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About Rosemary Cowell

How does the brain make sense of the visual world and enable us to remember things about it? What kind of neural representations are used for visual perception and for memory? Are there common mechanisms for perceiving objects, faces and scenes? Are there common representations for perceiving and remembering? My work examines memory and visual perception, and attempts to determine the neural underpinnings of these cognitive functions in the ventral visual stream and medial temporal lobe. I use computational models, fMRI and (through collaboration) studies of animals and humans with brain damage.

Positions

Present Assistant Professor, Department of Psychology, University of Massachusetts Amherst
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Curriculum Vitae


Disciplines


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Honors and Awards

  • Cermak Travel Award, Memory Disorders Research Society, 2013
  • Perception/Action Modeling Prize of the Cognitive Science Society, July 2009
  • Travel award from Brain, A Journal of Neurology, July 2009
  • Travel award from the British Academy, July 2009
  • Research Councils UK Academic Fellowship, October 2007 - September 2009
  • Newton Abraham Studentship in Biomedical Sciences, Oxford University, 2002-2005
  • Book Prize for final examinations, Pembroke College, University of Cambridge, June 2001
  • National Science Foundation CAREER Award, 2016


Contact Information

University of Massachusetts Amherst
Tobin Hall, Room 431
135 Hicks Way
University of Massachusetts Amherst
Amherst MA 01003
Tel:413-545-1832

Email:


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