Tristan Bekinschtein Explained

Birth Date:1975
Birth Place:Buenos Aires, Argentina
Tristan Bekinschtein
Nationality:Argentine, British
Field:Cognitive Neuroscience, Theoretical Neuroscience
Work Institution:Cambridge University
Alma Mater:Buenos Aires University
Doctoral Advisor:Facundo Manes, Adrian Owen
Known For:Physiology and Cognition of Consciousness, Auditory Processing
Prizes:Turing Institute Fellowship, Wellcome Trust Fellowship
Children:2

Tristan Bekinschtein is biologist, Master in Neurophysiology and PhD in neuroscience, Buenos Aires University.[1] He is a university lecturer and Turing Fellow[2] at Cambridge University. Dr. Bekinschtein is primarily known for his work on variable states of consciousness and auditory feedback. He presently runs the Consciousness and Cognition Laboratory at Cambridge University.[3]

Biography

Bekinschtein began his scientific career as a Neuroimaging analyst at the Raul Carrea Institute in 1999. In 2005, he joined the Impaired Consciousness Group[4] at the University of Cambridge as a research fellow. He became an Assistant Researcher at the Institute of Cognitive Neurology in Argentina in 2006, before joining the INSERM-CEA Cognitive Neuroimaging Unit (UNICOG) at the French Institute of Health and Medical Research in Paris. In 2008, he joined the MRC-Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit at Cambridge University as a research fellow. In 2012, he gave a TED Talk on consciousness at Rio De La Plata.[5]

As of 2011, Bekinschtein runs the Consciousness and Cognition Laboratory at Cambridge University.[6]

Select publications

Dr Bekinschtein has more than 150 publications[7] in renowned peer-reviewed publications. Below is a selection:

Notable awards

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tristan Bekinschtein. 2022-02-12. The Alan Turing Institute. en.
  2. Web site: Tristan Bekinschtein. 2022-02-12. The Alan Turing Institute. en.
  3. Web site: home. 2022-02-12. Cambridge Consciousness & Cognition. en.
  4. Web site: Administrator. 2012-02-28. The Impaired Consciousness Research Group. 2022-02-12. www.wbic.cam.ac.uk. en.
  5. Web site: Perder la conciencia - Tristán Bekinschtein @ TEDxRíodelaPlata . youtube.com. 2020-01-22.
  6. Web site: DR TRISTAN BEKINSCHTEIN . ccc-lab.org. 2020-01-22.
  7. Web site: Tristan A. Bekinschtein. 2022-02-12. scholar.google.co.uk.
  8. Web site: Neural signature of the conscious processing of auditory regularities . 2022-04-22 . scholar.google.co.uk.
  9. Web site: Classical conditioning in the vegetative and minimally conscious state . 2022-04-22 . scholar.google.co.uk.
  10. Web site: Brain connectivity dissociates responsiveness from drug exposure during propofol-induced transitions of consciousness . 2022-04-22 . scholar.google.co.uk.
  11. Web site: Inducing task-relevant responses to speech in the sleeping brain . 2022-04-22 . scholar.google.co.uk.
  12. Web site: Losing the left side of the world: rightward shift in human spatial attention with sleep onset . 2022-04-22 . scholar.google.co.uk.
  13. Web site: Preserved sensory processing but hampered conflict detection when stimulus input is task-irrelevant . 2022-04-22 . scholar.google.co.uk.
  14. Web site: Decreasing alertness modulates perceptual decision-making . 2022-04-22 . scholar.google.co.uk.
  15. Web site: Decreased alertness reconfigures cognitive control networks . 2022-04-22 . scholar.google.co.uk.
  16. Web site: Dissociable neural information dynamics of perceptual integration and differentiation during bistable perception . 2022-04-22 . scholar.google.co.uk.
  17. Web site: Different underlying mechanisms for high and low arousal in probabilistic learning in humans . 2022-04-22 . scholar.google.co.uk.