Differences From
Artifact [ee77cb9374]:
- File
pages/team-3.xml
— part of check-in
[9dcfbec856]
at
2019-05-06 16:07:54
on branch trunk
— primo canvas per una demo
(user:
manghi
- File
pages/team-3.xml
— part of check-in
[951d0ce116]
at
2019-08-20 23:57:16
on branch trunk
— now handling french cv too
(user:
manghi
116 116 <team format="json" teamid="3">
117 117 [{
118 118 "name": "Jean-René Duhamel, PhD",
119 119 "role": "Principal Investigator",
120 120 "phone": "(334) 37 91 12 18",
121 121 "email": "jrd@isc.cnrs.fr",
122 122 "photo": "duhamel.jpg",
123 - "cv": "Jean-René Duhamel initially trained in human neuropsychology at McGill University and at the University of Marseille, studying brain/behavior relations through the effects of focal brain lesions on cognitive function. After obtaining his PhD, he moved to the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, where he investigated the functional organization of the posterior parietal cortex, eye movements and visual mechanisms, focusing on the analysis of single neuron activity in monkeys. As a tenured researcher of the CNRS since 1992, he has pursued his interest in non-human primate cognition, addressing various topics such as multisensory integration, attention, space representation and, more recently, social and communication behavior. Dr Duhamel’s work is supported by the CNRS, Université de Lyon, Labex Cortex, Fondation pour la Recherche sur le Cerveau."
123 + "cv": {
124 + "en": "Jean-René Duhamel initially trained in human neuropsychology at McGill University and at the University of Marseille, studying brain/behavior relations through the effects of focal brain lesions on cognitive function. After obtaining his PhD, he moved to the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, where he investigated the functional organization of the posterior parietal cortex, eye movements and visual mechanisms, focusing on the analysis of single neuron activity in monkeys. As a tenured researcher of the CNRS since 1992, he has pursued his interest in non-human primate cognition, addressing various topics such as multisensory integration, attention, space representation and, more recently, social and communication behavior. Dr Duhamel’s work is supported by the CNRS, Université de Lyon, Labex Cortex, Fondation pour la Recherche sur le Cerveau."
125 + }
124 126 }
125 127 ,
126 128 {
127 129 "name": "Sylvia Wirth, PhD",
128 130 "role": "Principal Investigator",
129 131 "phone": "(334) 37 91 12 32",
130 132 "email": "sylvia.wirth@isc.cnrs.fr",
131 133 "photo": "wirth.jpg",
132 - "cv": "Sylvia Wirth earned a PhD in Neuroscience from Louis Pasteur University, Strasbourg, France, dedicated to the understanding of olfactory memory in rodents. She went on a post-doctoral training at New York University characterizing the neural activity underlying memory formation in the medial temporal lobe in the non-human primates. She joined the Institute of Cognitive Sciences in 2009. Her current research focusses on characterizing the nature of neural codes in primates during spatial learning and time processing. She also studies the representation of social stimuli in the brain during picture presentation or during live social interactions in monkeys.
134 + "cv": {
135 + "en": "Sylvia Wirth earned a PhD in Neuroscience from Louis Pasteur University, Strasbourg, France, dedicated to the understanding of olfactory memory in rodents. She went on a post-doctoral training at New York University characterizing the neural activity underlying memory formation in the medial temporal lobe in the non-human primates. She joined the Institute of Cognitive Sciences in 2009. Her current research focusses on characterizing the nature of neural codes in primates during spatial learning and time processing. She also studies the representation of social stimuli in the brain during picture presentation or during live social interactions in monkeys.
133 136
134 137 Dr Wirth’s research program is supported by the ANR (Agence Nationale de la recherche), University Lyon 1, Labex-Cortex."
138 + }
135 139 }
136 140 ,
137 141 {
138 142 "name": "Felipe Rolando, PhD",
139 143 "role": "",
140 144 "phone": "",
141 145 "email": "felipe.rolando@isc.cnrs.fr",
142 146 "photo": "frolando.jpg",
143 - "cv": "Felipe Rolando is a PhD student since February 2018, working under the supervision of Sylvia Wirth, HDR. He graduated in Neuropsychology and Clinical Neurosciences at the University of Toulouse. There, he obtained his title of psychologist specialized in Neuropsychology after a clinical experience at the University Hospital of Limoges. His current work is aimed at understanding the neural basis of time memory in nonhuman primates, using intracranial electrophysiology. His project is founded by the Agence National de la Recherche."
147 + "cv": {
148 + "en": "Felipe Rolando is a PhD student since February 2018, working under the supervision of Sylvia Wirth, HDR. He graduated in Neuropsychology and Clinical Neurosciences at the University of Toulouse. There, he obtained his title of psychologist specialized in Neuropsychology after a clinical experience at the University Hospital of Limoges. His current work is aimed at understanding the neural basis of time memory in nonhuman primates, using intracranial electrophysiology. His project is founded by the Agence National de la Recherche."
149 + }
144 150 }
145 151 ,
146 152 {
147 153 "name": "Rosella Cirillo, PhD",
148 154 "role": "",
149 155 "phone": "",
150 156 "email": "rossella.cirillo@isc.cnrs.fr",
151 157 "photo": "cirillo.jpg",
152 - "cv": "Rossella Cirillo is a Post Doc since April 2017, working under the supervision of Professor Jean-René Duhamel at the ISC – Institut des Sciences Cognitives Marc Jeannerod in Lyon, France.
158 + "cv": {"en": "Rossella Cirillo is a Post Doc since April 2017, working under the supervision of Professor Jean-René Duhamel at the ISC – Institut des Sciences Cognitives Marc Jeannerod in Lyon, France.
153 159
154 160 She graduated with honors in Cognitive Neuroscience at the Sapienza – University of Rome, Italy. There, she obtained her title of psychologist specialized in Neuroscience after a two years experience in a laboratory of Behavioral Pharmacology.
155 161
156 162 Then she started an internship in the laboratory of Behavioral Neurophysiology at the Department of Physiology and Pharmacology in Rome under the supervision of Professor Aldo Genovesio.
157 163
158 164 There, she conducted a PhD and obtained the title of Doctor in Cognitive Neuroscience. Her current project concerns the neural basis of social interaction in non-human primates using intracranial electrophysiology."
165 + }
159 166 }]
160 167 </team>
161 168 </page>