Surgeons could soon eavesdrop on a patient’s brain activity during surgery to remove their brain tumour, helping improve the accuracy of the operation and reduce the risk of impairing brain function. Patients with low-grade gliomas in their brains – a slow-spreading, but potentially life-threatening tumour – will usually receive surgery to have the tumour removed. […]
Transforming continuous experience to discrete memories
As we go about our lives, we experience a continuous stream of information. Yet when thinking about the past, we remember it as discrete events – ‘I attended a meeting’; ‘I went to see a movie’. How is our continuous experience transformed into these separate memories? Research has shown that people naturally segment experience into […]
New study on spontaneous cognition in dysphoria: reduced positive bias in imagining the future during mindwandering
We spend approximately a third of our waking life mind wandering away from the present moment. New research shows that the healthy mind tends to imagine positive rather than negative aspects of the future when mind wandering. However, the presence of depression symptoms disrupts this positive bias during mind wandering. Critically, this depression-linked disruption was […]
‘Talking therapy’ for depression
The best psychological ‘talking therapy’ for depression is Cognitive Behavioural Therapy – commonly referred to as ‘CBT’. Although CBT helps with depression, around half of people who complete a course of CBT still have depressive symptoms. It is therefore vitally important that we improve psychological therapies like CBT so that more people can beat depression. […]
Open Science Day at the MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit
We are delighted to confirm the 2nd MRC CBU Open Science Day Workshop will take place on Tuesday 20 November 2018. The workshop will be held in the Lecture Theatre at the MRC CBU, University of Cambridge, 15 Chaucer Road, CB7 2EF. Please see here for Unit directions (no on-site parking is available): How to […]
Forward models demonstrate that repetition suppression is best modelled by local neural scaling
Inferring neural mechanisms from functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is challenging because the fMRI signal integrates over millions of neurons. One approach is to compare computational models that map neural activity to fMRI responses, to see which best predicts fMRI data. Scientists, including MRC CBU’s Rik Henson, Arjen Alink and Huna Abdulrahman, use this approach to […]
Chaucer Club Seminars – Michaelmas Term 2018
The Chaucer Club Seminar schedule for Michaelmas 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 No parking is available at the MRC […]
Wednesday Lunchtime Seminars – Michaelmas Term 2018
The Wednesday Lunchtime Seminar programme for Michaelmas 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 […]
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