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Sorting Out What is Real: Q&A with Jon Simons

May 24, 2017

reality

At the CNS meeting last March in San Francisco, I learned a new term during Marcia Johnson’s Fred Kavli Distinguished Career Contributions Award lecture: reality monitoring. Coined by Johnson, reality monitoring refers to how we distinguish what is real from what is imagined in our everyday lives. For some people, having an impairment in this seemingly […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: cns 2017, memory, perception

The Digital Medicine of the Future: Watch Adam Gazzaley’s Public Keynote

April 3, 2017

Last Saturday, more than 1,300 people glimpsed a unique vision of brain fitness – one that more closely resembles cross-fit mixed with gaming than how we currently treat cognitive health. Adam Gazzaley of the University of San Francisco walked the CNS 2017 audience through the work his lab has been doing not only to create custom […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: adam gazzaley, cns 2017, cognition

Memory, Language, Action: Watch Big Ideas in Cognitive Neuroscience

April 3, 2017

Does the human brain process memory like a computer processes information? What enables human language with all its nuances and complexities? How does flexibility in the brain give rise to learning? These were just a few of the questions explored at Big Ideas in Cognitive Neuroscience, a special session at this year’s CNS meeting in […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: cns 2017, language, learning, memory, motor

Curiosity and Reward as Motivational Drivers in Learning

March 28, 2017

Your mental state before and after learning plays a critical role in how well your remember something. This may seem obvious, but scientists are only just uncovering the neural processes underpinning this effect. At the CNS meeting today, Matthias Gruber of Cardiff University discussed two important mental states: when receiving reward and when curious. Recent […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: cns 2017, learning, memory

Twins Illuminate Genetic Influences on Brain Structure

March 28, 2017

How much of our brain structure is inherited ? Neuroscientists seeking to answer that question often turn to twin pairs, as they offer a unique window for understanding the influence of genetics on who we are. New work presented at the CNS conference this week has found that brain structures involved with executive functions such […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: cns 2017, genetics

Identifying Genes Key to Human Memory: Insights from Genetics and Cognitive Neuroscience

March 26, 2017

CNS 2017 Press Release March 26, 2017 – San Francisco – Researchers have identified more than 100 genes important for memory in people. The study is the first to identify correlations between gene data and brain activity during memory processing, providing a new window into human memory. “This is very exciting because the identification of these […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: cns 2017, genetics, memory

From the Classroom to the NICU: Real-World Neuroscience Opening New Avenues

March 26, 2017

CNS 2017 Press Release March 26, 2017 – San Francisco – When going to the movies with a group of friends, one small action can make a big difference when it comes to being on the same page after the movie: eye contact. A simple conversation before the movie sets you up to be more […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: attention, cns 2017, senses, social neuroscience, synchrony

Pavlov’s Dogz is Back: Catch their Concert at CNS 2017

March 21, 2017

Calling all cognitive neuroscientists: Some great music is coming to a conference near you. After delighting crowds in New York City at last year’s CNS conference, rock band Pavlov’s Dogz is back for CNS 2017 in San Francisco on Sunday, March 26. Launched at an open-mic night at a small memory conference, Pavlov’s Dogz features […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: cns 2017, music

Brain Maturity and Teens: Q&A with Leah Somerville

February 22, 2017

Increasingly, the courts are turning to neuroscientific data as additional evidence in making legal decisions. From examining questions of impaired ability to even issues of diversity and bias, neuroscience and the law are intersecting more frequently. A key question often at stake is at what age is are people’s brains “mature enough” to make and […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: adolescence, cns 2017, motivation, teen, teenager, young investigator award

A Vision of the Future of Brain Health: Q&A with Adam Gazzaley

January 31, 2017

Even among the healthiest people, aging takes a toll on the brain – changing and often decreasing our cognitive capabilities. Science fiction writers have long imagined ways to maintain and enhance cognition in the face of aging, disease, or otherwise. Increasingly, scientists are investigating ways to make that happen. One of those scientists – Adam […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: featured Tagged With: aging, cns 2017, cognition, video games, virtual reality

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