Experts in: Cognitive neuroimaging
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 agrégée
HANGANU, Alexandru
Professeur sous octroi adjoint
HÉTU, Sébastien
Professeur adjoint
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.
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
- 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.