Author Archives: sbunge

Kirstie’s exit talk

Kirstie Whitaker, PhD, gave her exit talk on Friday. It was fabulous. Here she is, supported by the Bunge lab and her family, in from England. We will all miss her!

2012 lab photo

From left: Chloe Green, Connor Lemos, Lisa Johnson, Sally Bae, Alison Miller Singley, Silvia Bunge, Maia Barrow, Zdena Op de Macks, Forrest Riege, Belén Guerra-Carrillo, and Carter Wendelken

Introducing Drs. Whitaker & Mackey!

At UC Berkeley, every Ph.D. graduate receives a lollipop when their degree has been conferred. Allyson Mackey and Kirstie Whitaker paid a little visit to Graduate Division on August 10th and received their lollipops! They both started in the Neuroscience program 5 summers ago, both leave the lab at the end of the month, and are both heading to Cambridge for postdocs. Allyson will go to MIT (Cambridge, Mass.) to work with my grad advisor John Gabrieli, and Kirstie will go to the University of Cambridge to work with John Suckling. The lab is in denial at the moment.

 

Press release & media coverage

Reasoning training alters white matter microstructure

Open-access article:

http://www.frontiersin.org/neuroanatomy/10.3389/fnana.2012.00032/abstract

Science Daily:

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/08/120822125222.htm

The Wall Street Journal (misguidedly titled “Why Lawyers Are So Smart”):

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB20000872396390444230504577615443664768610.html

Etc. And, of course, since this study involved LSAT preparation, it’s been cited in law-related websites, including some fun articles…

http://abovethelaw.com/2012/08/studying-for-the-lsat-makes-you-smarter-at-doing-well-on-the-lsat/

 

 

Kirstie and Alison selected to give talks at Society for Neuroscience

Distinguished Scientist Lecture invitation

Silvia has been invited to give a Distinguished Scientist Lecture in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh. This is not until September, so she may have enough time to grow a distinguished white beard beforehand.

Supreme Court ruling

The Supreme Court has just ruled that life-without-parole sentencing for juveniles is unconstitutional, relying in part on evidence regarding the protracted timecourse of brain maturation. Over the last few years, a number of researchers, including Professor Bunge, co-wrote amicus briefs and testified in state State senate hearings that led up to this decision. The researchers took care to provide a balanced overview of extant research on brain development.

Coverage in La Nación article

http://www.lanacion.com.ar/1455875-pistas-sobre-como-aprende-el-cerebro

Yana Fandakova’s thesis defense

At Humboldt University in Berlin, at Yana Fandakova’s thesis defense. Yana, who graduated summa cum laude, is wearing a neat personalized graduation cap with lots of photos on it. Behind her from left to right: a Humboldt reseearcher, Silvia, Yee Lee Shing, Hauke Heekeren, Ulman Lindenberger, and Peter Frensch.

Funding for cognitive intervention in WA State

Thanks to the fundraising efforts of Jack Shonkhoff, Director of the Frontiers of Innovation, our lab has received philanthropic funding for a “Proposal to Advance the Frontiers of Innovation in Early Childhood Policy and Practice” in Washington State.

http://developingchild.harvard.edu/activities/frontiers_of_innovation/