Gregor M. Hörzer
Philosopher

Publications

Here is a list of my published books, journal articles, invited talks and conference contributions.


Books

Gregor M. Hoerzer (ed., 2021): Saul Kripke: Identity and Necessity/Identität und Notwendigkeit. Ditzingen: Reclam.

Gregor M. Hoerzer (2020): Understanding Physicalism. Berlin: De Gruyter. 


Journal Articles

Gregor M. Hoerzer (2015): Cognitive Naturalism and the Phenomenal Feel. Rivista Internazionale di Filosofia e Psicologia 6 (3), 492-496.

Gregor M. Hoerzer, Robert Legenstein, Wolfgang Maass (2014): Emergence of complex computational structures from chaotic neural networks through reward-modulated Hebbian learning, Cerebral Cortex 24 (3), doi: 10.1093/cercor/bhs348, 677-690.

Stefanie Liebe, Gregor M. Hoerzer, Nikos K. Logothetis and Gregor Rainer (2012): Theta coupling between V4 and prefrontal cortex predicts visual short-term memory performance, Nature Neuroscience 15, 456-462.

Gregor M. Hoerzer, Stefanie Liebe, Alois Schloegl, Nikos K. Logothetis and Gregor Rainer (2010): Directed coupling in local field potentials of macaque V4 during visual short-term memory revealed by multivariate autoregressive models, Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience, doi: 10.3389/fncom.2010.00014.

 

Invited Talks and Conference Contributions

Gregor M. Hoerzer (2022): The Metaphysics of Mechanisms Revisited. Or: Do mechanisms really have two kinds of components? 11th International Conference of the German Society for Analytic Philosophy (GAP.11), Berlin, Germany.

Gregor M. Hoerzer (2022): Constitutive Relevance First: Mechanistic Explanations without Mechanisms? GWP.2022, Berlin, Germany.

Gregor M. Hoerzer (2022): "Physical" in Physicalism and the Nature of Physical Properties. Workshop "Physicalism", Munich, Germany.

Gregor M. Hoerzer (2022): Mechanisms Revisited. Or: Do mechanisms really have two kinds of components? SCSS (Situated Cognition Spring School), Bochum, Germany.

Gregor M. Hoerzer (2021): Disentangling Entity-Activity Dualism and Mechanistic Componency in New Mechanist Frameworks of Explanation. MüBiOs Workshop (Online), Bielefeld, Germany.

Gregor M. Hoerzer (2019): Physicalism and Panpsychism: Friends or Foes? University of Luxembourg, Esch-sur-Alzette, Luxembourg.

Gregor M. Hoerzer (2019): Physicalism, Panpsychism and the Nature of Physical Properties. MüBiOs Workshop, Bielefeld, Germany.

Gregor M. Hoerzer (2018): How to Make a Panpsychist Physicalism Possible (Talk). 10th International Conference of the German Society for Analytic Philosophy (GAP.10), Cologne, Germany.

Gregor M. Hoerzer (2015): Zombies threaten the Contingency of Physicalism and Dualism (Talk). 9th International Conference of the German Society for Analytic Philosophy (GAP.9), Osnabrueck, Germany.

Gregor M. Hoerzer, Robert Legenstein and Wolfgang Maass (2011): Eliminating the Teacher in Reservoir Computing (Talk, presented by R. Legenstein). 2nd International Conference on Morphological Computation (ICMC), Venice, Italy.

Stefanie Liebe, Gregor M. Hoerzer, Nikos K. Logothetis and Gregor Rainer (2011): Long range coupling in theta between V4 and prefrontal cortex predicts visual memory performance (Poster, presented by S. Liebe). Computational and Systems Neuroscience Conference (COSYNE), Salt Lake City, USA.

Gregor M. Hoerzer (2010): Reward-modulated Hebbian Learning is able to induce Coherent Patters of Activity and Simple Memory Functions in initially Chaotic Recurrent Neural Networks (Talk and Poster).
Workshop on Cognitive and Neural Models for Automated Processing of Speech and Text (CONAS), Ghent, Belgium.

Stefanie Liebe, Gregor M. Hoerzer, Nikos K. Logothetis and Gregor Rainer (2010): Oscillatory neuronal synchronization between prefrontal and extrastriate visual cortex during visual memory (Poster, presented by S.Liebe). Annual Meeting of the Society for Neuroscience, San Diego, USA.

Stefanie Liebe, Gregor M. Hoerzer, Nikos K. Logothetis, Wolfgang Maass and Gregor Rainer (2009): Long Range Coupling between V4 and PF in Theta Band during Visual Short-Term Memory (Poster, presented by S. Liebe). Annual Meeting of the Society for Neuroscience, Chicago, USA.