be paired with a speaker from another university.

The lectures are:

Understanding the Brain and How We Hear: Insights from Our Fish Ancestors
Feb. 22, 2012

Fish represent perhaps the earliest and simplest examples of how the vertebrate auditory system detects and identifies biologically relevant sounds that are critical for survival. , 91探花associate professor of psychology, and , psychology professor at Loyola University Chicago, will discuss studies that provide important insight into the origins, adaptations and evolution of the vertebrate auditory system for sound detection and communication.

How We Remember, Why We Forget, and Why it Matters
Feb. 29, 2012

Why do some people learn at faster rates than others, and retain information for a longer time? How does learning become more efficient? Can there be too much leaning? , professor and chair of the 91探花psychology department, and , assistant professor of psychology at Columbia University, will discuss recent research that reveals new insights into how the brain selects and retains information in memory.

Learning to See: Insights from Sight Restoration and Expert Video Gamers
March 7, 2012

People’s visual systems might, at first, seem to all be the same – we open our eyes and we all see roughly the same thing. and , professors of psychology, will discuss recent research with two groups of people – those whose sight is restored in adulthood due to advances in medical science and expert video game players – that show that our visual systems are shaped by our experiences. The way we see the world is flexible, adaptable and unique.

The lecture series is made possible by a bequest from , a 91探花psychology professor from 1944 to his death in 1994, with the support of a bequest from , a 91探花psychology professor from 1936 until his retirement in 1968.