Honored to have received the fNIRS Young Investigator Award in at the meeting of the Society for fNIRS in Tokyo.
Neuroimaging demo for Ivorian Government
Our research team organized a functional Near Infrared Spectroscopy neuroimaging demonstration for the Ivorian Ministry of Education as well as a number of our Ivorian research partners. The neuroimaging demonstration events (at the University Felix Houphouet Boigny, hosted by the Neuroscience Laboratory, and at the Ministry of Education meeting) were a great success! Research is only possible with meaningful collaboration between all partners.
Ivorian Team at Ghana ISSDB Conference
Members of the research team: Hager Ayé Clarisse, Akpe Yapo Hermann, Konan Josiane, Tanoh Fabrice and Seri Axel Blahoua participated in the 12th African Regional Workshop entitled : Researching into adaptive behaviours in contexts of change: interdisciplinary and multicultural approaches for early career scholars in Africa. The event organized by the International Society for the Study of Behavioural Development (ISSBD) took place Oct 30-Nov 2017 at the University of Education, Winneba – Ghana. ISSBD is an international organization which promote scientific research on human development throughout the lifespan. During the workshop, junior researchers had the opportunity to hear lectures from Emeritus Professors among them Prof. Anne Petersen (University of Michigan, USA), Prof. Robert Serpell (University of Zambia, Zambia), Prof. Julie Robinson (Flinders University, Australia). The Ivorian team has reinforced their capacities on methodological approaches to the study of human development.The end of the 3 days conference was marked by an award ceremony for the participants, followed by a dinner gala.A excursion followed where all participants visited one of the historical vestiges of the slave trade in Ghana at the Cape Coast Castle.
How the brain learns to read in high-risk environments?
Invited Keynote presentation at the first Mexican Symposium on NIRS Neuroimaging on how the brain learns to read in environments with high risk of illiteracy. Shared our latest findings from our fNIRS neuroimaging study in rural Côte d’Ivoire tracking the development of neural circuitry for reading in a near-absence of quality literacy instruction. Other great Global NIRS talks at mexNIRS, including Clare Ewell and Mari Franceschini. Neuroimaging in low resources settings and understudied populations is on the rise! Soon to come, a protocol for field neuroimaging methods to appear in the Journal of Visualized Experiments.