The Complex Memory Lab recently traveled to Toronto to eat good food, catch up with friends, and share our recent work at the Cognitive Neuroscience Society annual meeting.
Rayna, Savannah, Angelique, and Adi all presented posters. Ata was asked to give a surprise symposium talk when one of the other speakers was unable to make it to the conference. With less than 24 hours’ notice, he put together an excellent talk on the representations of cognitive maps underlying model-based planning. Check out their work below!
Postdoc Adi Upadhyayula presented a poster titled “Intersubject neural similarity and pattern reinstatement during recall are enhanced at meaningful moments during film viewing.”
Savannah Born, a first-year graduate student, presented a poster titled “Do impressions of characters and their actions influence memory of a narrative?”
Rayna Tang, a second-year graduate student, presented a poster titled “Narrative linking during encoding drives associative inference.”
Angelique Delarazan, a fourth-year graduate student, presented a poster titled “Narrative coherence bends the arrow of time when recalling naturalistic events.”
Ata Karagoz, also a fourth-year graduate student, presented a talk titled “Representations of cognitive maps underlying model-based planning.” To learn more about Ata’s work, check out his behavioral paper here and stay tuned for his fMRI preprint coming soon!