EEG Research Day 2025
The newly appointed members of the CIBM Scientific Steering Committee leading the EEG Module, Prof. Serge Vulliémoz and Dr. Marzia De Lucia are kickstarting an annual event with goal to bring together the EEG community across the CIBM founding partner institutions CHUV, UNIL, EPFL, UNIGE and HUG. The aim is to provide new opportunities for collaborations and improve the visibility of the EEG research in the Lemanic region.
Date
7th of May 2025
Location
Marcel-Jenny Auditorium, Geneva University Hospitals (HUG).
PROGRAMME
8h45 Coffee/registration
9h15 Welcome
9h20 Future directions and needs for EEG research
- Pierre Megevand, UNIGE
9h50 Session 1
- Title TBC
Manuela Filippa, UNIGE - Cardiac signals shape auditory stimulus processing in conscious and unconscious states
Andria Pelentritou, CHUV - The Human Intracerebral EEG Platform
Philippe Ryvlin, CHUV
10h50 Coffee Break
11h20 Session 2
- Exploration of the role of sleep on cognition across development
Virginie Sterpenich, UNIGE - Signals, Graphs and Brains: Probing Structure-Function Relationships
Dimitri Van de Ville, EPFL - Neuropsychological markers of Peripersonal Space representations , scientific and translational applications.
Andrea Serino, UNIL - Alpha rhythms: transient dynamics and stable traits of visual processing
David Pascucci, UNIL
12h40 Lunch + Posters
14h00 Session 3
NIBS and EEG: applications in brain lesioned patients
Friedhelm Christoph Hummel, EPFLFrontal Novelty P3 as a marker of distractibility
Daphne Bavelier, UNIGEHallucinations & cognitive decline in Parkinson’s disease
Fosco Bernasconi, EPFLFrom lab to clinics: How EEG links rodent discoveries to human sleep
Georgios Foustoukos and Aurélie Stephan, UNIL
15h20 Coffee Break
15h40 Session 4
- The Dry Truth: When Electrodes Get Thirsty (and Signal Quality Suffers)
Tomas Ros, UNIGE - Validation of EEG source reconstruction with simultaneous intracranial EEG
Nicholas Roehri, UNIGE - Network imaging with EEG in clinical studies: opportunities and pitfalls
Adrian Guggisberg, UNIGE - Simultaneous EEG-fMRI: Progress, Challenges, and Future Perspectives
Frederic Grouiller, UNIGE