Laboratory of Cognition
People
GUI Peng
  • Department:
  • Position:Associate Investigator
  • Research Field:States of Consciousness, Sequence Cognition
  • Phone:
  • E-mail:peng.gui@icpbr.ac.cn
Biography
Dr. Gui received his B.S. in Biology from East China Normal University in Shanghai in 2009 and his Ph.D. in Psychology from the same university in 2015. In 2016,  he joined the Lab of Cognition at the Institute of Neuroscience CAS as a postdoctoral researcher. Dr. Gui has been an Associate Investigator at the same institute since 2021.


Research Interests
Accurately assessing cognitive abilities and state of consciousness in patients with altered states of consciousness (general anesthesia, disorders of consciousness, etc.) is both a critical clinical concern and a valuable opportunity for scientific understanding of the neural mechanism of consciousness. Dr. Gui aims to uncover the relationship between sequence cognition and states of consciousness, by combining novel sequence learning paradigms with bedside electroencephalography, and subsequently to develop advanced approaches for clinical application. He is also interested in how the cognition for sequence is developed in children, particularly those with neurological disorders.


Selected Publications

Gui, P.#, Jiang, Y.#, Zang, D.#, Qi, Z., Tan, J., Tanigawa, H., Jiang, J., Wen, Y., Xu, L., Zhao, J., Mao, Y., Poo, M., Ding, N., Dehaene, S., Wu, X.* and Wang, L.*  (2020)  Assessing the depth of language processing in patients with disorders of consciousness.  Nature Neuroscience.  23: 761-770
Gui P. #*, Li J.#, Ku Y.#, Li L., Li X., Zhou X., Bodner M., Lenz FA., Dong XW., Wang L. and Zhou YD. (2018) Neural Correlates of Feedback Processing in Visuo-Tactile Crossmodal Paired-Associate Learning. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. 12:266.
Gui P.#, Ku Y.#, Li L., Li X., Bodner M., Lenz FA., Wang L.* and Zhou YD. (2017) Neural correlates of visuo-tactile crossmodal paired-associate learning and memory in humans. Neuroscience. 362:181-195.
Wang L
.#, Gui P., Li L., Ku Y., Bodner M., Fan G., Zhou YD. and Dong X.* (2016) Neural correlates of heat-evoked pain memory in humans. Journal of Neurophysiology. 115(3):1596-604.