A Successful Journey into Multimodal Imaging Methods Across the World
Social scientist Dr TSE Chun-yu recounts his journey and experiences in brain imaging and the pioneering advances made in this field
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Now Assistant Professor at CityU’s Department of Social and Behavioural Sciences, Dr TSE Chun-yu started his studies focusing on medicine, before eventually moving on to psychology. He already had a very specific field in mind that he wished to work in – cognitive neuroscience: the study of the brain and human mind through brain imaging and brain stimulation.
His journey into brain science took him from Hong Kong to the United States, to Singapore and then back to Hong Kong.
Tse studies the cognitive and neural architecture of the automatic/pre-attentive change detection system in humans for the normal, ageing and clinical populations. He explains his research interests as examining “the memory and attention processes involved in detecting changes in the environment and neural substrates underlying those processes”. His work has delved into the application of multimodal brain imaging and stimulation methods that include electroencephalography (EEG), event-related optical signals (EROS), fast optical signals (FOS), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS).
He earned his PhD in psychology from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 2010 after obtaining his undergraduate and master degrees in Hong Kong.
Of Man and Brain-imaging Machine