Maddalena Canna
maddalena [dot] canna [at] northwestern [dot] edu I am a Postdoctoral Fellow in Anthropology at Northwestern University (Evanston/Chicago), Fyssen Foundation. I hold a PhD in Social Anthropology and Ethnology (EHESS) and I am affiliated to the Laboratoire d’Anthropologie Sociale (LAS) of the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales (EHESS/Collège de France). Laureate of the Martine Aublet Foundation (Musée du Quai Branly) since 2012, in my thesis (Martine Aublet Award 2018) and recent works I focus on grisi siknis, a family of hallucinatory, dissociative seizures diffused in the Caribbean Moskitia. My current interests include: the interplay between imagination, metacognition and physiological regulation; the bio-social variability of dissociative phenomena; interactional models of ASCs, embodiment, interoception and visceral perception in dissociative states, spiritual experience and meditative practices. |
Anna Ciaunica
anna [dot] ciaunica [at] gmail [dot] com My research to date in philosophy of mind and cognitive science focuses on the relationship between (a)typical forms of self-consciousness, embodiment and social interactions in human and artificial agents. I am also interested in basic forms of self-awareness as it unfolds in early life. I am currently the Principal Investigator of three interdisciplinary projects looking at : (1) the relationship between altered sense of self and social alienation in Depersonalisation. (2) self-consciousness and social interactions in human and artificial agents. (3) multisensory modulation of the sense of self through bodily movements and action observation in depersonalisation and psychedelic experiences. I am also co-PI of a project looking at the relationship between dreams, sense of self, and self-detachment in clinical depersonalisation. In my work, I combine conceptual resources from philosophy of mind and the phenomenological tradition with experimental methods from psychology and cognitive neuroscience. I am the main coordinator of the Network for Embodied Consciousness and the Arts (NECTArs) – a collaborative platform bringing together artists, researchers, stakeholders, policy makers and people with lived experiences, aiming at fostering creative approaches to timely issues such as self-awareness and (dis)embodiment in our hyper-digitalized world. |
Guillaume Dumas
guillaume [dot] dumas [at] ppsp [dot] team I am the IVADO Professor of Computational Psychiatry at the Faculty of Medicine of the Université de Montréal, the Director of the Precision Psychiatry and Social Physiology laboratory at the CHU Sainte Justine Research Center, and an Academic Member of the Mila - Quebec AI Institute. In parallel, I am also associated to the "Culture, Mind, and Brain” program of McGill University and the “Center for Complex Systems and Brain Sciences” of Florida Atlantic University. I co-founded ARTEMOC, the French research group dedicated to the study of ASCs that later gave birth to ALIUS. In this context, I am now focusing on the relationship between ASCs and psychiatry, from the articulation of categorical and dimensional approaches to the integration of the neural, behavioral, and social scales through multi-brain neuroscience and computational methods. |
David Dupuis
david [dot] dupuis2 [at] gmail [dot] com I am a Research Fellow at the French Institute of Health and Medical Research (INSERM), affiliated to the Institut de recherche interdisciplinaire sur les enjeux sociaux (IRIS/EHESS, Paris). My research interests lie mainly within the contemporary reconfigurations of the status of so-called “hallucinogenic” (or “psychedelic”) substances and “hallucinatory” experiences. I explore the anthropological, political, clinical and ethical implications of these dynamics within Euro-American societies. My work is based on ethnographic fieldworks conducted since 2008 in Latin America (Peruvian Amazon, Mexico) and Europe (United Kingdom, France). |
Sebastian Ehmann
SE1005948 [at] wcupa [dot] edu I am a Master’s student in General Psychology with the intention to pursue a Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology. My background is interdisciplinary in Nutritional Sciences (B.S.) and Exercise Science (M.S.), but I ended up growing a significant interest in the field of psychology and philosophy. My research centers around the intersection of psychedelic experiences and mindfulness practices from the east. Specifically, how altered states of consciousness influence the perception of self and how the phenomenology of these experiences improves mental health outcomes. In the future, I am interested in additional formal training in philosophy and cognitive neuroscience to fully explore my field of interest from every angle. |
Cordelia Erickson-Davis
cred22 [at] stanford [dot] edu I am an MD/PhD candidate at Stanford University in the cultural anthropology department. I draw together theory and methods from the neurosciences and the social sciences in order to explore the links between the political and perceptual; the social and subjective. My research focuses on brain machine interfaces devices – in particular, the artificial eye. I am interested in how certain assumptions that inform device design and implementation manifest in the phenomenological experience of device users. What does the subject “see” when the device is turned on? What does it mean for it to “work”? How might we use the discrepancies that arise between our predictions for artificial vision and that which results to inform our theories of perception more generally? |
George Fejer gyorgyf [at] live [dot] com George studied Bioscience (B.Sc.) at the University of Heidelberg and Cognitive Neuropsychology (M.Sc) at the Vrije University in Amsterdam. His thesis project investigated the subperceptual effects of microdosing psilocybin on temporal integration processes. He is a board member of the Amsterdam Psychedelic Research Association, a collaborative partner of the Interdisciplinary Conference on Psychedelic Research. His research interests include Psychedelics, Predictive Processing, Belief Formation, Phenomenology, and the organization of field studies, citizen research, and open science initiatives. He is currently working as a Research Assistant at the Religion Cognition & Behavior Lab, investigating the placebo effects of psychedelics |
Brendan Fleig-Goldstein fleiggoldstein [at] pitt [dot] edu I am a philosopher, cognitive scientist, and historian of science and religion, completing my PhD in the History & Philosophy of Science department at the University of Pittsburgh. Previously, I studied these subjects at Tufts University and Stanford University. My primary research focuses on the philosophical foundations of cognitive science, with particular emphasis on how to provide evidence for cognitive models. I also work on traditional topics in the philosophy of mind, consciousness, and the self. |
Larry D. Fort ld [dot] fort [at] uliege [dot] be I am a PhD student at the University of Liège where I work in the Physiology of Cognition lab as part of the GIGA-Cyclotron Research Center (CRC). My background is in general psychology (B.S.) and Experimental Psychology (M.A.) where I took interests in altered states of consciousness (ASCs). My research focuses on understanding non-pharmacologically induced ASCs such as ganzfeld and flicker light stimulations through phenomenonogical and neurobiological investigation. Furthermore, my work aims at testing if we can ground our mental experience through engaging our physiological processes as a way to de-induce from ASCs. |
Mathieu Frerejouan
mathieu [dot] frerejouan-du-saint [at] univ-paris1 [dot] fr I studied Psychology at Paris 8, as well as Philosophy at Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, where I am currently a Maitre de Conférences. My PhD research deals with the concept of hallucination from an historical and epistemological point of view. My aim is to show that the meaning of this concept, from its emergence in early psychiatry to nowadays, is linked to medical practices and cannot be understood apart from its pathological implications. |
Daniel Friedman danielarifriedman [at] gmail [dot] com As an undergraduate (Genetics, University of California, Davis, 2010-2014), I studied gene regulatory network evolution in flies. During my PhD (Ecology and Evolution, Stanford University, 2014-2019) I studied ant neurophysiology and collective behavior at a long-term field site in New Mexico, USA. Currently I am a researcher interested in consciousness, active inference, and cognitive security. |
Tom Froese
t [dot] froese [at] gmail [dot] com I am a faculty member of the Research Institute for Applied Mathematics and Systems and a member of the Centre for the Sciences of Complexity, both at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, where I am the coordinator of the 4E Cognition Group. I received a D.Phil. in Cognitive Science from the University of Sussex. My research is concerned with understanding the complexities of the human mind in its biological, psychological, and social manifestations. The overarching methodology is to use a dynamical systems approach to interrelate objective and qualitative aspects of subjectivity. I am exploring the idea that ritualized alteration of consciousness may enhance neural and social self-optimization, and that such alteration may also have contributed to the prehistoric origins of human symbolic cognition. |
Juan González jgonzalez [at] uaem [dot] mx I am Professor of Philosophy and Cognitive Sciences at Morelos State University (UAEM), in Cuernavaca, Mexico. I obtained my Ph.D. at the École Polytechnique (CREA; Paris, 1998) under the supervision of the late Francisco Varela. I am a member of Mexico’s National Council for Scientific Research (SNI), level II, and currently the Director of the Center for Research in Cognitive Sciences (CINCCO), at UAEM . My primary research interests are in epistemology, philosophy of mind and perception theory, combining conceptual analysis, empirical research and phenomenology to tackle problems concerning perception, hallucinations, consciousness, ASCs and cognition in general. I am also interested in shamanism as part of the traditional (indigenous) practices and approaches to knowledge and wisdom. |
Arnaud Halloy
arnaud [dot] halloy [at] gmail [dot] com I am a Belgian anthropologist, assistant professor at the University of Nice Sophia Antipolis since 2007. After studying an Afro-Brazilian cult in Belgium during my graduation, I traveled to Brazil where I conducted extensive fieldwork in the Afro-Brazilian Xangô Possession Cult of Recife, in the North-East Region of Brazil. My main interest goes to the mutual influence between contextual and cognitive dimensions of religious transmission. My research on ASC focuses on emotions and the senses, and their specific role in possession learning process. |
Matthieu Koroma
mkoroma [at] ens-paris-saclay [dot] fr I am a Postdoctoral researcher at University of Liege studying body-brain interactions during sleep. During my PhD in Neuroscience under the direction of Pr. Sid Kouider (Ecole Normale Supérieure, PSL Research University), I focused on understanding whether the sleeping brain disconnects from its environment and to what extent sensory processing depends on internal brain activity, such as dreams and slow-waves. This study adds further understanding on the cognitive ability preserved during sleep such as memory and attention, both when conscious abilities are diminished (deep or slow-wave sleep), or when the sleeper is vividly conscious but with a different phenomenology than during wakefulness (REM or paradoxical sleep). |
Michael Lifshitz
michael.lifshitz2 [at] mail.mcgill [dot] ca Michael Lifshitz is an Assistant Professor in the Division of Social and Transcultural Psychiatry at McGill University and the Lady Davis Institute in Montreal. He did his PhD in Neuroscience at McGill and then worked as a postdoctoral fellow with T. M. Luhrmann in the Stanford Department of Anthropology. Before his doctorate, he completed a master's in neuroscience and an undergraduate in psychology, philosophy, and world religions, all at McGill. His work combines phenomenology, neuroscience and ethnography to shed light on the plasticity of consciousness. He studies practices that aim to transform subjective experience—from meditation and hypnosis to placebos, prayer, and psychedelics. He is particularly interested in how these practices can modulate feelings of agency, so that thoughts and sensations can come to feel as if they are emerging from a source beyond the self. |
Romy Lorenz
romy.lorenz [at] mrc-cbu.cam [dot ]ac.uk I am a cognitive neuroscientist with a multidisciplinary background in psychology and biomedical engineering. I received My PhD from Imperial College London in 2017, for which I have developed an “Artificial Intelligence” neuroscientist – a novel brain-computer interface for optimizing experimental design by combining real-time neuroimaging with machine-learning. Currently, I am a Sir Henry Wellcome Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Cambridge and Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive & Brain Sciences. My research vision lies in revisiting the classic taxonomy of cognitive processes and bring forward a neurobiologically-derived cognitive taxonomy by fusing large-scale neuroinformatic tools (e.g., text mining and automated meta-analyses) and brain-computer interface technology at the individual level. This also involves thinking about novel efforts of how to advance explanatory insights into the causal network mechanisms that underlie cognition, for which I currently explore deep learning techniques and computational modelling. Equally, I am fascinated studying altered states of consciousness (e.g., meditation and psychedelics) and am long-term collaborator of the Psychedelic Research group, led by Dr. Robin Carhart-Harris group at Imperial College London. |
Charlotte Martial cmartial [at] uliege [dot] be I studied Psychology and Neurosciences, and obtained a Ph.D. in Biomedical Sciences at the University of Liège (BE). At present, I’m leading the projects aiming to study the phenomenon of near-death experiences at the Coma Science Group (GIGA-Consciousness). More broadly, I mainly investigate the episodes of disconnected consciousness (being conscious without experiencing the external world) and ofconnected consciousness (the subjective experience of the external environment) in unresponsive conditions such as during general anesthesia or cardiac arrest. I also explore the neural correlates of other altered or modified states of consciousness such as disorder of consciousness or trance. |
Audrey Mazancieux
audrey [dot] mazancieux [at] gmail [dot] com I am currently a postdoc at the Cognitive Neuroimaging Unit at Neurospin in Paris. My research deals with metacognition, epistemic feelings, and self-awareness. During my PhD (Grenoble Alpes University), I investigated the domain-generality of metacognition, with a particular focus on confidence in memory and perceptual decisions. I also explored low level metacognitive cues (cues that do not depend on self-reflection but rather on subjective feelings such as fluency) in several metacognitive judgements. I worked with populations with neurological diseases such as Multiple Sclerosis and Alzheimer's disease to investigate self-awareness of their cognitive abilities and anosognosia. Current research projects also focus on how feeling of confidence is integrated over time in statistical learning and how it is encoded in the brain. I am particularly interested in how metacognitive (epistemic) feelings play a role in consciousness. I am also part of the SkuldNet consortium (consortium investigating the neural architecture of consciousness funded by COST). |
Raphaël Millière
raphael [dot] milliere [at] philosophy [dot] ox [dot] ac [dot] uk I am a D.Phil student in philosophy and an Ertegun Scholar at the University of Oxford. My research lies mainly at the crossroads between philosophy of mind, phenomenology and cognitive science. In my doctoral thesis, I discuss the claim that a minimal kind of self-awareness is necessary for phenomenal consciousness, through the study of a variety of empirical cases which appear to challenge it (including drug-induced ego dissolution). In recent works, I have also focused on the nature of perceptual error, the philosophical significance of autoscopy and full-body illusions, methodological issues regarding the collection of data about phenomenology, the epistemology of metaphysical realism, the conceivability principle in the epistemology of modalities, and topics in history of philosophy (e.g. George Berkeley, F.H. Bradley and Roman Ingarden). |
Polona Pozeg
pozegpolona [at] gmail [dot] com I have obtained a MSc in Neuropsychology (Maastricht University, The Netherlands) and PhD in Cognitive Neuroscience (École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Switzerland). In the recent years I have been conducting behavioral studies to scientifically investigate how the sense of one’s own body is constructed and represented in the brain. Intrigued by illusions, hallucinations, and delusions, I am strongly interested in the neuro-cognitive processes underlying the representations of one’s self, and its disorders, observed in certain neurological and psychiatric conditions. |
Katrin Preller
preller [at] bli.uzh [dot] ch I obtained my M.Sc. (Neuropsychology) from University of Konstanz, Germany. As a PhD student, I went to University of Zurich, Switzerland, where I run several studies investigating the neurobiological and social-cognitive long-term effects of cocaine, MDMA, and heroin use. After completing my PhD, I joined the Neuropsychopharmacology and Brain Imaging lab at the Psychiatric University Hospital Zurich and Heffter Research Center Zürich, investigating the effects of psilocybin and LSD on self-perception, social cognition, and multimodal processing using different brain imaging techniques. After working as a postdoc at the Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging, UCL, London, UK, and Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA, I now continue my research on the neurobiological effects of psychedelics at University of Zurich and Yale University. |
Leor Roseman
leoroseman [at] gmail [dot] com I hold a BSc in Neuroscience from Tel Aviv University. Since June 2013, I am a PhD student in neuroscience in the Beckley-Imperial Research Program under the supervision of Prof. David Nutt and Dr. Robin Carhart-Harris. I specialize in fMRI analysis techniques and my main research focus is neural correlates of psychedelic visual imagery and psilocybin-assisted therapy for treatment resistant depression. |
Rebecca Seligman
r-seligman [at] northwestern [dot] edu I am a medical and psychological anthropologist who focuses on transcultural psychiatry, or the study of mental health in cross-cultural perspective. My research interests involve critical examination of the social and political-economic forces that affect the experience and distribution of mental and physical illness, with an emphasis on the physical processes and mechanisms through which such forces become embodied. I am interested in the relationships of stress, social disadvantage, and cultural models of selfhood to outcomes such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), dissociation, somatization, diabetes, and depression. I am also exploring current neurobiological research concerning these phenomena. My past research has explored the connection between mental health and religious participation in northeastern Brazil. My book on this research was recently published. |
Enzo Tagliazucchi
tagliazucchi [dot] enzo [at] googlemail [dot] com I studied physics and mathematics at the University of Buenos Aires and obtained a PhD in physics at the Goethe University Frankfurt. Currently, I lead the Consciousness, Culture and Complexity Group (www.cocuco.org) at the Buenos Aires University. I am a Professor of Neuroscience at the Favaloro University, and a Marie Curie fellow at the Brain and Spine Institute in Paris. My main interest is the study of human consciousness as embedded within society and culture. The members of my research group represent different disciplines, including physics, engineering, biochemistry, psychology, computer science and ethnobotany. Our ongoing projects aim towards linking the phenomenology of non-ordinary states of consciousness to neurophysiological and neuropharmacological data. We are also interested in how cultural diversity influences consciousness and vice versa. We use tools ranging from natural language processing, to chemical informatics and molecular dynamics, and to whole-brain neuroimaging and computational modeling of brain activity. |
Chris Timmermann
c [dot] timmermann-slater15 [at] imperial.ac [dot] uk I obtained a BSc in Psychology in Santiago, Chile and a MSc in Cognitive Neuroscience at the University of Bologna in Italy. I am currently completing a PhD in Imperial College London, leading a project focusing on the effects of DMT in the brain and human consciousness. I am interested in the use of methods bridging the relationship between the phenomenology evoked by the psychedelic experience and changes in brain activity using diverse neuroimaging tools. |
Timo Torsten Schmidt
timo [dot] t [dot] schmidt [at] fu-berlin [dot] de I am a postdoctoral researcher at the Freie Universität Berlin. As a neuroscientist interested in the neuronal underpinnings of human consciousness, I work with methods from the field of computational cognitive neuroscience with a focus on functional neuroimaging. My research focuses on the mental representation of consciousness content (working memory and mental imagery) and mechanisms underlying altered states of consciousness (ASC). The latter entails a meta-analytical approach aimed at identifying common ‘phenomenological patterns’ across diversely induced ASCs. For this purpose, we created the Altered States Database accessible on www.asdb.info. It constitutes a full open-access resource to enable meta-analyses on questionnaire data about ASC experiences. I am also interested in classifying different physiological and neuronal mechanisms that contribute to the induction of ASCs in accordance with a taxonomy of predictive brain processes, including the concept of ‘active inference’. |
Michiel van Elk
m [dot] vanelk [at] uva [dot] nl I work in the Psychology Department of the University of Amsterdam. My research group focuses on the psychological and neurocognitive basis of religious and spiritual experiences. I mainly investigate (1) the causes and consequences of religious experiences (e.g., elicitors, role of expectations, effects on prosocial behavior) and (2) the role of cognitive biases and cultural learning in shaping supernatural beliefs and experiences. In a recent project, I critically assess the replicability of main findings within the psychology of religion and propose to use a Bayesian framework to improve the scientific study of religion. My research is multidisciplinary, involving both cognitive and personality measures, brain imaging techniques (e.g., EEG and fMRI), self-report measures and field studies. In the spring quarter of 2017, I will be working as a Fulbright scholar in Stanford’s Anthropology Department. |
Alessio Bucci alessio [dot] bucci [at] unito [dot] it I studied philosophy at the University of Turin and at the University of Edinburgh. I am currently a PhD student in philosophy at the University of Turin, Italy. My research aims to provide a clarification of the notion of “altered states of consciousness”, from both a philosophical and scientific perspective. My focus is on dreaming and sleep related phenomena, hallucinogenic drugs, and meditative states, analysed within the broad framework of philosophy of mind and cognitive science. |
Léna Coutrot lenacoutrot [at] gmail [dot] com Former student researcher in cognitive sciences, I am now a scientific journalist at Tempo Santé (Bayard Presse). I write feature stories and news articles about psychology, well-being, medicine, society, and I am interested in any subject related to human and environmental health. I also produce podcasts on a freelance basis and I am supervising an ongoing podcast project for ALIUS. |
Cécile Manhich cecile [dot] mahnich [at] gmail [dot] com I am research engineer at San Diego State University. My contributions involve the edition of the forthcoming ALIUS newsletter and the creation of a new website. |