Did you
know that there is an international standard research lab in Ecuador, focused
on scientific psychology and neuroscience, e.g. neuropsychology and psychophysiology?
It’s called the Quito Brain and Behavior Lab and is based at Universidad San
Francisco de Quito. In fact, I think it is the only psychology/neuroscience
research lab in the country. There are quite a few other groups who put ‘neuro’
in their names, but they all simply using it as a marketing move, selling educational
or psychotherapeutic services etc. We are the only ones who have been doing and
publishing academic research.
The official logo of the Quito Brain and Behavior Lab. This was created by the first student to do a thesis in the lab, Marco Lopez of Escuela Superior Politécnica de Chimborazo. |
The lab is
run by me, Dr. Graham Pluck. I am British but have lived in Ecuador for several
years. As an undergraduate psychology student at the University of Birmingham
(UK) I was lucky enough to study with two great neuropsychologists- Jane
Riddoch and Glyn Humphreys. Jane and Glyn were famous for their work on vision
and action (they later moved to the University of Oxford and set up The Oxford Cognitive Neuropsychology Centre, and Glyn became the Watts Professor of Experimental
Psychology). I did my undergraduate thesis with Jane on limb praxis, the data
was eventually published in the journal Cognitive Neuropsychology (Riddoch et
al., 2004). After graduating in Psychology I went to the Institute of
Neurology, part of University College London, to do a doctorate on Parkinson’s
disease with Dr. Richard Brown, also a very successful neuropsychologist.
Perhaps not surprisingly, I’m passionate about neuropsychology research. My own
research generally involves application of neuropsychological principles to
understand real-life issues. For example, cognitive studies of homeless adults
(e.g. Pluck et al., 2011; Pluck et al., 2012; Pluck et al., 2015a) or street
children (e.g. Pluck et al., 2015b; Pluck et al., 2018). But I have also done
some more clinical-neuroscientific work, such as an fMRI study of schizophrenia
(Lee et al., 2015).
They say you can judge an academic by the size of their office, true academics don't pursue flash offices because they are about the research, not the image. I hope so, my office is tiny. |
The lab is
co-directed by Dr Ana Trueba. She has a bachelor’s degree in Neuroscience from
Trinity University and a PhD in Clinical Psychology from Southern Methodist
University, both in Texas, the USA. In addition to being a Clinical
Psychologist, and director of the University’s Master’s in Clinical Psychology
Program, Ana is active in research, particularly on psychophysiology (e.g. Trueba
et al., 2016a; Trueba et al., 2016b; Ritz et al., 2018).
Ana in her office in the lab, demonstrating her unique filing system |
We maintain
international and national research links. I am an honorary research fellow at
the University of Sheffield (UK) and Ana has ongoing research with colleagues
in the USA, particularly Dr. Thomas Ritz at the Department of Psychology,
Southern Methodist University. We also currently have national research collaborations
with the University of Guayaquil and Universidad Nacional de Chimborazo, in
Riobamba.
Apart from
Ana and me here at the lab, we always have a few international visitors doing
research here too. Recently a master’s student from the University of Amsterdam
did a 3-month research placement here, and another comes from Osnabrück
University in Germany in late August. Currently a speech therapy student from
the University of Illinois in the USA is doing a research project with us.
Some of the students working with the lab |
In addition
to actual research, we also run a series of research seminars at the
University. These are called the Brain Meetings. Roughly every two weeks during
the teaching semesters we have guest scientists present their work on
psychological and neuroscientific topics. The Brain Meetings are free to attend
and open to all. If you want to keep informed of these meetings, then ‘join’
the lab on our Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/groups/PluckLab/
Post Script, the Quito Brain and Behavior Lab has now become Pluck Lab, within the wider USFQ Institute of Neurosciences. You can find out more about the work of the lab/Institute on the blog (Spanish): https://neurocienciasusfq.blogspot.com/
Lee, K. H.,
Pluck, G., Lekka, N., Horton, A., Wilkinson, I. D., & Woodruff, P. W.
(2015). Self-harm in schizophrenia is associated with dorsolateral prefrontal
and posterior cingulate activity. Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology and
Biological Psychiatry, 61, 18-23.
Pluck, G.,
Lee, K. H., David, R., Macleod, D. C., Spence, S. A., & Parks, R. W.
(2011). Neurobehavioural and cognitive function is linked to childhood trauma
in homeless adults. British Journal of Clinical Psychology ,50(1), 33-45.
Pluck, G.,
Lee, K. H., David, R., Spence, S. A., & Parks, R. W. (2012).
Neuropsychological and cognitive performance of homeless adults. Canadian
Journal of Behavioural Science, 44(1), 9-15.
Pluck, G., Nakakarumai, M., & Sato, Y. (2015a).
Homelessness and cognitive impairment: An exploratory study in Tokyo,
Japan. East Asian Archives of Psychiatry, 25(3), 122-127.
Pluck, G.,
Banda-Cruz, D. R., Andrade-Guimaraes, M. V., Ricaurte-Diaz, S., &
Borja-Alvarez, T. (2015b). Post-traumatic stress disorder and
intellectual function of socioeconomically deprived ‘street children’ in Quito,
Ecuador. International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction, 13(2), 215-224.
Pluck, G.,
Banda-Cruz, D. R., Andrade-Guimaraes, M. V., & Trueba, A. F. (2018). Socioeconomic deprivation and the
development of neuropsychological functions: A study with “street children” in
Ecuador. Child Neuropsychology, 24, 510-523.
Riddoch, M.
J., Humphreys, G. W., Jacobson, S., Pluck, G., Bateman, A., & Edwards, M.
(2004). Impaired orientation discrimination and localization following parietal
damage: On the interplay between dorsal and ventral processes in visual
perception. Cognitive Neuropsychology ,21(6), 597-623.
Ritz, T., Trueba, A. F., Vogel, P. D., Auchus, R. J., &
Rosenfield, D. (2018). Exhaled nitric oxide and vascular endothelial growth
factor as predictors of cold symptoms after stress. Biological Psychology, 132,
116-124.
Trueba, A., Ryan, M. W., Vogel, P. D., & Ritz, T.
(2016). Effects of academic exam stress on nasal leukotriene B4 and vascular
endothelial growth factor in asthma and health. Biological Psychology, 118,
44-51.
Trueba, A.
F., Simon, E., Auchus, R. J., & Ritz, T. (2016). Cortisol response
to acute stress in asthma: Moderation by depressive mood. Physiology & Behavior, 159, 20-26.
Buen día soy Carmen Lucía, vivo en Cuenca Ecuador y quisiera ponerme en contacto con ustedes, por favor a que correo puedo escribirles y por favor si me pueden dar un numero de teléfono para ponerme en contacto con ustedes.
ReplyDeleteGracias
Carmen