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  • 21
    Jan 2015

    New paper – Working Memory Capacity: Limits on the Bandwidth of Cognition


    Miller Lab
    In The News, Miller Laboratory

    Miller, E.K. and Buschman, T.J. (2015)  Working memory capacity: Limits on the bandwidth of cognition. Daedalus, Vol. 144, No. 1, Pages 112-122.  View PDF

    Why can your brain store a lifetime of experiences but process only a few thoughts at once? In this article we discuss “cognitive capacity” (the number of items that can be held “in mind” simultaneously) and suggest that the limit is inherent to processing based on oscillatory brain rhythms, or “brain waves,” which may regulate neural communication. Neurons that “hum” together temporarily “wire” together, allowing the brain to form and re-form networks on the fly, which may explain a hallmark of intelligence and cognition: mental flexibility. But this comes at a cost; only a small number of thoughts can fit into each wave. This explains why you should never talk on a mobile phone when driving.

  • 20
    Jan 2015

    Radio New Zealand: Earl Miller interviewed about multi-tasking and technology


    Miller Lab
    In The News, Miller Laboratory

    Radio New Zealand:  Interview with Professor Earl Miller about Multi-tasking and technology

    Originally aired on Afternoons, Tuesday 20 January 2015

    Getting back into work routines, after a holiday break, is something many of us will already have come to grips with in recent weeks. And these routines seem to get busier all the time, as modern technology allows us to perform more and more tasks ourselves, quickly, on our tablets and smart phones. But at what cost? MIT neuroscientist Professor Earl Miller is an expert on divided attention. He argues our addiction to technology is actually making us less efficient.

  • 5
    Jan 2015

    Photo of recipients of 2014 Bose Research Awards


    Miller Lab
    In The News, Miller Laboratory

    (Back row, left to right) Vanu Bose, ’87, SM ’94, PhD ’99, son of Amar Bose; Earl Miller, the Picower Professor of Neuroscience; Jeff Grossman, an associate professor of materials science and engineering; Janet Conrad, a professor of physics; Alan Oppenheim, the Ford Professor of Engineering; and President L. Rafael Reif; and (front row, left to right) Joel Voldman, a professor of electrical engineering and computer science; Gabriel Bousquet, a PhD student in mechanical engineering; and Nicola Ferralis, a research scientist for materials science and engineering.

    Bose grants reward risk. Five innovative, high-risk projects launch with support from Prof. Amar G. Bose Research Grants.

  • 18
    Nov 2014

    Earl Miller wins Bose Grant for high-risk, innovative research


    Miller Lab
    In The News, Miller Laboratory

    Bose grants reward risk

    Five innovative, high-risk projects launch with support from Prof. Amar G. Bose Research Grants

  • 30
    Oct 2014

    Earl Miller interviewed about consciousness in The Huffington Post


    Miller Lab
    In The News, Miller Laboratory, Neuroscience

    They got my experiment wrong, but spelled my name right:
    Biology of Consciousness: Bridging the Mind-Body Gap?
    The Huffington Post 10/30/14

  • 20
    Oct 2014

    Kay Tye named 2014 NYSCF – Robertson Investigator


    Miller Lab
    In The News

    Our own Kay Tye receives a well-deserved honor:

  • 6
    Oct 2014

    Tim Buschman is a winner of NIH New Innovator Award


    Miller Lab
    In The News, Miller Laboratory

    Miller Lab Alumnus Tim Buschman is one of the winners of the NIH Director’s New Innovator Award.

    According to the NIH website: The award “is designed specifically to support unusually creative new investigators with highly innovative research ideas at an early stage of their career when they may lack the preliminary data required for an R01 grant.”

    We couldn’t be prouder of him if we were a Little Lebowski Urban Achiever.

  • 26
    Sep 2014

    Tweeting While Watching TV Linked to Fewer Brain Cells


    Miller Lab
    In The News, Miller Laboratory

    “Linked” is the operative term here.  Earl Miller is quoted in a New York Magazine article about a study that finds less gray matter in people who multitask more.  Earl points out that the study does not necessarily mean that multitasking decreases brain matter.  It could be that people with less gray matter are more impulsive and thus more prone to multitasking.

    Tweeting While Watching TV Linked to Fewer Brain Cells

  • 20
    Aug 2014

    Picower Institute’s own Kay Tye named to Tech Review’s top-innovators list


    Miller Lab
    In The News, Neuroscience

    According to the press release, Kay made a “list of exceptionally talented technologists whose work has great potential to transform the world.”  It won’t be through her poker play, I’ll tell you that much.
    Congrats Kay!  Well deserved.

  • 14
    Jan 2014

    The ‘smart life’: How connected cars, clothes and homes could fry your brain


    Miller Lab
    In The News, Miller Laboratory, Neuroscience

    Earl Miller is quoted on NBCnews.com.  In brief: Don’t multitask and if you do don’t drive.
    NBCnews.com: The ‘smart life’: How connected cars, clothes and homes could fry your brain

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