It was a great 4 days of science in Boston at CNS 2018! The sun was out and it was warming up outside, while inside participants were treated to the last poster session of the meeting and a wonderful set of final symposia. Talks covered what makes musical rhythm special and sleep’s role in memory and emotion processing, as well as well as age-related cognitive decline, among other topics. Check out our full photo album of the day here on Facebook and check out our Twitter coverage here.
Rocking out with @NeuroBeats (and rhythmic babies!) in Constitution Hall on the cognitive neuroscience of music and rhythm#CNS2018 pic.twitter.com/h2JFbqlXHK
— CNS News (@CogNeuroNews) March 27, 2018
Rebecca Spencer closing out the last talk of this last session of the last day of #CNS2018 by discussing how sleep and memory change over the lifespan from youth to old age… pic.twitter.com/rjmeRHqqpU
— CNS News (@CogNeuroNews) March 27, 2018
Something to look forward to in older age: positive emotional memories will become more prominent…preferentially consolidated in sleep as compared to negative memories in young and middle age -Rebecca Spencer #cns2018
— CNS News (@CogNeuroNews) March 27, 2018
Thank you #CNS2018 for a fantastic 4 days of science! See our coverage of the conference, including stories in the news, on the CNS 2018 bloghttps://t.co/1C2MZclInk @CNSmtg @CNS_TA #neuroscience pic.twitter.com/vMWihMftwI
— CNS News (@CogNeuroNews) March 27, 2018
-Lisa M.P. Munoz