August 30–September 4, 2026
Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Barbara A. Oakley and Terrence J. Sejnowski, Chairs
Program Advisory Committee
April A. Benasich, Ken-Zen Chen, Kenji Doya, Julia R. Lupp, Barbara A. Oakley, Terrence J. Sejnowski
Goals of the Forum
Background
Neural learning mechanisms are designed to function with information that the brain holds and manipulates internally. Knowledge is not stored as isolated facts; it is organized into schemata that represent knowledge and inform its use. Critical discoveries (e.g., engrams, the transition from declarative to procedural memory systems, the formation of neural manifolds) have enhanced our understanding of learning, yet neural learning systems are remarkably sensitive to environmental influences. Socioeconomic factors can significantly shape functional connectivity between key learning networks. Children from enriched educational environments, e.g., show distinct patterns of connectivity between the cingulo-opercular and default mode networks, with reduced connectivity associated with better cognitive performance. The ubiquitous use of digital tools and AI systems has created an unprecedented natural experiment in cognitive offloading.
Although humans naturally use external tools to enhance cognitive abilities, excessive reliance can weaken internal mental frameworks. For example, when students repeatedly outsource cognitive processes to technology, they develop “biological pointers” and remember where to find information rather than the information itself. This illusion of knowledge undermines schema formation and deeper understanding. Constant task engagement is demanded by digital interfaces (e.g., through notifications and endless streams of content) and may inhibit mind-wandering periods when the default mode network becomes active, thus potentially suppressing the neural states necessary for creativity, insight, and memory consolidation.
This Forum seeks to understand how cognitive offloading and constant distracted focused attention affects the fundamental neural mechanisms of learning.
Group 1: Neural Mechanisms of Learning, Memory, and Action
Group 2: Neural Mechanisms of Habit, Motivation, and Curiosity
Group 3: Neural Dynamics of Knowledge Organization
Group 4: Learning in Technology-Mediated and Socioeconomically Diverse Environments