Seminarium:

3N: Integrating Neuroscience, Neuroimaging and Neurotechnology to enrich models of development and learning

dr Paweł Matusz (University of Applied Sciences Western Switzerland, University of Lausanne & HES SO Valais)

Data:

5 lutego 2026

Dr Pawel Matusz

Physiolab, Institute of Health Sciences, School of Health Sciences, University of Applied Sciences Western Switzerland (HES SO) Valais, Sion, Switzerland

The SENSE Research & Innovation Center, University of Lausanne & HES SO Valais

Currently, it is almost a truism to say that selective attention is crucial for goal-directed behaviour. It allows us to recognise objects and (re)acquire skills and knowledge. However, neurocognitive models of selective attention and its development, and of learning are based on lab studies using typically unisensory (visual, auditory) stimuli. This contrasts with the multisensory nature of everyday environments (e.g., classroom, high-street) and the brain’s mirroring propensity for integrating multisensory information and the non-linear effects of the latter on brain and cognition.

I will discuss research, mine and of others, showing how the traditional laboratory and the neuroscientific research “in the wild” can be bridged by an approach that integrates rigorous behavioural measures, gauging the information rich nature EEG through multivariate analyses and advances in neurotechnology (Matusz et al. 2019 JOCN). I will discuss how studying selective attention in multisensory settings can shed light on the dynamic, reciprocal development of cognitive-attentional and (multi-)sensory skills in service of learning. I’ll also demonstrate how EEG neuroimaging can help identify the elusive neuro-cognitive mechanisms of developing attentional processes in naturalistic settings.

Finally, I will discuss how the careful, grounded in basic and clinical science, use of such neurotechnologies like virtual/mixed reality, can offer important new insights into the understanding of the sensory and neurodevelopmental conditions, their detection, diagnosis and care, as well as for a more holistic perspective on development, integrating health and education.

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