Experts in: Cognitive neuroimaging
ARGUIN, Martin
Professeur titulaire
- Attention
- Vision
- Cognitive neuroscience
- Lecture
- Object recognition
- Cognitive neuropsychology
- Cognitive training
- Visual attention
- Visual System
- Visual pathologies
- Visual processing
- Cerebral and cognitive development
- Cognitive intervention
- Cognitive neuroimaging
- Developmental sensory and cognitive disorders
- Brain hemispheres
- Neuroimaging
- Cerebral plasticity
- Traumatisme craniocérébral
- Electrophysiology (EEG)
- Magnetoencephalography and Electroencephalography
- Shape recognition
- Face recognition
- Attention deficit disorders
My research activities focus on the cognitive aspects of visual processing, in both normal individuals and those who have suffered brain injuries. My main objectives are to identify the normal mechanisms involved in visual processing and to characterize the functional deficits resulting from brain damage. I use behavioural and electrophysiological methods. My current projects concern a number of themes:
- Reading: visual mechanisms (i.e. shape perception and visuospatial attention) involved in accessing orthographic-lexical knowledge when recognizing written words, and organization of the lexical representation system
- Visual recognition of objects: properties of the system for encoding visual shapes and representation of structural knowledge
BOLLER, Benjamin
Professeur associé
BOUCHER, Olivier
Professeur associé
BRAMBATI, Simona Maria
Professeure titulaire
- Language
- Aging
- Neuropsychologie
- Cognitive neuroscience
- Aphasia
- Atypical dementias
- Magnetic-resonance imaging
- Cognitive neuroimaging
- Brains and semantic memory
- Memory
- Language acquisition
Dr. Brambati has a PhD in Molecular Medicine (cognitive neuropsychology profile) from the Università Vita-Salute San Raffaele in Milan, Italy (2006). She then completed post-doctoral studies at the Memory and Aging Center (University of California, San Francisco) (2006-2007), and the IUGM research centre. Today she is a researcher at the IUGM research centre (FRQ-S Junior 1) and a professor on loan to the Department of Psychology at the Université de Montréal.
DALLA BELLA, Simone
Professeur titulaire
- Cognitive neuroscience of hearing and music
- Brain and music
- Musical cognition
- Music
- Circadian rhythms and performance
- Auditory neuroscience
- Réadaptation
- Motricity
- Cerebral and cognitive development
- Cognitive training
- Cognitive intervention
- Cognitive neuroimaging
- Cognitive neuropsychology
- Cognitive neuroscience
- Mild cognitive impairment
- Developmental sensory and cognitive disorders
GOSSELIN, Nadia
Professeure titulaire
HANGANU, Alexandru
Professeur sous octroi adjoint
HÉTU, Sébastien
Professeur agrégé
JERBI, Karim
Professeur titulaire
- Cognitive neuroimaging
- Cognitive psychology
- Machine learning
- System neurosciences & Neural oscillations
- Magnetoencephalography and Electroencephalography
- Systems neuroscience
Karim Jerbi heads the Computational and Cognitive Neuroscience Lab (CoCo Lab) at UdeM. His research lies at the cross-roads between computational, systems and cognitive neuroscience, with an emphasis on exploring biological and artificial network dynamics. The research he leads seeks to elucidate the role of large-scale brain network dynamics in normal cognitive processes and their breakdown in psychiatric disorders. To this end, his research relies on a combination of invasive (intracranial electroencephalography, iEEG) and non-invasive (EEG and MEG) recordings, combined with advanced signal processing and artificial intelligence tools, including machine learning.
Karim Jerbi is interested in inter-disciplinary research questions such as the neural basis of attention, decision-making, states of consciousness and sleep, and has a keen interest in various forms of interaction between art, creativity and neuroscience.
MONTEMBEAULT, Maxime
Professeur associé, Chargé de cours
PERETZ, Isabelle
Professeure titulaire
- Cognitive neuroscience
- Neuroimaging
- Amusia
- Brain and music
- Musical cognition
- Emotions
- Musique et Langage
- Cerebral and cognitive development
- Affect mentalization
- Language
- Language acquisition
- Memory
- Autism
- Cognitive neuroimaging
- Electrophysiology (EEG)
- Magnetic-resonance imaging
My field of research is cognitive neuropsychology. The approach is characterized by the study of the effects of brain lesions on cognitive functions. I am interested in musical perception and recognition; emotions; language; prosody; and memory. These functions all have a link with musical cognition, which remains my main field of interest. Aside from brain lesions, we also work with neurologically healthy adults or those with a specific congenital disorder (autism, congenital amusia). Lastly, we use various exploration techniques including, currently, event-related potential (ERP) responses, neuroimaging by magnetic resonance and electrodermal responses. Our team has access to two laboratories: one in the psychology department, in the GRENE research centre, and the other at the Institut universitaire de gériatrie de Montréal. I receive financial support for my research work from the NSERC and the CIHR (MRC) and from the FCAR and FRSQ.