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Professor Andreas Roepstorff

Andreas Roepstorff, Ph.D. is Professor, Center of Functionally Integrative Neuroscience and Department of Social Anthropology, Aarhus University / Aarhus University Hospital, Denmark.
 
As an anthropologist in neuroscience, Andreas tries to maintain a dual perspective. He studies the workings of the brain, particularly at the levels of consciousness, cognition and communication. He is equally interested in how brain imaging, as a field of knowledge production, relates to other scientific and public fields.
 
He is project manager of Technologies of the Mind. People have a unique capability to change actions, behavior and their ways of organizing. The technologies that surround us influence our perception of the world, but at the same time our ways of organizing ourselves is part of a technology that influences the world we are living in. How are we going to understand the interaction between technology, practice, and cognition? This project is focusing on how human thought activity exploits technology and culture and how it is influenced in return. Usually the brain is seen as a biological and “natural” part of the body, that can be separated from “artificial” inventions like culture and technology. As opposed to this, this project tries to understand technology as a way of using the brain and body, incorporated into practices that people develop naturally to reach different objectives. This project includes resources from the fields of anthropology, archaeology, linguistics and cognitive sciences to investigate e.g. rituals, reading and writing, masquerades, and physical objects.
 
Andreas edited Imagining Nature: Practices of Cosmology and Identity, coedited Trusting the Subject? Volume 1 and Trusting the Subject, Volume 2, coauthored Concrete spatial language: See what I mean?, To musicians, the message is in the meter: Pre-attentive neuronal responses to incongruent rhythm are left-lateralized in musicians, Trust or Interaction?, and What’s at the top in the top-down control of action? Script-sharing and “top-top” control of action in cognitive experiments, and authored Cellular Neurosemiotics: Outline of an interpretive framework, Mapping Brain Mappers: An Ethnographic Coda, and A double dissociation in twentieth century psychology? A commentary on Bernard Baars: The Double Life of BF Skinner. Read the full list of his publications!
 
Andreas earned his B.Sc. and M.Sc. in Biology at the University of Aarhus in 1995. He earned his BA and MA in Social Anthropology at the University of Aarhus in 1996. He earned his Ph.D. in Social Anthropology at the University of Aarhus in 2002.
 
Read Two Heads Are Better Than One — With the Right Partner. Read his Academia profile and his LinkedIn profile. Follow his Twitter feed. Visit his Facebook page.