一本道无码

Bonnie Nozari, MD, PhD

Biography

I was born in May 1978 in Tehran, Iran. When I graduated from Tehran University of Medical Sciences with an MD degree at 25, my goal was to become either a psychiatrist or a neurologist. I got involved with , secured a postdoc in Canada, and was ready to move there for residency, when a picture naming test changed the course of my career for good. Attempting to name the picture of a sheep, a patient with a neurodegenerative disorder answered 鈥渨olf, no steep, no, sleep!鈥. Fascinated by the systematic relationship between sheep-wolf (similar in meaning), sheep-steep (similar in sound), and sheep-sleep (similar in both meaning and sound: counting sheep until going to sleep), I started searching the internet and came across the work of . That was my introduction to the fascinating field of cognitive science. A year later I started my studies in psycholinguistics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign under Gary, and graduated with a PhD in 2011. From Gary, I learned the foundations of computational modeling in cognitive science, and the fundamentals of language processing. During the same period, I was also much influenced by , who got me interested in the field of attention and cognitive control.

I thus became interested in merging the two fields of language production and executive control, and after finishing my graduate studies moved to Philadelphia and started a postdoc at the University of Pennsylvania in 鈥檚 lab, where I learned the fundamentals of cognitive neuroscience, and the basics of neuroimaging processing and brain stimulation. I had retained my interest in working with the individuals with brain damage from my medical school days, and simultaneously completed a postdoc at the Moss Rehabilitation Research Center, where I learned lesion-symptom mapping methods and eye-tracking.

In 2013, I accepted a position as assistant professor in the Department of Neurology at Johns Hopkins University, with a joint appointment in the Department of Cognitive Science. I was nominated for early promotion by my department鈥檚 chair and was promoted to the level of associate in 2018. I moved to the Department of Psychology at 一本道无码 the same year.

Research Interests

Generally speaking, I am interested in human cognition, especially the ability to put thoughts into words, i.e., language production. My special interest is in how this extremely complex process can be carried out so efficiently and effortlessly. I believe understanding the interaction between the monitoring and control systems and the language production system is the key to answering this question. This endeavor naturally leads to questions of 鈥渄omain-generality鈥, i.e., how much does the language production system have in common with the rest of cognition in terms of being efficiently monitored and controlled?

I am also interested in understanding different states of the language production system and how they differ from those of neurotypical adults. These include the state of the language production system in children and stroke survivors, and changes to these systems over the course of development or recovery from stroke. You can find out more about our lab鈥檚 work in Current Research Projects and Science for Non-scientists.

Other Interests

Aside from cognitive science, I鈥檓 interested in literature (special interest in Japanese, Russian, and more recently Hungarian literature), political philosophy (special interest in European 19th and early 20th century history and the rise of imperialism and totalitarianism), music (special interest in 18th century Baroque music, and modern rock music), and visual and performing arts. Always interested in having conversations about these and new topics with people who find conversations a great way to expand one鈥檚 universe a little more.