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The Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience

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Archives for 2018

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Working Out Working Memory: A Life’s Pursuit

December 19, 2018

working memory

Q&A with Earl Miller Working memory is key to our everyday survival — how we communicate, remember what we need to do, learn new things, and generally operate. It is also an aspect of cognition that is disrupted or dysfunctional in almost every neuropsychiatric disorder. Therefore, understanding how working memory works is of vital importance. […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: cns 2019, george a. miller award, working memory Leave a Comment

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Going Deep on Sleep with Matthew Walker

November 29, 2018

sleeping

Did you get enough sleep last night? Probably not, says Matthew Walker, cognitive neuroscientist and neurophysiologist at the University of California, Berkeley. Statistics show, he says, that two-thirds of adults fail to obtain the recommended 8 hours of nightly sleep. If that doesn’t seem like a big deal, Walker has some robust research to counter […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: aging, alzheimer's, cns 2019, sleep Leave a Comment

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Machine Learning to Help Move Beyond Diagnostic Labels for Struggling Learners

October 29, 2018

Anyone who has ever worked with children who are struggling at learning – whether a parent or teacher – knows that diagnostic labels can only go so far in helping individuals. While receiving a diagnosis is an important landmark moment for children and families, is it enough information to guide those who are trying to […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: development, education, machine learning Leave a Comment

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Playing an Instrument Changes Our Perception of Music

September 27, 2018

The musical instrument you play, or played as a child, likely has a big impact on how you perceive music every day. In a novel new study looking at beatboxers and guitarists, cognitive neuroscientists found that areas of the brain that control movement were activated in the musicians’ brains but not in non-musicians’ brains. Past […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: motor, music, musicians

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Learning What to Learn: Lessons from Cognitive Neuroscience for Education

September 17, 2018

learning

How do we learn what to learn? This fundamental question drives the work of Rachel Wu at the University of California, Riverside. Before we can learn anything, we need to know what to pay attention to. From infancy, people are bombarded with distractions that can make that challenging. While there is a wealth of cognitive […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: children, development, education, learning

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Taking Control of Your Brain Activity: New Neurofeedback Results

August 28, 2018

neurofeedback

Summer is coming to an end, but imagine if your fun summer vacation experiences could later help you in addressing neuropsychological conditions. That’s a concept that inspires and motivates David Mehler, an MD/PhD student and cognitive neuroscientist at Cardiff University. “Imagine seeing a thermometer gauge that shows how strongly a specific part of your brain […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: depression, fMRI, neurofeedback

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The Centrality of Character to Storytelling in the Brain

August 2, 2018

storytelling

While binge watching a new show, I sometimes wonder what’s keeping me watching even when the plot, well, falls apart. Usually, it has to do with the characters; watching them show after show makes it hard to separate from them even when the plot is no longer engaging. A new study about narrative storytelling might […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: body language, language, neuroart

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A Dynamic Approach to Understanding Age-Related Memory Decline

June 26, 2018

Matthew Costello has been studying how aging affects cognition and perception for close to 10 years. But answers to the questions of exactly how and why visual working memory declines in older adults have still eluded him and other researchers. Now, he is taking an information processing approach to this topic that affects so many […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: aging, computation, memory, working memory

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Breaking Barriers in Brain Stimulation: Q&A with Nanthia Suthana

May 11, 2018

Nanthia Suthana is working to become fluent in the “language of the brain.” She does not study linguistics but rather that electrical patterns that the brain uses to communicate. She and her team at UCLA seek to alter these patterns by externally stimulating brain cells with electricity – testing its effects on cognition and memory […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: brain stimulation, cns 2018, memory, neuroprosthetic

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Watch the Debate: Big Data Versus Big Theory

April 9, 2018

CNS 2018 In the neurosciences, there exists a veritable orgy of data – but is that what we need? Will the colossal datasets we now enjoy solve the questions we seek to answer, or do we need more ‘big theory’ to provide the necessary intellectual infrastructure? Four leading researchers, with expertise in neurophysiology, neuroimaging, artificial […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: cns 2018

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Recent Posts

  • New CNS Mentorship Program Now Open
  • New Initiatives with the Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
  • CNS 2026 Day 4 Highights
  • From Genetics to AI: Integrated Approaches to Decoding Human Language in the Brain
  • CNS 2026 Day 3 Highlights

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