Faculty of Humanities
T.F. Yaczo
T.F. (Timothy) Yaczo
Capaciteitsgroep Mediastudies University of Amsterdam
Capaciteitsgroep Engelse taal en cultuur University of Amsterdam


Turfdraagsterpad 9
1012 XT Amsterdam


Spuistraat 210
1012 VT Amsterdam

Room: 5.01

http://home.medewerker.uva.nl/t.f.yaczo/
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Cultural Plasticity: Neuroarchaeologies of the Present

My project aims to intervene in the methodologies, discursive deliveries and implications of cognitive neuroscience. Considering themselves as working between branches of psychology and neuroscience, researchers of cognitive neuroscience scientifically study the biological structures underlying cognition. Propelled by developments in technology (such as Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation and Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging), studies and research resulting from employing methodologies of measurability centralize the brain as an apparatus par excellence at the intersection of physiology and psychology.


The epistemological implications of such current ‘recognitions’ of the brain are expressed culturally in varied scenes. Characterizations in narratives are susceptible to readings of neurological structures; madness or sincerity, for example, is attributed to trauma or lesions in the brain. Gender expression andconstruction becomes the scene of a synaptic crime, where platitudes like male, female or trans are explained away as a chemical and electrical reaction through the visual aid of fMRI scans. The brain, too, enters politics, not merely as a vital or biological phenomenon, but as a collection of evidence, vulnerable to management and discipline.


What concerns me most about contemporary neuroscience is the seductive apophenia at play; in a quest to capture and predict ‘the brain’, consciousness and affect are annexed—and abbreviated—into patterns of data always already observable and intelligible. Intrigued by this sensation that neuroscience (and the trope of neuroplasticity) is becoming a brute answer to questions of corporeality, cognition and behavior, I will trace how the formation of neurocognition and plasticity implicate cultural practice and expectations.


The image above is a neuron fractal created using Context Free Art


Context Free Art

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Critical Neuroscience

This reseach takes its cue from the ongoing Critical Neuroscience project, spearheaded by Suparna Choudhury and Jan Slaby.

Critical Neuroscience