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  Department:    Human Development - Web

    Full list of Departments at the bottom of the page


Matthew Belmonte
    (WEB PAGE)
mkb4 @ cornell.edu
G62A MVR      607-255-6385
  [edit]

Faculty

Keywords: Cognitive Neuroscience (17), Development (21), Imaging (8)

Matthew Belmonte's research has applied EEG and fMRI to explore brain physiology in people with autism spectrum conditions and in their family members. He also has interests in the development of computational methods for statistical analysis of fMRI and EEG time series, and in the relation of cognitive science to literary representation.

Sherry X. Xianxx37 @ cornell.edu
203 Uris Hall      607-255-7898
  [edit]

Research Associate associated with: David J. Field

Keywords: Behavioral Neuroscience (9), Cognitive Neuroscience (17), color vision (1), Neurophysiology (5), Systems Neuroscience (25), Vision (11)

I am interested in human perception, neural representation and natural scene statistics of color. Here in Cornell, I use psychophysical methods to measure perception of chromatic illusions which provide a good tool to test hypotheses about color processing in the brain. Together with Dr. David Field, we use both psychophysical and computational methods to study the natural scene statistics with special emphasis on color. Is our trichromacy shaped by natural scenes? Can we explain the formation of different visual pathways and color opponent receptive fields with computational models based on natural scenes?

During my post-doctoral study at Stanford, I studied neuronal representation of color and color appearance in V4 using neurophysiology method, e.g. single-electrode recording in Dr. Tirin Moore¡¯s lab. We will continue to collaborate on these projects and will also study the influence of eye movements to processes along different visual pathways.


Charles J Brainerd
    (WEB PAGE)
cb299 @ cornell.edu
B-43, MVR Hall      607-254-1163
  [edit]

Faculty

Keywords: Aging (6), Cognitive Neuroscience (17), Development (21), Emotion (4), Hippocampus (11), Imaging (8), Individual Differences (Human) (6), Learning and Memory (13), Mathematical Modeling (14)

My research covers areas such as human memory and decision-making, statistics and mathematical modeling, psychological assessment, learning, intelligence, cognitive development, learning disability, child abuse, and memory impairments in aging and Alzheimer's Disease. My current research program centers on the relation between memory and higher reasoning abilities in children and adults, and it also focuses on false-memory phenomena. Together with another Cornell Professor, Valerie Reyna, I have developed fuzzy-trace theory, a model of the relation between memory and higher reasoning that has been widely applied within cognitive neuroscinece, medicine, and law.


Joseph A. Mikelsjam342 @ cornell.edu
  [edit]

Faculty

Keywords: Aging (6), Cognitive Neuroscience (17), Development (21), Emotion (4), Imaging (8), Individual Differences (Human) (6), Social behavior (12)

Joseph Mikels’ research program lies at the intersection of cognitive and affective neuroscience. His primary interests include topics related to emotion, attention, and decision making, with particular consideration of the development trajectory of these processes across the life span. By incorporating the perspective of functional magnetic resonance imaging, ongoing projects in Mikels’ Emotion and Cognition Laboratory are exploring the neural substrates of observed behavioral differences between younger and older adults. For example, what brain structures underlie the preference for positively valenced emotional material among older adults? Do younger and older adults recruit different brain regions in making decisions? Answers to these questions have the potential to explain the strategic means by which individuals may successfully compensate for the decline in cognitive function during later life.

Richard A. Depuerad5 @ cornell.edu
G22 MVR Hall      607-257-7316
  [edit]

Faculty associated with: Elise Temple

Keywords: Cognitive Neuroscience (17), Individual Differences (Human) (6), Learning and Memory (13), Social behavior (12), Stress (8)

Professor Depue's work involves the neurobiology and neurochemistry associated with the structure of personality,emotion, and cognition. He studies the relation of dopamine, serotonin, norepinephrine, and opiod function to the traits of extraversion, emotional stability, fear-anxiety, and affiliation, repectively, as well as to cognitive functioning. These neurotransmitter and neuropeptide systems are modulated pharmacologically in humans, and the sensitivity of the responses is assessed hormonally, emotionally, motorically, and cognitively. The work has direct implications for personality disorders and disorders of affect. Finally, the manner in which these systems come to be controlled by environmental context is addressed.


Elise Temple
    (WEB PAGE)
elise.temple @ dartmouth.edu
G63 MVR Hall      607-255-9460
  [edit]

Faculty associated with: Richard A. Depue,   Kathleen M. Linnane

Keywords: Auditory Neuroscience (5), Cognitive Neuroscience (17), Development (21), Education (1), Imaging (8), Individual Differences (Human) (6), Language (5), Social behavior (12), Stress (8)

Dr. Temple's focus is in the fields of developmental cognitive neuroscience and educational neuroscience. This includes both an exploration of the development of neural mechanisms underlying cognitive and emotional processes and how these mechanisms undergo plasticity based on experience, education, disordered development or disease, and /or remediation. This overarching focus is being explored with a number of projects including 1) normal and disordered literacy development and the effect of remediation and education, 2) a newly developing program in neuro-math-ed, the exploration of brain mechanisms involved in mathematical processing - how they develop and are impacted by educational strategies, 3) the effects of stress and trauma on brain function and brain development, and 4) the development and plasticity of the brain mechanisms underlying theory of mind and the effects of culture and language on these brain mechanisms.

Dr. Temple is now at Dartmouth College, Hanover NH in the Department of Education and graduate faculty in the Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences. She maintains some active collaborations with people at Cornell, but to contact her please use the elise.temple@dartmouth.edu email.

Valerie F. Reyna
    (WEB PAGE)
vr53 @ cornell.edu
B44 Martha Van Rensselaer Hall      (607) 255-6778
  [edit]

Faculty

Keywords: Aging (6), Behavioral genetics (7), Behavioral Neuroscience (9), Cognitive Neuroscience (17), Development (21), Emotion (4), Hippocampus (11), Imaging (8), Individual Differences (Human) (6), Learning and Memory (13), Mathematical Modeling (14), Social behavior (12)

My research focuses on memory, judgment, and decision making across the lifespan. My recent work concerns neurocognitive mechanisms of memory in normal aging and mild cognitive impairment, and how these differ from disease processes such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease. In collaboration with Charles Brainerd, we apply mathematical models of memory to such tasks as recall, recognition, semantic and pragmatic inference, other higher reasoning tasks, and the Deese-Roediger-McDermott false-memory procedure. In another stream of research, our laboratory is investigating rationality and risky decision making in a variety of populations, ranging from emergency room physicians to adolescents (e.g., examining mental representations, dual processes, risk and reward pathways, impulsivity, and emotion in HIV prevention).

Steven S. Robertson
    (WEB PAGE)
ssr4 @ cornell.edu
G23 MVR Hall      607-255-9076
  [edit]

Faculty

Keywords: Behavioral Neuroscience (9), Cognitive Neuroscience (17), Development (21), Individual Differences (Human) (6), Mathematical Modeling (14), Motor Systems (13), Vision (11)

Professor Robertson studies the dynamic relations between mind and body during early development. Recent work focuses on visual foraging behavior in young infants using measurements of visual spatial attention (amplitude modulation of steady state visual evoked potentials), gaze (corneal reflections of stimuli), and body movement (piezoelectric sensors). Dynamical models of visual foraging are being studied in collaboration with John Guckenheimer in the Center for Applied Mathematics. The functional significance of individual differences in early movement-gaze-attention coupling is being examined in experimental studies of novelty detection and longitudinal studies of attention problems.

Kathleen M. Linnanekml48 @ cornell.edu
G86 MVR Hall      607-254-1510
  [edit]

Graduate Student associated with: Elise Temple

Keywords: Cognitive Neuroscience (17), Development (21), Imaging (8), Social behavior (12), Systems Neuroscience (25)

I am currently investigating the neurological correlates of different attention networks and how those relate to the cognitive, behavioral and social deficits persistent in Autistic Spectrum Disorders. I am interested in both structure and pathway differences between autistic and non-clinical individuals as well as typical and pathological neural development.




Complete list of departments:


Please report corrections, questions, comments, and problems to: Lori Miller (lmm8 AT cornell.edu)