Cognitive Neuroscience Society

The Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience

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Archives for 2019

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Mapping the Brain’s Visual Behavior One Tidbit at a Time

December 20, 2019

visual

Q&A with Marlene Behrmann For the past 30 years, Marlene Behrmann has been on a mission to answer some of the biggest questions in cognitive neuroscience about how visual function in the brain maps onto structure. Along her journey, she has explored a wide range of topics, including autism, migraines, aphasia, agnosia, and more. “These […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: cns 2020, fMRI, vision, visual Leave a Comment

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Predicting Working Memory Through Brain Activity Models

November 25, 2019

working memory

As a ballet dancer, Emily Avery has always had a great appreciation for people’s ability to execute complex movements, recall choreography, and internalize intricate musicality. Her love of dance is what first drew her to the field of cognitive neuroscience, where a growing body of research is using neuroimaging and computational techniques to study working […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: fMRI, intelligence, working memory Leave a Comment

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Models of Our Selves Reflected in Our Friends

October 22, 2019

friends

Just like when an architect builds a scale model of a building, friends in your close-knit social circle build representational models of you. That’s how Robert Chavez, a social cognitive neuroscience at the University of Oregon, describes the neural representations we have of our friends. “And just like the architectural model, others’ representation of you […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: fMRI, friends, self Leave a Comment

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Communication Control: The Brain Activity that Monitors Our Speech

September 24, 2019

speech

When we communicate with others, we are constantly monitoring our speech and theirs — taking in multiple external cues — to best engage in meaningful conversation. Despite the multidimensional aspects of speech monitoring, most studies on the topic to date have focused on how we produce a string of accurately sequenced sound units rather than […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: language, speech Leave a Comment

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Bring in the Laughs: Investigating Laughter as a Social Signal

August 26, 2019

laughter

For Qing Ceci Cai, a Chinese Ph.D. student at University College London, social laughter has a very personal connection. “As a Chinese student immersing in this very different British culture, I normally fail to understand British humor,” she explains. “So most of the time when I hang out with my friends, I capture the exact […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: autism, humor, laughter Leave a Comment

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Controlling the Urge to Relieve Pain

July 17, 2019

Pain

The internal battle between the need to act and the need to suppress an action is something I have been through multiple times this summer: trying to suppress the urge to scratch itchy mosquito bites. Such a state is common in everyday life and also important to several clinical disorders but has yet to be […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: motor, pain, tms Leave a Comment

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Sharpening Understanding of How the Deaf Brain Sees

June 17, 2019

deaf brain

Q&A with Stephen Lomber We often see it in superhero movies: When people are deprived of one sense, they develop superhuman powers in another sense. While those depictions may be exaggerated, the underlying premise has a real scientific basis. When the brain is deprived of input from one sense, such as hearing, it often compensates […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: deaf, vision Leave a Comment

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Exploring the “Dark Side” of Brain Imaging

May 2, 2019

Q&A with Robert Thibault Guest Post by David Mehler Neuroimaging. For many people, this term invokes the thought of a photographer taking a snapshot of brain activity and then looking at the still. Cognitive neuroscientists, however, know this couldn’t be further from the truth. Image parameters, data cleaning, and statistical analyses all affect the final […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: fMRI, neuroimaging Leave a Comment

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Why Sleep?: Watch Matthew Walker’s CNS 2019 Keynote

April 5, 2019

sleep

To kick off the 26th annual meeting of the Cognitive Neuroscience Society, Matthew Walker (UC Berkeley) gave audience members a detailed look at the myriad physiological and cognitive ways sleep influences people — and the dire consequences associated with not getting enough sleep. His presentation touched on learning, memory, aging, Alzheimer’s disease, and education, as […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized Leave a Comment

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Watch: The Relation Between Psychology and Neuroscience from CNS 2019

April 5, 2019

psychology

Whether we study single cells, measure populations of neurons, characterize anatomical structure, or quantify BOLD, whether we collect reaction times or construct computational models, it is a presupposition of our field that we strive to bridge the neurosciences and the psychological/cognitive sciences. Our tools provide us with ever-greater spatial resolution and ideal temporal resolution. But […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: cns 2019, psychology Leave a Comment

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