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Jason M. Watson, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor, Department of Psychology
Principal Investigator, Cognitive Science Lab
Assistant Investigator, The Brain Institute
University of Utah
 
Contact Information
Education
Research Interests
Publications
Curriculum Vita
Cognitive Science Lab
As a Cognitive Scientist, my research focuses on brain-behavior relations. Currently, I have active lines of research in the following areas: illusions of memory; effects of healthy aging and Alzheimer's disease on cognitive function; functional neuroimaging of reading, remembering, and cognitive control; and word recognition. Please see my expanded research interests below for additional information about ongoing experiments and methods used in my Cognitive Science Lab.
Contact Information
 
Jason M. Watson, Ph.D.
The University of Utah
Department of Psychology
380 South, 1530 East, Room 502
Salt Lake City, UT 84112
Email: jason.watson@psych.utah.edu
Phone: 801-581-5040
Fax: 801-581-5841
Office: Social and Behavioral Sciences Building, Room 1034
 
Education
 
Ph.D. Washington University (Experimental Psychology, 2001)
M.A. Washington University (Experimental Psychology, 2000)
B.A. University of Arkansas (Psychology, 1995)
 
Research Interests
 
Three of the most fundamental questions in Cognitive Science are concerned with (1) how people read words, (2) how people remember events, and (3) how people stay "on task" by minimizing the influence of potentially distracting information. Although there have been several important findings in these three areas of research, there have been very few attempts to bridge the gaps in knowledge accumulated thus far on word recognition, memory, and cognitive control. Yet there must be a fundamental (and perhaps synergistic) relationship among these three cognitive processes.

The goal of my research is to bridge the scientific work conducted thus far on reading, remembering, and cognitive control in an attempt to gain a richer understanding of brain-behavior relations. To accomplish this goal, I am pursuing several converging lines of research in my Cognitive Science Lab at The University of Utah including but not limited to: (1) behavioral studies of individual differences in cognitive control in young adults that may mediate susceptibility to associative memory illusions, (2) functional neuroimaging studies of individual and age differences in reading, remembering, and cognitive control (3) and other large scale behavioral and neuroimaging studies that systematically compare the influence of lexical variables like frequency, concreteness, and spelling-to-sound correspondence on reading and memory performance.

Given the inter-disciplinary nature of Cognitive Science, in my lab, we employ a variety of methods from Cognitive Psychology, Cognitive Neuroscience, and Neuropsychology to gain leverage in answering empirical questions about brain-behavior relations. For example, to investigate reading, remembering, and cognitive control, we (1) may measure reaction times using naming and lexical decision tasks, (2) may measure memory using free recall and episodic recognition tasks, (3) may conduct cross-population studies with healthy old adults or neuropsychological participants like Alzheimer's patients, and (4) may use functional neuroimaging techniques to determine the underlying neural correlates of a hypothesized cognitive process.

For additional information about my research interests, ongoing research projects, and preferred research techniques, please contact me via email jason.watson@psych.utah.edu, by phone (801-581-5040), or refer to my Cognitive Science Lab website. Thank you!