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Spontaneous Future Cognition: Exploring multiple perspectives and common threads

This September, York St John University are hosting the second conference on Spontaneous Future Cognition. This follows the inaugural conference in 2017 (see associated Special Issue in Psychological Research).

https://www.yorksj.ac.uk/events/upcoming/spontaneous-future-cognition.php

https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/spontaneous-future-cognition-tickets-332709632467?aff=YSJUwebsite

The conference provides a unique platform to discuss multiple perspectives on the emerging area of spontaneous future thinking, including basic science, clinical-based and applied research.

It is intended as a platform for academics, clinician-researchers, and postgraduates working in the related areas of episodic future thinking, spontaneous thought, mind wandering, and prospective and autobiographical memory. In addition to a joint keynote by leading experts, Emily Holmes (Uppsala University, Oxford University) and Michelle Moulds (University of New South Wales), the conference will provide a much-needed space for researchers and postgraduate students to come together, present new findings, and discuss theoretical and methodological challenges faced by spontaneous future thinking research. Our aim is to promote a reflection on common goals and methods to facilitate crosstalk and synthesis of findings from sub-disciplines.

The conference will be held online on Zoom, and will be free to attend for speakers and attendees. To minimise Zoom fatigue and overall screen time, we have avoided whole-day schedules, and included several breaks.

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