![]() | Stuart’s main interest is neuroimaging and pain and he has written extensively on these topics. He is currently funded by the Medical Research Council to investigate functional pain using neuroimaging combined with a novel analgesic technique called ‘offset analgesia’. He is an Associate Editor of the journal Pain and the journal Psychosomatic Medicine. Stuart’s work extends beyond imaging, however, to deeper questions of what it means to be human and how experience develops. Consequently he has written extensively on a wide range of topics including fetal pain, mobile phones, shopping, evolutionary psychology and the brain. His work has been quoted extensively in the international print media and he has appeared several times on radio and television. He is also regularly consulted for his expertise and has submitted evidence for the UK DOH and the Commons Science and Technology Committee and has spoken before the Virginia Senate in the US and consulted for the New York Civil Liberties Association. |
Saturday 16 May 2009, 2.15pm Churchill Room
The rise and rise of behavioural economics
Sunday 1 November 2009, 10.45am Upper Gulbenkian Gallery
Nudge Nudge, Nag Nag: the new politics of behaviour
"The Battle of Ideas is adrenaline for the mind. A chance for intellectual fisticuffs with some of the best-known and most stimulating thinkers in the world."
Colin Blakemore, professor of neuroscience, Oxford University