Research groups
Colleges
Rogier Mars
Professor of Neurosciences
- MRC Senior Non-clinical Fellow
I explore what it is that makes brains the way they are. Primates, and especially humans, have exceptionally large brains for their body size. Between primates, brains differ in size and in their internal organisation. Why is this? I believe that each brain is an adaptation to the particular environment its owner lives in. I try to understand differences between brains as the result of deviations from ancestral brains that arose to deal with challenges in the environment.
To study these question my group and I use two complementary approaches. First, we study how the human brain is organised and works using a range of non-invasive brain imaging techniques, such as functional magnetic resonance imaging and transcranial magnetic stimulation. Second, we use magnetic resonance imaging to compare the organisation of different brains. We scan the brains from deceased animals to study the size, location, and connections of different brain regions and compare these between species.
Recent publications
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Towards multi-modal, multi-species brain atlases: part two.
Journal article
Mars RB. and Palomero-Gallagher N., (2024), Brain Struct Funct
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Exploration in 4-year-old children is guided by learning progress and novelty.
Journal article
Poli F. et al, (2024), Child Dev
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Author Correction: Toddlers strategically adapt their information search.
Journal article
Poli F. et al, (2024), Nat Commun, 15
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Curiosity and the dynamics of optimal exploration.
Journal article
Poli F. et al, (2024), Trends Cogn Sci
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Individual differences in processing speed and curiosity explain infant habituation and dishabituation performance.
Journal article
Poli F. et al, (2023), Dev Sci