NOGGINFEST 2026!!!!

We did it!

LEARN MORE: NOGGINFEST

The free OHSU/OMSI Brain Fair sadly died in 2024, and the nonprofit Allen Institute for Brain Science now offers a Seattle, Washington-based BrainFest requiring expensive admission to the Pacific Science Center (adult tickets go for $30.45, and kids (from 3 years of age!) are charged $22.70!)!

LEARN MORE: Cost of Admissions and Museum Visitation

LEARN MORE: Bigger is not better and free admission costs institutions less, museum report finds

LEARN MORE: Entrance Fees as a Subjective Barrier to Visiting Museums

Learning, community and fun!

We’re once again indebted to the fabulous Leaven Community Center in Northeast Portland, which welcomed back our enthusiastic volunteers, along with art materials, sound systems, pipe cleaner brain cells, research posters, and plenty of additional NOGGINS!

LEARN MORE: Noggin Bloggin

LEARN MORE: Where are we going next?

Are YOU excited about the brain? Are you a graduate student pursuing research? Are you an undergraduate thrilled by the billions of glia and neurons collaborating in your head? Are you a painter skilled in perception? Are you an educator, researcher, artist, student, community member and/or storyteller?

LEARN MORE: FREE Noggin STEAM (STEM + Arts) Projects

1-5pm: BOOTHS AND POSTER SESSION

So many exciting things to do at NogginFest!

“This year the Oregon Hearing Research Center (OHSU) and the National Center for Rehabilitative Auditory Research (Portland VA) had a combined table at Noggin Fest that was organized and led by Senior Research Assistant, Conner Corbett and Doctor of Audiology Extern, Katie Esser. The table had lots of information on active clinical studies that cover tinnitus, auditory processing, and traumatic brain injury. The main attraction to our table was the video otoscope. Katie was able to look into people’s ears and project what she was seeing onto an iPad that was set up in front of them. For a lot of people, this was their first time seeing an ear drum, let alone their own ear drum. We also had an iPad demo set up that had auditory processing tasks and games that are currently being used in some of our research studies. To top it all off, our very own Dr. Melissa Papesh gave a phenomenal talk that covered hearing and the brain. One common complaint that we hear from our concussion patients is that they struggle to process speech, especially when there’s a lot of background noise. Despite having normal hearing thresholds this issue seems to persist after a concussion. Dr. Papesh addressed this by showing how we can record brain activity using different well-established electroencephalography (EEG) paradigms to track brain activity in response to specific auditory stimuli. Some of the research has shown that brain activity is in fact different in those with a concussion history.” -Conner Corbett, Senior Research Assistant, Behavioral Neuroscience, OHSU

LEARN MORE: Brain Hacking is Electric!

5-7pm: RESEARCH SPEAKERS

LEARN MORE: Randall Olson

LEARN MORE: Hannah Cunningham

LEARN MORE: Dr. Melissa Papesh

LEARN MORE: Dr. Larry Sherman

7-9pm: LIVE MUSIC

A gigantic (magnocellular :)) shoutout to Kadi Rae Smith and Conner Corbett and all the fantastic volunteers from the Interdisciplinary Neuroscience Association for organizing an incredible show!

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