About this Research Topic
This research topic will include select submissions from the 2022 joint meeting of Neuroergonomics Conference and NYC Neuromodulation Conference, hosted at City College of New York, New York City, and is linked with the Research Topic Neurotechnology for sensing the brain out of the lab: methods and applications for mobile functional neuroimaging. The 2022 Neuroergonomics and NYC Neuromodulation Conferences are joined together to address the state-of-the-art in neurotechnology for brain-body performance and health. Conference themes are intended to encourage discussion that fuses traditional sub-domains of brain and health technologies.
This Research Topic calls for submissions that cover recent approaches and emerging new directions in neuroergonomics and attempt to chart a path toward a better understanding of the neurophysiological measures and their relationship to complex tasks. This Research Topic also calls for submission that cover recent approaches and emerging new directions in all aspects of neuromodulation, including non- invasive brain stimulation and implanted approached, that aim to enhance human performance, reduce disease burden, and/or enhance our understanding of complex brain functions. Submissions can be any article type covering advanced neuroscience methods and techniques as well as neurostimulation and neuroimaging analysis approaches to investigate brain dynamics in actively behaving participants in field settings. Application of these technologies to investigate cognition, emotion, perception, decision making, attention, working memory, cognitive workload, performance monitoring, human-machine- interaction, brain computer interface, mobile brain and body imaging, neuroadaptive technologies and related areas relevant to working environments are especially invited.
Keywords: Applied Neuroscience, Human Machine Interaction, Neuroergonomics, Functional Neuroimaging and Neurostimulation, Brain Computer Interface
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.