Top Researchers
Top Neuroscience Researchers at University of Reading for 2026
Research at the University of Reading continues to span a wide range of questions in Neuroscience, from cognition and autism research to dementia, language, and the science of consciousness. Looking across the last year, the picture is less about a single theme than a connected set of efforts that bring together brain function, behavior, and clinical context.
Below, you’ll find a selection of researchers whose recent work reflects that mix of approaches. Their publications show how neuroscience at the University of Reading is engaging with both fundamental questions and applied problems, often through interdisciplinary methods that cross psychology, genetics, medicine, and beyond.
Featured Researchers
Walter Veit
Walter Veit’s recent work at the University of Reading connects History and Philosophy of Science, Genetics, and Cognitive Neuroscience through papers on animal consciousness, neurodiversity, and corvid cognition.
Activity over the last year: 8 indexed journal articles.
Top publications:
Bhismadev Chakrabarti
Bhismadev Chakrabarti has been focusing on Cognitive Neuroscience, Genetics, and Education, with studies examining executive functioning, emotion recognition, and auditory attention in autistic and non-autistic adults.
Activity over the last year: 8 indexed journal articles.
Top publications:
- Slow but Steady: Similarities and Differences in Executive Functioning Between Autistic and Non‐Autistic Adults (Mar 2025)
- Intact but Protracted Facial and Prosodic Emotion Recognition Among Autistic Adults (Mar 2025)
- Locus coeruleus tonic upregulation increases selectivity to inconspicuous auditory information in autistic compared to non-autistic individuals: a combined pupillometry and electroencephalography study (Aug 2025)
Arpita Bose
Arpita Bose’s recent publications span Cognitive Neuroscience, Developmental and Educational Psychology, and Psychiatry and Mental health, centered on aphasia, spoken discourse, bilingual language use, and cross-linguistic analysis.
Activity over the last year: 6 indexed journal articles.
Top publications:
- Aphasia in South Asian Languages (ASAL) project: a protocol of connected speech tasks for investigating cross-linguistic grammatical profiles in aphasia for South Asian languages (Sep 2025)
- Let's Chat About Spoken Discourse: A Tutorial to Support Use of Spoken Discourse Analysis When Providing Aphasia Clinical Services (Jun 2025)
- Cross-linguistic asymmetries in language production and code-switching patterns in bilingual aphasia (Nov 2025)
Aileen K. Ho
Aileen K. Ho’s work brings together Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience, Neurology, and Physiology through feasibility studies in cognitive impairment, Alzheimer’s disease, and Huntington’s disease care.
Activity over the last year: 5 indexed journal articles.
Top publications:
- Increased attention to the eye region when playing background music in Alzheimer's disease: a remotely-delivered webcam eye-tracking feasibility study (Apr 2025)
- Home-Based Attentional Bias Modification with Webcam-Based Eye Tracking with Persons with Cognitive Impairment: A Feasibility Study (Jun 2025)
- Economic Cost of Current and Alternative Models of Multidisciplinary Care of Juvenile‐Onset Huntington's Disease (Nov 2025)
Fang Liu
Fang Liu is publishing across Cognitive Neuroscience and Experimental and Cognitive Psychology, with recent studies on syntax processing, speech-in-noise perception in autism, and executive function in multilingual individuals.
Activity over the last year: 4 indexed journal articles.
Top publications:
- Linguistic and Musical Syntax Processing in Autistic and Non‐Autistic Individuals: An Event‐Related Potential (ERP) Study (Apr 2025)
- Auditory and Semantic Processing of Speech‐in‐Noise in Autism: A Behavioral and EEG Study (Aug 2025)
- Do trilingual individuals exhibit an advantage over bilinguals in executive function tasks? (Aug 2025)
Anne-Marie Greenaway
Anne-Marie Greenaway’s recent research combines Experimental and Cognitive Psychology, Social Psychology, and Psychiatry and Mental health, including feasibility work in dementia and studies of music listening and cognitive impairment.
Activity over the last year: 4 indexed journal articles.
Top publications:
- Increased attention to the eye region when playing background music in Alzheimer's disease: a remotely-delivered webcam eye-tracking feasibility study (Apr 2025)
- Home-Based Attentional Bias Modification with Webcam-Based Eye Tracking with Persons with Cognitive Impairment: A Feasibility Study (Jun 2025)
- Spontaneous music listening in dementia: relationships between listening device and rumination but not depression, anxiety and listening frequency (Jul 2025)
Carl Bunce
Carl Bunce’s publications link Cognitive Neuroscience, Sociology and Political Science, and Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, ranging from intergroup infrahumanization to training people to detect AI-generated faces.
Activity over the last year: 4 indexed journal articles.
Top publications:
Jiayin Li
Jiayin Li works across Cognitive Neuroscience, Artificial Intelligence, and Developmental and Educational Psychology, with recent papers on autism, speech-in-noise perception, and listening in noisy environments.
Activity over the last year: 3 indexed journal articles.
Top publications:
- Linguistic and Musical Syntax Processing in Autistic and Non‐Autistic Individuals: An Event‐Related Potential (ERP) Study (Apr 2025)
- Auditory and Semantic Processing of Speech‐in‐Noise in Autism: A Behavioral and EEG Study (Aug 2025)
- Listening in a noisy world: The impact of acoustic cues and background music on speech perception in autism (Oct 2025)
What University of Reading's Neuroscience Community Is Working On
The most common subfield across the featured researchers is Cognitive Neuroscience, suggesting a strong shared interest in how the brain supports language, attention, executive function, and social perception. Around that core, the community is actively working in Genetics, Developmental and Educational Psychology, Psychiatry and Mental health, and Experimental and Cognitive Psychology, which points to a broad but connected research profile. Together, these areas reflect a field that is not only asking how cognition works, but also how it varies across autism, aging, dementia, aphasia, and other lived contexts.- Cognitive Neuroscience - seen across 6 of the featured researchers
- Genetics - seen across 2 of the featured researchers
- Developmental and Educational Psychology - seen across 2 of the featured researchers
- Psychiatry and Mental health - seen across 2 of the featured researchers
- Experimental and Cognitive Psychology - seen across 2 of the featured researchers
Taken together, these researchers show a department working across core questions in neuroscience while keeping close ties to real-world challenges in communication, neurodevelopment, aging, and mental health. If you’re exploring related literature or preparing your own manuscript, Resub can help streamline citation discovery, formatting, and submission prep so you can spend more time on the research itself.
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