Early Career Colloquium (ECC) Speaker: Asieh Zadbood

Krieger 205

Asieh Zadbood from the Columbia University will be giving an early career colloquium seminar at 4:00 pm today in Krieger 205! Q&A to follow Reconstructive brain: how the brain uses past experiences to rebuild our world Facing the rich and continuous stream of information in daily life, our brain constantly processes the incoming data to […]

Early Career Colloquium (ECC) Speaker: Tyler Bonnen

Krieger 205

Tyler Bonnen from the Memory Lab at Stanford University will be giving an early career colloquium seminar at 4:00 pm today in Krieger 205! Q&A to follow Understanding Memory-Related Behaviors: From Psychological Constructs to Function Approximation Perception unfolds across multiple timescales. Some visual attributes can be inferred at a glance™ , an ability that largely […]

Early Career Colloquium (ECC) Speaker: Megha Sehgal

Krieger 205

Megha Seghal from the Columbia University will be giving an early career colloquium seminar at 4:00 pm today in Krieger 205! Q&A to follow Co-allocation to overlapping dendritic branches in the retrosplenial cortex integrates memories across time Events occurring close in time are often linked in memory, providing a framework for those memories. Recent studies […]

Colloquium Speaker- Dr. Nicholas Turk-Browne

Nicholas Turk-Browne, PhD, Professor at Yale University  will be giving a Colloquium talk at 4:00 pm with a Q&A to follow! Adventures in infant cognitive neuroscience In this talk, I will present the approach my lab has developed for performing fMRI studies in awake infants during cognitive tasks. I will share some of our recent […]

Colloquium Speaker- Dr. Marisa Carrasco

Krieger 205

Wednesday, May 3rd, 2023 Marisa Carrasco, PhD, Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience at New York University will be giving a Colloquium talk at 4:00 pm with a Q&A to follow! How spatial attention shapes perception Visual attention is essential for visual perception.  I will illustrate how endogenous (voluntary) and exogenous (involuntary) covert attention differentially modulate […]