History of Grupo INECO

The INECO Group is a network of medical institutions based in Argentina, exemplifying how an initiative driven by passion, vision, and dedication can have a global impact on cognitive neuroscience, brain health, and mental health from South America. INECO’s evolution into an internationally recognized neuroscience center demonstrates the power of mission and commitment. INECO has … Continued

Symposium: Data Science in Clinical Settings

On June 24th, 2021 at 5 PM (ET Time) INECO Foundation will hold its 13th Scientific Symposium: “Data Science in Clinical Settings“. Computational tools are transforming mental health research. Large clinical, epidemiological and molecular databases obtained from people affected by mental disorders are being processed by data science algorithms, and begin to provide the answers … Continued

Interview of the International Society for Frontotemporal Dementias to its president, Dr Facundo Manes, Founder of Ineco Foundation.

INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY FOR FRONTOTEMPORAL DEMENTIAS (ISFTD) The ISFTD Newsletter editors want to introduce a member of the ISFTD executive committee, what better way to start off with interviewing the President Elect of the ISFTD, Facundo Manes,  Founder of Ineco Foundation. Dr Manes grew up in a rural town of the province of Buenos Aires, at … Continued

Feeling your heart: A trans-sectional study of cardiac reinnervation and brain activity through interoception

The objective of this project is to determine the degree of cardiac re-innervation with multiple measures of heart-brain and heart-peripheral system integration over time in a transplant population ranging from year 1 to year 16 post-transplantation. Likewise, this study will address the cardiac and cerebral bases of interoception in this group of patients. The experimental … Continued

Study of contextual cues

Recent studies suggest that cognition is a contextual process that does not function universally or statically. Our laboratory studies the effects of contextual cues on brain correlates of various cognitive processes in healthy participants and in patients with schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and ADHD.

Neural bases of moral cognition

Thanks to the deep and complex community life of the human beings, some cognitive functions necessary for establishing and maintaining healthy social interactions have arisen. The ability to judge what is morally correct from what is morally incorrect is perhaps one of the most complex cognitive functions, not only because it requires relying on a … Continued