Dear all,

This is a friendly reminder that you are warmly invited to two upcoming 
Seminars hosted by the Macquarie University Ethics & Agency Research Centre 
(EAC):

Event 1:

‘The risks of AI slop and AI model collapse, and why it is essential to 
adequately feed the next Generative AI models and to remunerate creators 
through a dual right system’

Speaker:
Visiting Scholar Professor Alain Strowel (UCLouvain)

Date & Time:

Wednesday, 13 August 2025

1:00 PM – 2:00 PM

Location:
17 Wally's Walk 301 Boardroom, Macquarie University

Join us for an engaging discussion, drawing on insights from the European 
Union, on the growing risks facing generative AI systems, the challenges of 
maintaining data quality, and the importance of sustainable human creator 
compensation frameworks.

Please register at: 
Link<https://events.humanitix.com/lunch-seminar-with-prof-alain-strowel-uclouvain-why-feeding-generative-ai-models-and-paying-creators-matters?_gl=1*5a2umg*_gcl_aw*R0NMLjE3NTI2NDI2NDcuRUFJYUlRb2JDaE1JaXZXajBjN0FqZ01WaEhOSEFSMWdZelBGRUFBWUFTQUFFZ0xpeGZEX0J3RQ..*_gcl_au*MTAzMTcyMjExNS4xNzQ5NTMzMzQ4LjE2OTU3Nzg0MC4xNzQ5NTMzNDc3LjE3NDk1MzM0NzY.*_ga*ODU0MzA3NjAyLjE3NDk1MzMzNDg.*_ga_LHKW5FR9N6*czE3NTI2NDI2MTckbzMkZzEkdDE3NTI2NDUyMzAkajMxJGwwJGgw>

Event 2:

Speaker: Distinguished Professor Colin Allen, UCLA


Event details: Thursday 14th of August, 2:00pm, 17 Wally's Walk, Moot Court 
(224)

Zoom link: 
https://macquarie.zoom.us/j/88450712075?pwd=qpRGiHONWEGtWbEhwUUthXDVXrxR2B.1

Password: 221611

Title: How (not) to estimate chimpanzee or hominin working memory capacity

Abstract: Working memory is central to many cognitive tasks but despite 86 
billion neurons, working memory capacity in modern humans is surprisingly 
small. Why is it so limited and what information is available to understand how 
it scales with increasing brain size in the hominin lineage? I will combine 
insights from computational modeling, neuroscience, comparative cognition, and 
the archaeological record to contest a lowball estimate of working memory 
capacity in early hominins and chimpanzees. I will argue that frontal control 
over working memory contents rather than absolute capacity is likely to be more 
important for explaining how early Homo erectus began to construct a cognitive 
niche different from earlier Australopithecenes.


Best wishes,
Ethics & Agency Research Centre (EAC)
Macquarie University

[cid:69f8c00e-5b0f-443b-ab41-8598c35d0ae3]

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  • [SydPhil] Reminder:... Macquarie University Ethics and Agency Research Centre

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