ALL BRAINS ON DECK!

This year, the INA at PSU teamed up with NW Noggin to throw the first ever NogginFest Brain Fair; a combination of the Brain Fair that was formerly supported by both OHSU and OMSI (the Oregon Museum of Science & Industry), and NOGGINFEST, the entirely free, annual volunteer public celebration of all things art, brain and music that NW Noggin and PSU’s neuroscience students host each year.

LEARN MORE: NogginFest!

LEARN MORE: Noggin Brings Brains, Volunteers, Coffee and Pizza to Brain Fair 2024

LEARN MORE: Brain Awareness for ALL

LEARN MORE: The Brains at Brain Fair

LEARN MORE: Bringing BRAINS to Brain Fair 🙂

LEARN MORE: Putting the brains in Brain Fair!

LEARN MORE: Pipe Cleaners, Gel Prints, Electrodes & Brains!

“Persecute bookworms all you like, prohibit science, and destroy art, but sooner or later you’ll be forced to think better of it, and with much gnashing of teeth open the way for everything that is so hated by the power-hungry dullards and blockheads.” — Arkady Strugatsky

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LEARN MORE: Ambitious NIH drive to solve brain mysteries faces uncertain future

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LEARN MORE: Stand Up for Science 2025

LEARN MORE: NW Noggin @ Society for Neuroscience

So…NW Noggin and INA picked up the mantle!

LEARN MORE: Dana Foundation/IBRO Brain Awareness Grants

LEARN MORE: Noggin Benefit Night @ Fort George!!

LEARN MORE: Noggins in ASTORIA!

Bonnie Nagel (OHSU) → Adolescent development and cognition

Randall Olson (OHSU, Lewis & Clark) → Psychedelics and neuroplasticity booth

Maggie Stojak (OHSU) → From the Balance Disorders Laboratory

Tess Koerner → Dr. Koerner uses behavioral and electrophysiological methods to identify and understand neural mechanisms that contribute to auditory processing and speech understanding difficulties in patients who are aging or who have a history of traumatic brain injury (TBI).

Anneliese Bishop-Perdue → Octopus cognition, biology, brains!

LEARN MORE: Dreams of a Scientist!

Hannah Cunningham → Sleep and cognition

Emilee Brnusak → Attachment disorders

Dan Jang & Marc Chenard → Diagnoses via AI

“What can you learn by hearing the sound of someone’s voice? When it comes to your health, your voice may have a lot to say. Turns out the voice carries indicators of your health. And this goes beyond the sound of a head cold. The voice may be an indicator of illnesses like diabetes or Parkinson’s. Researchers hope in the near future, it will be possible to screen for diseases using a cell phone. They’re building a database of voices and using artificial intelligence to do this…”

LEARN MORE: AI analysis of patient’s voice could help diagnose illness, new research shows

LEARN MORE: Bridge2AI-Voice Scholars

LEARN MORE: Bridge2AI-Voice

Nicholas Margolies → STEM accessibility and graduate school

Image by KJ Kim

Avani Patel, Lauren Shin, & Olivia Sheng →

Carmen Wang →

Naman Pradhan →

This device allowed people to see inside their ear in real time! While many kids were excited about this, there were also plenty of adults who lined up and had great questions about their ears. The OHRC staff shared that it was a lot of fun to engage with people of all ages.

From Lauren Charney, Research Audiologist & Lab Manager at OHRC: “I learned that human brains are WAY tinier than I thought. Like the head is THIS BIG but the brain is only this big. Wild.“

This year is special

Image by KJ Kim

The threats that public science, art, education and inclusivity now face on a federal level have many concerned over the future of research, including brain research, and the potential that this chaotic Republican administration might wipe out an entire generation of future scientists.

Image by KJ Kim; Cape Meares

Image by KJ Kim; Cape Meares

For many people, “science” remains an abstract concept that lives out of reach in expensive textbooks, or guarded by paywalls in online journals or at high admission science museums like OMSI. Many believe that science and discovery are only pursued in university at a significant tuition cost.

While that perception is unfortunately accurate for much of academia, this year’s NFBF allowed our community to see and discover current research from many well respected local labs, all for free.

Image by KJ Kim

Second image by KJ Kim

The fuel that fed these ALL VOLUNTEER efforts was a collective passion to restore science in light of budget cuts and other deeply upsetting current events. We hope that our bigger institutions, most still flush with significant resources and influence, will speak up, lift up, recognize and support grassroots efforts like ours and begin positively contributing to action that brings all of us together.

Image by KJ Kim

Video by KJ Kim

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