Rhythmic electrical activity in the brain (neural oscillations) has been shown to align to the rhythm of speech, particularly when listeners successfully understand sentences. However, it remains unknown whether these oscillations truly cause successful speech processing, or are only a commonly-associated epiphenomenon. In a recent publication in Current Biology, Benedikt Zoefel, Alan Archer-Boyd, and Matt […]
Wednesday Lunchtime Seminars – Lent Term 2018
The Wednesday Lunchtime Seminar programme for Lent term 2018 is now available. Talks are free to attend and are open to all. Please note – spaces are limited and all seats are allocated on first-come, first-served basis. You can find the programme and further details here: WLTS No parking is available at the MRC Cognition […]
Chaucer Club Seminars – Lent term 2018
The Chaucer Club Seminar programme for Lent term 2018 is now available. Talks are free to attend and are open to all. Please note – spaces are limited and all seats are allocated on first-come, first-served basis. You can find the programme and further details here: Chaucer-Club-Seminars No parking is available at the MRC Cognition […]
‘Rising Star’ Award
Congratulations to MRC CBU’s Rogier Kievit for being selected as an APS Rising star of 2017. ‘The APS Rising Star designation is presented to outstanding psychological scientists in the earliest stages of their research careers post-PhD’. Rogier said: “It’s an honour to be selected for this award. APS has been at the forefront of improving […]
New staff for 2018
We are delighted to announce that Alex Woolgar will be joining the MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit (MRC CBU) as a new Programme Leader Track scientist in April 2018. She will be leading a new programme investigating the cognitive and neural mechanisms involved in the flexible control of cognition. Alex is currently an Australian […]
Frontal brain regions are necessary for flexible predictions during speech perception
Speech perception relies on integrating sensory information with predictions about which words are likely to be heard. Researchers from University of Cambridge Units; MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit (MRC CBU) and the Department of Clinical Neurosciences, with collaborators in Newcastle, have shown that regions of the frontal lobe allow listeners to use these predictions […]
Teaching students about mental health and wellbeing
A team of experts from the University of Cambridge’s MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit (MRC CBU) and Department of Psychiatry spent a day at Cambridge Academy for Science and Technology, talking to Year 10 students about the teenage brain and how it works, what happens to the brain when it is under stress and […]
Cambridge Methods Day in Cognitive Neuroscience
The next Cambridge Methods in Cognitive Neuroscience Day will take place on Tuesday 5 December 2017 in the Lecture Theatre at the MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, University of Cambridge. The day will consist of 20 short talks by cognitive neuroscientists from Cambridge grouped into five sessions: MRI I and II, EEG/MEG and Brain […]
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