cns 2024

CNS 2024: Day 1 Highlights

April 13, 2024

The 31st annual meeting of the Cognitive Neuroscience Society (CNS 2024) kicked off in Toronto with 1,400 participants! Today’s sessions included the Data Blitz session, Poster Session A, and the keynote lecture by Sheena Josselyn (Hospital for Sick Children and The University of Toronto) about research to understand “engrams,” long-lasting […]

sensorimotor

Diving Deeply into Brain Plasticity Through Work with the Sensorimotor Deprived

March 27, 2024

CNS 2024 Q&A with Ella Striem-Amit For the last two decades, Ella Striem-Amit has been searching for answers to some of neuroscience’s deepest questions: How does the human brain develop in individuals and what happens when something is missing? Working with people born without hands, sight, or hearing has given […]

illusions

Great Expectations: How Our Prior Experiences Shape Our Reality

February 5, 2024

CNS 2024 Q&A with Peter Kok From daily illusions like seeing animal shapes in clouds or mistaking a curtain for a person in a dark bedroom to more complex ones, like the “hollow mask illusion,” (screenshot at right/above) our prior experiences and expectations shape how we perceive the world around […]

engram

Watching a Memory Unfold

January 18, 2024

CNS 2024 Q&A with Sheena Josselyn For the past few decades, Sheena Josselyn has had a ringside seat to some remarkable technological advancements that have enabled scientists to study memories in ways once only imaginable through science fiction. Viral vectors, optogenetics, and live imaging have all enabled neuroscientists like Josselyn […]

focus

Bringing New Focus to the Mind

December 13, 2023

CNS 2024 Q&A with Kia Nobre For Kia Nobre, the drive toward science is instinctive. For as long as she can remember, she has been curious about the world around her.  “I like to think that all humans start out that way, curious, perplexed even,” says Nobre of Yale University. […]

hippocampus

Mapping Paths to Understand the Hippocampus

November 28, 2023

Q&A with Lynn Nadel Over the last several decades, research led by cognitive neuroscientists has led to new understanding of the hippocampus and its core role in human memory. “The attention the hippocampus has received, and the progress that has been made in understanding it, has been nothing short of […]

unwanted thoughts

Training Your Attention on Unwanted Thoughts to Remove Them

October 10, 2023

Zulkayda Mamat has always been interested in the interplay between memory and trauma. Ethnically Uyghur, Mamat left China when she was 12 years old, becoming part of the diaspora community. She has borne witness to the mass trauma experienced by the Uyghurs, at least a million of whom, by many […]

false memory

When Our Brains Trick Us with a False Memory

September 25, 2023

When I was very young, my family visited Disney World, and for years after, I had a fairly vivid memory of the Dumbo ride: the elephants spun around vertically like a Ferris wheel. When I returned there decades later as an adult with my own family, I was stunned to […]

coincidences

Exploring Coincidences: When We Find Meaning in Random Patterns

August 24, 2023

As a master’s student studying paranormal beliefs and parapsychology some 15 years ago, Christian Rominger stumbled upon a paper by Paola Bressan about “meaningful coincidences” and why they might happen.  “What really caught my attention about meaningful coincidences is that they’re different from other paranormal ideas and phenomena. They’re tied […]

out-of-body

Using Virtual Reality to Explore the Neuroscience of Out-of-Body Experiences

August 3, 2023

When I was young, I remember first hearing the phrase “out-of-body experience” in reference to the Shirley Maclaine TV series “Out on a Limb.” At the time, I remember thinking of it as a mystical, mysterious state. Now, researchers know these experiences can happen through meditation, sensory deprivation, or when […]

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