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CNS 2019 Day 2 In Brief

March 25, 2019

The second day of CNS 2019 in San Francisco was action packed with two poster sessions, five symposia on a diverse set of topics, an award lecture, and, of course, lots of good company and food!  The symposia covered topics ranging from exercise and casual inference to episodic memory and selective attention. Rounding out the day was Earl K. Miller (MIT) with his George A. Miller Prize in Cognitive Neuroscience Lecture on workung memory 2.0 — on a growing body of work on the rhythmic nature of our working memory. Check out our full photo album of the day here on Facebook and check out our Twitter coverage here.

 

Wendy Suzuki (NYU) introduces the session on immediate and long-term effects of exercise on the brain.

 

Michael Yassa (UC Irvine) on acute mild exercise and the hippocampus

 

Michelle Voss (University of Iowa) on bridging acute and long-term effects of memory on the brain

 

Congratulations to Earl Miller (MIT), this year’s recipient of the George A. Miller Prize in Cognitive Neuroscience

“Anatomy isn’t destiny in the brain, it’s possibility” –@MillerLabMIT #CNS2019 pic.twitter.com/Uqh9rG4Jiv

— CNS News (@CogNeuroNews) March 24, 2019

 

-Lisa M.P. Munoz

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

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  • Poverty: What’s the Brain Got to Do With It?
  • Unraveling Graceful Human Learning Over Time
  • Looking Forward to Understand Working Memory
  • From the Neurology Clinic to the Lab and Back Again: Addressing Frontal Lobe Syndromes
  • When Philosophical Questions Turn to Neuroscience Experimentation

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How Prior Knowledge Shapes Encoding of New Memories
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