Public engagement

Explore the impact of our research beyond academia across a wide range of media, including public events, interviews, podcasts and newspaper articles.

One person wearing a VR headset standing next to a mannequin as part of a body swap illusion.Image credit: Stuart Robinson 2024
  • Dr Adam Barrett: Scientific Spirituality and Psychedelics

    Adam spoke to the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ Psychedelic Research Society, presenting a scientific basis for a certain kind of spirituality. to discover more about ‘panpsychism’ i.e. consciousness being a fundamental property of all matter. Are we all in some sense part of one cosmic being?  How does ‘eternalism’ view the past, present and future to exist equally? Contact Adam if you'd like to further discuss the topic! 05/12/2024

  • Prof Anil Seth: Consciousness in humans and other things

    Don’t miss the chance to hear from Anil at this year’s  at the Oxford Playhouse.  Anil will talk about the brain as an embodied “prediction machine” and the implications of this idea for society and technology, including AI. Get your tickets now!

  • Prof Zoltan Dienes: Believed-in imaginings & Dr Jenny Bosten: Colour vision and individual experience

    Dr Jenny Boston presenting at a New Scientist event in September 2024. Behind Jenny on stage is a slide on colour matching with images illustrating her points, including a red apple in front of a TV showing said apple.

    Jenny Bosten speaking at the New Scientist Masterclass September 2024. Image: George Musser

    This one-day masterclass was a chance to dive ‘’ with Prof Dienes, Dr Bosten and other experts who shed light on the mystery of consciousness. Do humans have ‘phenomenological control’ over their experiences? What makes us disagree on the colour of the objects we encounter? Are we right to assume there is such a thing as a universal colour experience? This masterclass satisfied everyone’s curiosity about these questions and more.

  • Dr Maxine Sherman: The brain basis of time perception

    Does time really fly when you're having fun? How accurately can you estimate the passing of time without the help of your watch or clock? Over 100 attendees heard Dr Maxine Sherman explain how our brains estimate time and how this relates to sensory processing at a  event in August 2024. 

  • Dr Adam Barrett: A spirituality built on science

    Can science explain metaphysical matters as well as the physical?  Do rocks and trees have conscious experiences? What is 'panpsychism' and why do many neuroscientists reject it?  Dr Barrett gets to grips with these and many other deep questions in his Have a read and if you have further questions, why not post a comment?

  • Prof Andy Clark: What is consciousness?

    Consciousness is an elusive topic which prompts many questions.  Is it a "hard" problem? Can we explain why it is that we say and do all the things that we say and do? What influences our perception of the world around us?  What is "interoceptive" information?  with Closer To Truth host Robert Lawrence Kuhn for a deep-dive into the topic.  Questions of your own? Let us know! 

  • Prof Anil Seth: "Being You - A New Science of Consciousness"

    Prof Seth’s well-reviewed book has already been published in eight languages and has therefore reached a global and wide-ranging audience. Consequently, Anil receives many invitations to explain further the mind-bending concepts from his book that have sparked so much curiosity. What you think you know about yourself could be completely wrong! Take a look at some of Anil’s , including his .

  • Dr Maxine Sherman: The AI Revolution; what it means for work and wellbeing

    Maxine presented at in April 2024, talking about what Chat GPT can do, cannot yet do, and will never be able to do with its current design. She also talked about how and why AI can generate stereotyped content, and what all of this might mean going forward for women in the workplace.

  • Dreamachine and the Perception Census

    Scientific direction and management: Anil Seth. Development: James Alvarez, Reny Baykova, Trevor Hewitt, David Schwartzman

    is a large government-funded, collaborative research project. Its public-facing outcomes are the result of extensive work by members of our lab alongside colleagues at Glasgow University. Its three elements comprise a hugely popular live experience (London, Cardiff, Belfast, Glasgow) which took people on a journey into the power of their own minds using combinations of fast flashing light on closed eyes and panoramic sound. The second element is the - a large-scale citizen science study of ‘perceptual diversity’ which launched in July 2022. This census mapped, for the first time, the differences in how we each experience the world. The third element is the schools programme containing over 30 specially designed lesson plans for children aged 7-13, and an accompanying programme called ‘Life’s Big Questions’ designed to galvanise interest in the mind and brain in a way that matches national curricula.

  • Prof Andy Clark: Extended you

    Ever wondered where "you" ends and "not you" begins?  Or where your mind is? Professor Andy Clark's  ponders these and other questions, considering how gesture can actually enhance our thinking and recognising the role of facial feedback in comprehension.

  • Dr Maxine Sherman & Dr Warrick Roseboom: Why does time fly when you're having fun?

    How can we make our lunch break seem longer? Can busy settings influence our perception of time passing? Drs. Sherman and Roseboom's findings feature in the  - from their original .

  • Prof Anil Seth: Your brain hallucinates your conscious reality

    For anybody questioning their own existence,  from 2017 is a must-watch. The talk has amassed over 14 million views and generated much discussion. Could we be hallucinating all of the time? Can you be persuaded that 'reality' is actually when we agree about our hallucinations? 

  • From Body to Being (2017 British Science Festival)

    Our "From Body to Being" exhibit was part of the 2017 British Science Festival. The event attracted over 1200 people with 11 different installations allowing members of the public to explore how experiences of the world are shaped by the body and how bodily experience itself is actively constructed, moment-to-moment, by the brain.

  • Prof Anil Seth answers neuroscience questions for Wired

    This is a chance to watch Prof Anil Seth answer . How does our memory work? Can we implant new memories? Is face blindness a real thing? Watch this Wired video on YouTube and find the answers to these questions and more.