![]() |
Diego
Fernandez-Duque Associate Professor Department of Psychology Villanova University |
|
About me:
I grew up in Buenos Aires, Argentina. In 1993, after getting my medical doctor degree,
I moved to University of Oregon in Eugene, where I had the good fortune of
working with Mike Posner on issues of
attention and
executive function. I also
did research on
change blindness with Ian Thornton --a buddy from graduate
school--, and on
metaphors of attention with the philosopher Mark L. Johnson. My
wonderful wife, Jodie Baird taught me about
theory of mind and metacognition.
In 2000, I moved to Toronto for my postdoc to work under the supervision of Sandy Black, a
cognitive neurologist at the Rotman Research Institute and Sunnybrook Hospital.
I did research on
attention and
executive function in Alzheimer's disease. I
also studied fronto-temporal dementia (FTD), a disease characterized by impaired
social skills and
denial of deficit. In 2004, I took a job as faculty at
Villanova University, a liberal arts college in the suburbs of Philadelphia
where I pursue research on judgment and decision making, and on
social
cognition.
Jodie and I have two wonderful kids. Santiago was born in Toronto in 2002 and Malena was born in Philadelphia in 2005.
My Publications (or search them in google scholar )
News:
Our Neurocase article on attention and simultanagnosia
Our review of Judgment & Decision Making in school-age children
My review on people's beliefs about the relationship between mind and brain.
"How much does your brain contribute to who you truly are?" find out what people think in our article
Our research showing that students are fooled by neuro-gibberish, reviewed here by MIT press Spolight . (free access to the article here)
diego.fernandezduqueATvillanovaDOTedu Office: Tolentine 220; Lab: Tolentine 253
outdated educational resources