I am a neuroscientist studying auditory working memory and
imagination. I try to understand how our brains can mentally hold and
manipulate sounds, giving rise to our remarkable mind’s ear.
I use a combination of invasive (intracranial EEG) and non-invasive
(M/EEG) techniques to register the activity of the brain while people
listen and imagine musical sound sequences. My hope is that these
recordings will give us valuable clues about the neural mechanisms that
allow auditory imagination, potentially leading to a better
understanding of abnormal imagery in psychiatric disorders and
applications in brain-computer interfaces.
After a few years as a postdoc at UC Berkeley, I moved in the fall of
2024 to the University of Copenhagen to start a cognitive intracranial
EEG research program.