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November 3, 2025

CNS 2026 Q&A with Peter Hagoort From his days as an undergraduate student assistant at the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics to his work now as Director of the Institute, Peter Hagoort has come full circle in his career, seeking to unlock the mechanisms of language in the brain. For more than four decades, he […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: cns 2026

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September 10, 2025

smell

Just a whiff of certain smells can instantly take me back to my childhood. When I smell fresh bread or apple cake right out of the oven, for example, I remember sitting around the dinner table with my parents and sisters for the holidays. Although odors can be a powerful memory cue, they are little […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized

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August 14, 2025

When I was young, I remember taking apart a simple flashlight to understand how it works. It seemed to make sense that if you reduce an object down to its parts, you can then see how it all works together. But that is not always the case: some things in the world have properties that […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized

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June 30, 2025

sound

As the summer lawn mowers roar outside my window, I cannot help but think about how that sound is being processed in my brain. Like many people, I think about the process as quite hierarchical – with the auditory nerve in my ear registering the sound and then deciphering the volume (it’s loud), the pitch, […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized

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May 29, 2025

free recall

School is almost out for summer in many places around the world, and as any parent or teacher knows, asking young kids about how their school day was, or even what they did for the summer, can be a challenge. Many children struggle to freely describe their day to day experiences, perhaps saying nothing at […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized

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April 21, 2025

pathways

CNS 2025 guest post by Lauren Homann (CNSTA president) As cognitive neuroscience trainees look toward the future, many are considering options beyond traditional academic pathways. With growing uncertainty around research funding, increasing academic precarity, and a shifting policy landscape, the scientific world is in flux. These challenges, while daunting, also invite a reevaluation of what […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized

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April 1, 2025

We closed out CNS 2025 in Boston with another excellent poster session, followed by a whopping 6 more symposia, including on the use of VR in understanding and diagnosing Alzheimer’s and a discussion of 100 years of EEG. Check out some highlights in photos and posts below. @bostonu.bsky.social Brain Plasticity & Neuroimaging Lab in attendance […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized

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April 1, 2025

VR

CNS 2025 Press Release BOSTON – April 1, 2025 – Most people donning virtual reality (VR) goggles are seeking the thrill of being immersed in a fictitious video game world. But some are donning them for an entirely different experience: to help researchers identify those most at risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease.  “We know that […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized

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April 1, 2025

CNS 2025

The third day of CNS 2025 in Boston included 4 symposia — on topics ranging from use of smartphones to better understand and strengthen memory to visual development across cognitive systems — 2 poster sessions, a workshop on navigating difficult times, the Young Investigator Award lectures by Emily Finn and André Bastos, and the Fred […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized

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March 31, 2025

smartphone

CNS 2025 Press Release BOSTON – March 31, 2025 – A memory is not a straight line from one point to another, even if we sometimes think of them like linear stories. This key insight that cognitive neuroscientists have known for many years is now guiding a new type of research—to explore not only how […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized

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  • CNS 2026 Day 4 Highights
  • From Genetics to AI: Integrated Approaches to Decoding Human Language in the Brain
  • CNS 2026 Day 3 Highlights
  • CNS 2026 Day 2 Highlights
  • Modeling Brain Aging and Resilience Over the Lifespan Reveals New Individual Factors

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