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With Beatrice Barra (Prof., NYU Neuroscience Institute).
Simons Foundation, 160 5th Ave, Gerald Fischbach Auditorium, New York
Jan 31 (Fri) , 2025 @ 06:00 PM
FREE
 
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Imagine a world where we are freed from the limits of our minds. Advances in neuroscience & technology are bringing once-distant visions, like enhanced sensory experiences & direct brain-computer connections, closer to reality.

Yet, ethical questions rise as we progress toward this new world of neural hacking. How far should we be willing to go when studying the brain? What ethical challenges are scientists navigating as they venture into new territory? What safeguards are in place to protect both science & our society? And ultimately, just because we can, does that mean we should?

Simons Society Junior Fellow Beatrice Barra is a neuroscientist at New York University's Neuroscience Institute. As part of her research on sensory processing, Barra studies how brain-machine interfaces might one day restore sensations & hopes to use her findings to help create better neuroprosthetic devices in the future.

Neuroscientist Karen Rommelfanger is the program director of Emory University's Neuroethics Program. With expertise in brain-machine interfaces & cognitive enhancement, Rommelfanger explores how emerging neurotechnologies challenge our definitions of health, identity & ethics, guiding critical discussions on the societal impact of these advancements.

Join us as Barra & Rommelfanger sit down for a conversation with The Transmitter Editor-in-Chief Ivan Oransky to examine the crossroads of ethics & science involved in hacking the brain. Their discussion will invite us to reconsider the boundaries of our minds.

ABOUT THE SPEAKERS

Barra is a postdoctoral fellow in the laboratory of Dmitry Rinberg at New York University's Neuroscience Institute. She received her M.Sc. in biomedical engineering from Politecnico di Milano in Italy & her Ph.D. in medical sciences from the University of Fribourg in Switzerland. During her doctoral studies under the supervision of Marco Capogrosso, she focused on developing a spinal cord stimulation protocol that successfully restored arm & hand movement in nonhuman primates with cervical spinal cord injury. During her Ph.D., she was awarded a Swiss National Science Foundation fellowship to spend 18 months at the University of Pittsburgh, where she developed spinal cord stimulation protocols to restore naturalistic tactile sensation in subjects with sensory impairments. While studying how stimulation of the sensory system can restore sensation, she developed a particular interest in the neural encoding of sensory information, & she is now focusing her postdoctoral research on the neural encoding of sensation intensity. Specifically, she aims to understand how the mouse olfactory bulb encodes the intensity of olfactory information in the early stages of sensory processing.

Rommelfanger is a neurotech ethicist & strategist. She founded & directs the Institute of Neuroethics, the first think tank dedicated to neuroethics. She works across sectors to promote trusted neuroscience. She pioneered neuroethics-by-design approaches & launched the first neuroethics consultancy, Ningen Neuroethics Co-Lab. Her early career as a biomedical neuroscience researcher organically evolved into neuroethics research. Her work explores how neuroscience challenges definitions of health across cultures & the ensuing societal implications of neurotechnology deployment. She maintains a professorship in neurology & psychiatry at Emory University, has published extensively, & has given more than 150 talks worldwide. A recognized global leader in neuroethics, she has collaborated with & advised organizations such as the Council of Europe, DARPA, OECD & the World Economic Forum.

Image: Dr. Brian Edwards, Dr. Greg Dunn. (2018). Self Reflected. The Franklin Institute, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

REGISTRATION REQUIREMENTS & DETAILS

You must be 18+ to attend this event
Registration will close at 2:00 PM the day of the event
Please only register yourself & use your complete first & last name as it appears on your photo ID when filling in the form
If you have a guest you would like to bring with you to this event, please send them the link to register so they can sign up on their own
By registering to attend this event, participants agree to follow the Simons Foundation Code of Conduct
BUILDING ENTRY PROTOCOL

All attendees must be pre-registered & walk-in entry will be denied
Provide valid photo ID upon entry
Present your digital or printed Eventbrite ticket confirmation; make sure it is for the correct event & that the name on it matches your ID
Limited seating is available for this in-person event & is on a first-come, first-served basis
Admittance to the event closes at 6:20 p.m.
Please note that by entering the Simons Foundation buildings, you are attesting that you are not experiencing COVID symptoms & are not knowingly positive for COVID.

EVENT SCHEDULE:

Doors open: 5:30 p.m. (No entrance before 5:30 p.m.)

In Conversation: 6:00 - 7:00 p.m. (Admittance closes at 6:20 p.m.)

Reception: 7:00 - 8:00 p.m.

If alcohol is served at this event, event organizers reserve the right to refuse to serve guests who are not of legal drinking age or who appear to be intoxicated.

The Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium complies with the Americans with Disabilities Act & offers accessible seating to visitors with special access needs.

Inquiries: sfpresents@simonsfoundation.org
 
 
 
 
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