Indre Viskontas | |
---|---|
Alma mater | University of California, Los Angeles, PhD (2006); San Francisco Conservatory of Music, MM (2008) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Neuroscience, opera |
Institutions | San Francisco Conservatory of Music, University of California, San Francisco, University of San Francisco |
Website | http://www.indreviskontas.com/ |
Indre Viskontas is a Lithuanian-Canadian neuroscientist and operatic soprano. She holds a Ph.D. in cognitive neuroscience from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). While at UCLA she was a member of the Bjork Learning and Forgetting Lab and Cogfog. [1] and a M.M. in opera. She is a Professor of Psychology at the University of San Francisco [2] and serves on the faculty at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music. She is also the Creative Director of Pasadena Opera. [3]
Viskontas's parents emigrated from Lithuania to Canada just after World War II, and Viskontas grew up in Toronto. [4] [5]
Viskontas's research has explored the neurological basis of memory, reasoning and self-identity, while also studying creativity in people with neurodegeneration. Techniques used in her research include single-unit recording in patients with epilepsy, high-resolution functional magnetic resonance imaging, eye-movement tracking, voxel-based morphometry, and various behavioral tasks in healthy adults, patients with epilepsy, and patients with neurodegenerative diseases such as frontotemporal dementia, semantic dementia and Alzheimer's disease. She has published over 50 research articles and book chapters. [6] Her research projects also include teaching people with cochlear implants how to sing. [7]
Viskontas is affiliated with the Memory and Aging Program at the University of California at San Francisco [8] and is an editor of the journal Neurocase . [6] [9]
Born to a choral conductor, Viskontas sang in choirs since she was 5 years old. [5] She has studied opera since she was a young child and performed for the Canadian Opera Company when she was only 11 years old. [10] [11] She continued to study music throughout her life even while working towards her Ph.D. in neuroscience. [12] Upon receiving her Ph.D. from University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), [7] she began working on her Master of Music degree at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music. She earned that degree in 2008, once again graduating as her class valedictorian. [10] [13]
Viskontas has performed as a soprano for numerous roles, including Beth in Mark Adamo's Little Women , Kate in John Estacio's Frobisher, Heart's Desire in Arthur Sullivan's The Rose of Persia and Aurelia in Purcell's Dioclesian . [14] She is a soloist with San Francisco chamber groups and is the co-founder and director of Vocallective, an organization of musicians that promotes the art of vocal chamber music. [15] Indre Viskontas is also a co-founder of Opera on Tap, "a non-profit organization whose mission is to make opera as ubiquitous and accessible as pop music". [16] [17]
She is also the Creative Director of Pasadena Opera. [18] At Pasadena Opera, she has directed an opera, based on an Oliver Sacks case study, called The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat . [3]
Viskontas uses her performance skills to communicate science through online lectures and as host of two podcasts and a television series. [7] She co-hosted a television show called Miracle Detectives with Randall Sullivan. Six episodes aired on the Oprah Winfrey Network beginning in January 2011. [19] The show's topics included claims of supernatural healing and other reported miracles. [19] According to Viskontas, her role on Miracle Detectives was to "get people to think more deeply about what they believe without threat or disrespect." [20]
In 2012 Viskontas joined Chris Mooney as co-host of Point of Inquiry , "The Radio Show and Podcast of the Center for Inquiry". [21] [22] In June 2013 Viskontas, Mooney, and show producer Adam Isaak resigned from the Center for Inquiry [23] and started their own new podcast, Inquiring Minds. The first episode of the new podcast was released in September 2013. [24]
Viskontas has appeared on television shows including The Oprah Winfrey Show , Entertainment Tonight , CNN , Access Hollywood , E! , and TV Guide . She has contributed to podcasts including Token Skeptic, [25] This Week in Science , [26] and Strange Frequencies Radio. [15] [27]
Viskontas participated in a panel discussion on skepticism and the media at the 2011 Committee for Skeptical Inquiry convention CSICon in New Orleans. [28] She participated again at CSICon 2012 in Nashville on a panel discussion on memory and belief. [29]
She has also appeared in the NPR program City Arts & Lectures and The Sunday Edition on the CBC in Canada. In 2017, she co-hosted the web series Science in Progress for Tested.com and VRV.
In 2019, Viskontas authored the book How Music Can Make You Better – ISBN 1452171920 , in which she talks about how music affects our brains, bodies and society at large. [30] She mentions the different purposes of music including multi-sensory, visual, auditory and healing benefits. [18] [3]
James Randi was a Canadian-American stage magician, author, and scientific skeptic who extensively challenged paranormal and pseudoscientific claims. He was the co-founder of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSI), and founder of the James Randi Educational Foundation (JREF). Randi began his career as a magician under the stage name The Amazing Randi and later chose to devote most of his time to investigating paranormal, occult, and supernatural claims. Randi retired from practicing magic at age 60, and from his foundation at 87.
The Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSI), formerly known as the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP), is a program within the U.S. non-profit organization Center for Inquiry (CFI), which seeks to "promote scientific inquiry, critical investigation, and the use of reason in examining controversial and extraordinary claims." Paul Kurtz proposed the establishment of CSICOP in 1976 as an independent non-profit organization, to counter what he regarded as an uncritical acceptance of, and support for, paranormal claims by both the media and society in general. Its philosophical position is one of scientific skepticism. CSI's fellows have included notable scientists, Nobel laureates, philosophers, psychologists, educators, and authors. It is headquartered in Amherst, New York.
Skeptical Inquirer is a bimonthly American general-audience magazine published by the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSI) with the subtitle: The Magazine for Science and Reason.
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João Teixeira de Faria, known also as João de Deus, is a Brazilian convicted rapist, self-proclaimed medium, and self-proclaimed psychic surgeon. He was based in Abadiânia, Brazil, where he ran a spiritual healing center called the Casa de Dom Inácio de Loyola. He received media coverage on CNN, ABC News, and personally from The Oprah Winfrey Show. However, James Randi and Joe Nickell exposed his healing procedures as nothing more than carnival tricks, and there is no evidence that the benefits reported by patients are anything more than placebo effects.
Christopher Cole Mooney is an American journalist and author of four books including The Republican War on Science (2005). Mooney's writing focuses on subjects such as climate change denialism and creationism in public schools, and he has been described as "one of the few journalists in the country who specialize in the now dangerous intersection of science and politics." In 2020 he was awarded a Pulitzer Prize for a series of articles on global warming published in The Washington Post.
The Amazing Meeting (TAM), stylized as The Amaz!ng Meeting, was an annual conference that focused on science, skepticism, and critical thinking; it was held for twelve years. The conference started in 2003 and was sponsored by the James Randi Educational Foundation (JREF). Perennial speakers included Penn & Teller, Phil Plait, Michael Shermer and James "The Amazing" Randi. Speakers at the four-day conference were selected from a variety of disciplines including scientific educators, magicians, and community activists. Outside the plenary sessions the conference included workshops, additional panel discussions, music and magic performances and live taping of podcasts including The Skeptics' Guide to the Universe. The final Amazing Meeting was held in July 2015.
The Skeptics' Guide to the Universe (SGU) is an American weekly skeptical podcast hosted by Steven Novella, MD, along with a panel of contributors. The official podcast of the New England Skeptical Society, it was named to evoke The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. The show features discussions of recent scientific developments in layman's terms, and interviews authors, people in the area of science, and other famous skeptics. The SGU podcast includes discussions of myths, conspiracy theories, pseudoscience, the paranormal, and other forms of superstition, from the point of view of scientific skepticism.
Karen Stollznow is an Australian-American author, linguist, public speaker, and podcaster. Her books include Missed Conceptions: How We Make Sense of Infertility, On the Offensive: Prejudice in Language Past and Present, The Language of Discrimination, God Bless America: Strange and Unusual Religious Beliefs and Practices in the United States, Haunting America, Language Myths, Mysteries and Magic, Hits and Mrs, and Would You Believe It?: Mysterious Tales From People You'd Least Expect. Stollznow also writes short fiction, including the title Fisher's Ghost and Other Stories, and she is a host on the podcast Monster Talk with Blake Smith. She has written for many popular publications, including The Conversation and Psychology Today. Stollznow has also appeared as an expert on many TV shows, including A Current Affair and the History Channel's History's Greatest Mysteries.
James "Jim" Underdown has been the executive director of The Center for Inquiry (CFI) West in Los Angeles since 1999. The Center for Inquiry is a non-profit educational organization with headquarters in Amherst, New York, whose primary mission is to foster a secular society based on science, reason, freedom of inquiry, and humanist values. CFI West is the largest facility in the organization outside Amherst.
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Deborah Hyde is a British sceptic, folklorist, cultural anthropologist, Ufologist, fellow of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry, and editor-in-chief of The Skeptic. She writes and lectures extensively about superstition, cryptozoology, religion and belief in the paranormal, with special regard to the folklore, psychology and sociology behind these phenomena, and has been introduced as a "vampire expert". Hyde has also worked in the motion picture industry.
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