Gina is an Invited Professor at the Rovereto Winter School at the University of Trento, Italy. The theme of the lectures is "What event-related potentials can and can't tell us about language comprehension in the brain". The title of her course is "New methods in language comprehension".
Kirsten Weber, Eddie Wlotko, and Gina Kuperberg present posters at the 5th Annual Meeting of the Society of the Neurobiology of Language, held in San Diego, CA.
Gina is an Invited Keynote Speaker for the conference on "Investigating Semantics: How to Combine Empirical and Philosophical Approaches" in Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany. The title of her talk is "What can the study of schizophrenia tells us about the neural architecture of language processing?". Thanks to Markus Werning, Erica Cosentino, Maria Spychalska and others for organizing the conference. [Abstract]
Gina is an Invited Speaker for the Tufts University Cognitive and Brain Sciences Series in Medford, MA. The title of her talk is "The Neurobiology of Language Comprehension: A Hierarchical Bayesian Architecture". [Abstract]
Goodbye and thank you to Yumiao Gong who, after spending the spring and summer as a visiting scholar in our lab, is returning home to China. Bye Yumiao!
Gina is an Invited Keynote speaker for the Tufts University Annual Neuroscience Retreat in Beverly, MA. The title of her talk is "How the brain makes sense of language".
With the beginning of a new semester, welcome to several Tufts undergraduates who are joining our lab: Annie Choong, Jennifer Kurzrok, Barbara Storch, Deepa Patil, Matt O'Conor, Nick Caggiano, Sarah Valentina Diaz, and Chelsey Rae Ott.
Welcome to our new research assistant Margarita Zeitlin, who has a B.A. in Linguistics from New York University, and joins us from her time as a lab coordinator at the Snedeker Lab at Harvard.
Gina and colleagues have had their paper "Altered language network activity in young people at familial high-risk for schizophrenia" accepted by Schizophrenia Research. [pdf]