Young investigators from the Martinos Center were recognized at the 2014 Research Fellows Poster Celebration, sponsored by the MGH Office for Research Career Development (ORCD).
Martinos Center News

The Martinos Center's Umar Mahmood and Anna Moore are among the 46 researchers to be honored with the 2014 Distinguished Investigator Award from the Academy of Radiology Research.

Two members of the Laboratory for Computational Neuroimaging have been awarded new grants.
Martinos Center researchers were widely recognized for their work at the 2014 meeting of the International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine (ISMRM), held last month in Milan, Italy.

In a recent Current Biology paper, the Martinos Center's Wim Vanduffel and colleagues report that artificially stimulating a brain region believed to play a key role in learning, reward and motivation induced monkeys to change which of two images they choose to look at.

The Martinos Center investigator is a new member of the prestigious organization.

Martinos Center researchers and colleagues will launch a $30 million research initiative designed to treat post-traumatic stress disorder, traumatic brain injury and other neurological and psychiatric disorders.

The Martinos Center's Clarissa Cooley received a Young Investigator Award at the 2014 meeting of the International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.
The brainchild of the Martinos Center’s Tyler Triggs, the Boston-based group Parachuter aims to create evocative sonic terrains through a mix of composition and improvisation while also incorporating field recordings and sound design.

How does the brain decide whether something is correct? When it comes to the processing of spoken language, the theory has been that the brain applies a set of rules to determine which combinations of sounds are permissible. Now, the work of the Martinos Center's David Gow and colleagues suggests that the brain decides based on the words that are already known.