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Welcome to the Neuroarts Resource Center!

Our team will periodically post updates in this space to keep you informed on how the platform is evolving. Thank you for being part of the neuroarts community.

6-9-25: We’re excited to share that the NRC’s social feed now includes comments—making it easier than ever to engage in conversation and connect with others across the community. We’ve also made several quality-of-life improvements, including an enhanced notifications system. Now, you’ll receive an alert when your submitted organization has been verified. If you’ve previously submitted an organization, don’t forget to make it publicly visible so the community can find and connect with you!

Art, Humanities, and Neuroscience Project at Columbia University

New York City, NY, United States
Posted byAni Cook
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The Italian Academy's Art, Humanities, and Neuroscience Project is one of the oldest cross-disciplinary programs of its kind in the world. It anticipated the current boom for interdisciplinary research linking neuroscience with the humanities and the social sciences by several years, both at Columbia and elsewhere.

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Since 2001, the Academy has developed seminars and public events designed to spread word of the newest scientific advances and to bring together researchers in the sciences and the humanities. Highlights include the remarkable conference (led by the Academy's Director David Freedberg, with Arthur Danto and Nobel Laureate Eric R. Kandel) on responses to the visual arts; this Columbia Forum on Art and the New Biology of the Mind welcomed artists Marina Abramovic, Laurie Anderson, David Salle, and others, along with many distinguished scientists. Further events have brought attention to the default mode network, the cell biology of neurodegeneration, music perception and music in rehabilitation, the sense of smell, and many other topics. (The full list is below.) This semester's event on attention and attunement can be seen in connection with an earlier event on vision, attention, and emotion.

The Academy also supports researchers doing ongoing studies (see the Arts, Humanities,  and Neuroscience Fellowships page), and the Academy's Director, Prof. Freedberg, teaches a course assessing the potential of the cognitive neurosciences to illuminate critical problems in the humanities and the history of art and images ("The Work of Art in the Age of Digital Reproducibility").