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32nd International Conference on Neurology and Cognitive Neuroscience, will be organized around the theme “Interdisciplinary Approach for Innovation & Invention in Neuro Science Research”

Cognitive Neuroscience 2022 is comprised of 20 tracks and 5 sessions designed to offer comprehensive sessions that address current issues in Cognitive Neuroscience 2022.

Submit your abstract to any of the mentioned tracks. All related abstracts are accepted.

Register now for the conference by choosing an appropriate package suitable to you.


To understand the relationship between conscious mental states and brain activity, we must make progress in three distinct areas. To be conscious is to be awake (rather than in a dreamless sleep, or unconscious) and so we must understand the neural mechanisms associated with changes in level of consciousness. But when we are awake, our conscious states are individuated by their content, which has a particular subjective feel. We therefore need to understand the neural underpinnings of conscious content, and how such representations in the brain are distinguished from merely unconscious processing. And finally humans (and possibly some other animals) are self-aware and able to make introspective judgments about their perception and action. Understanding the neural correlates of such metacognitive ability is also required.


  • Track 1-1Conscious mental states
  • Track 1-2Brain Activity
  • Track 1-3Level of consciousness


Migraine is a neurological condition that can cause multiple symptoms. It's frequently characterized by intense, debilitating headaches. Symptoms may include nausea, vomiting, difficulty speaking, numbness or tingling, and sensitivity to light and sound. Migraines often run in families and affect all ages.


  • Track 2-1Migraine with Aura (Complicated Migraine)
  • Track 2-2Retinal Migraine
  • Track 2-3Ice Pick Headaches
  • Track 2-4Cluster Headaches
  • Track 2-5Cervicogenic headache


Neurocognitive disorders are characterized by decline from an attained level of cognitive functioning mainly when physical changes occurs in brain, such as after neurological and mental illness, drug use, or brain injury. The two major degenerative causes of dementia are Alzheimer's disease and vascular dementia.  Dementia is usually caused by degeneration in the cerebral cortex, the part of the brain responsible for thoughts, memories, actions, and personality. Death of brain cells in this region leads to the cognitive impairments that characterise dementia. Vascular dementia is the broad term for dementia associated with problems of circulation of blood to the brain.


  • Track 3-1Attention deficit hyperactive disorder
  • Track 3-2Hallucinogen persisting perception disorder
  • Track 3-3Mild cognitive impairment
  • Track 3-4Hemiplegic Migraine


Neuroscience is a multidisciplinary science that is concerned with the study of the structure and function of the nervous system. It encompasses the evolution, development, cellular and molecular biology, physiology, anatomy and pharmacology of the nervous system, as well as computational, behavioural and cognitive neuroscience.

 


  • Track 4-1Neurons
  • Track 4-2Branches of Neuroscience
  • Track 4-3Modern Neuroscience
  • Track 4-4Clinical Neuroscience


Robotic or Robot-Assisted Surgery integrates advanced computer technology with the experience of the skilled surgeons. This technology provides the surgeon with a 10x magnified, high-definition, 3D-image of the body's intricate anatomy. The surgeon uses controls in the console to manipulate special surgical instruments that are smaller, as well as more flexible and manoeuvrable than the human hand. The robot replicates the surgeon's hand movements, while minimizing hand tremors. The surgeon thus can operate with enhanced precision, dexterity and control even during the most complex procedures. Robotic surgery is the recent new advanced technique in the field of Neurosurgery.


  • Track 5-1The telesurgical robot (master–slave
  • Track 5-2Handheld shared/ controlled systems
  • Track 5-3Intraoperative MRI for Brain Tumors


Mental health deals with absence of mental illness or psychological wellbeing. If someone in psychological state it shows functioning at a behavioral adjustment and satisfactory level of emotional. From the positive psychology, mental health may include an individual's ability for life, and create the balance between psychological resilience and life activities.


  • Track 6-1Classes of mental illness/types of disorder
  • Track 6-2Risk factors
  • Track 6-3Prevention of mental illness
  • Track 6-4Diagonsis & Treatment for mental disorder
  • Track 6-5Positive psychology
  • Track 6-6Depression & anxiety
  • Track 6-7The supervisory surgeon-controlled robot


There are 2 main techniques in cognitive rehabilitation remediation and compensatory approaches. CR is designed to stimulate new learning, or relearning, of cognitive tasks, and thus, to improve domains of deficit. Compensatory approaches seek to make improvements in the patient’s functioning by avoiding areas of impairment and recruiting other intact cognitive domains or by creating a supportive external environment.


  • Track 7-1Neurorehabilitation
  • Track 7-2Neurotrauma
  • Track 7-3Electroconvulsive Therapy
  • Track 7-4Rehabilitation after brain injury
  • Track 7-5Behavioral and Cognitive effects


Neurosurgery is a specialized area of neurology, which is the diagnosis and treatment of diseases and injuries affecting the brain, spinal cord an nervous system. Many earn high incomes for their expertise, but such benefits are accompanied by a number of day-to-day challenges. The daily life of Neurosurgeons is extremly complex and demanding, with rapidly changing tasks and responsibilities, assesing and diagnosing the patients. Without these eminent people the field of Neurology and the treatment for the disorders wouldn't be as bright as now.


  • Track 8-1To maintain a modern, efficient, and responsive educational program for neurosurgery
  • Track 8-2Responding to the changing demands of society
  • Track 8-3Influencing increased Reimbursement
  • Track 8-4Creating meaningful medical liability reform


Neurosurgery, or neurological surgery, is the medical specialty concerned with the prevention, diagnosis, surgical treatment, and rehabilitation of disorders which affect any portion of the nervous system including the brain, spinal cord, peripheral nerves, and extra-cranial cerebrovascular syst.


  • Track 9-1Vascular & endovascular neurosurgery
  • Track 9-2Pediatric neurosurgery
  • Track 9-3Neurosurgical oncology
  • Track 9-4Epilepsy Surgery
  • Track 9-5Advances in Neurosurgery
  • Track 9-6Maintaining the boundaries of neurosurgical practice


Neuro-oncology is the study of brain and spinal cord neoplasms, many of which are (at least eventually) very dangerous and life-threatening (astrocytoma, glioma, glioblastoma multiforme, ependymoma, pontine glioma, and brain stem tumors are among the many examples of these.


  • Track 10-1Chemotherapy for Neuro-oncology
  • Track 10-2Tumor Factors
  • Track 10-3Primary Tumor
  • Track 10-4Metastatic Tumor
  • Track 10-5Radiotherapy


Cognitive neuroscience is the scientific field that is concerned with the study of the biological processes and aspects that underlie cognition, with a specific focus on the neural connections in the brain which are involved in mental processes.  It addresses the questions of how cognitive activities are affected or controlled by neural circuits in the brain. Cognitive neuroscience is a branch of both neuroscience and psychology, overlapping with disciplines such as physiological psychology, cognitive psychology, and neuropsychology. Cognitive neuroscience relies upon theories in cognitive science coupled with evidence from Neuropsychology, and Computational modelling.


  • Track 11-1Causes of Dementia
  • Track 11-2Cognitive Psychology
  • Track 11-3Neuropsychology
  • Track 11-4Experimental Psychology
  • Track 11-5Physiological psychology
  • Track 11-6Cognitive genomics
  • Track 11-7Complications of mental illness
  • Track 11-8Translational Research


When nerve cells in the brain are damaged, they can no longer send information to each other in the normal way. This causes changes in the person's behaviour and abilities. Individuals with a moderate-to-severe brain injury often have problems in basic cognitive (thinking) skills such as paying attention, concentrating, and remembering new information and events. They may think slowly, speak slowly and solve problems slowly and confused easily when normal routines are changed or when things become too noisy or hectic around them. They may have speech and language problems, such as trouble finding the right word or understanding others. After brain injury, a person may have trouble with all the complex cognitive activities necessary to be independent and competent in our complex world. The brain processes large amounts of complex information all the time that allows us to function independently in our daily lives. This activity is called executive function because it means being the executive or being in charge of one's own life.


  • Track 12-1How Cognition Behavioural Works
  • Track 12-2Uses For Cognition Behavioural Therapy(CBT)
  • Track 12-3Pros of CBT
  • Track 12-4Cons of CBT


The classic Neuro pathological signs of Cognitive disorders are amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles. Plaques consist largely of the protein fragment beta-amyloid. This fragment is produced from a "parent" molecule called amyloid precursor protein. Tangles consist of tau, a protein normally involved in maintaining the internal structure of the nerve cell. While tau is normally modified by phosphorylation, or the attachment of phosphate molecules, excessive phosphorylation appears to contribute to tangle formation and prevents the protein from carrying out its normal functions. Oxidative stress, or damage to cellular structures by toxic oxygen molecules called free radicals, is also regarded as a pathology characteristic of Alzheimer’s. Individuals with Alzheimer’s typically experience brain inflammation. Many of the oldest patients with Alzheimer’s show signs of cerebrovascular disease in addition to "classic" Alzheimer's neuropathology.


  • Track 13-1Most common Neurocognitive Disorders
  • Track 13-2Therapies for Neurological Disorders
  • Track 13-3Stroke Neurological Disorders
  • Track 13-4Brain Disorders & Therapeutics


It is an older term for the treatment of disorders that affect the nervous system which psychological, psychiatric, and nervous disorders. Neurotherapeutics is a quarterly peer-reviewed medical journal covering research on experimental treatments of neurological disorders. There is a profound increase in the diagnostics procedure and drug discovery in the field of Neurology. It includes Stem cells and treatment, Nerve injury and repair Clinical Case report, Neurogenesis, cell and gene based approach and Neurotransmitter release and cell repair.


  • Track 14-1Spine CNS Biomarkers
  • Track 14-2Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
  • Track 14-3Computed Tomography (CT)
  • Track 14-4Neuroplasticity


A drug used to treat Neuropsychiatric, Neuropsychological, or Nervous-system disorders. Neuro-pharmaceutics focuses on identification of therapeutic targets, and then translating those discoveries into drug and therapy development. Research in Neuropharmaceutics includes: drug discovery for limiting high frequency activity in Epilepsy; drug transport proteins that control drug distribution to target tissues; spinal delivery of analgesics to chronic pain treatment; drugs for the treatment of depression, bipolar disorder, and schizophrenia; intranasal delivery methods for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease; development of strategies to evaluate therapeutics on preclinical models of Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease; anti-atherogenic and anti-diabetic therapies for the prevention and treatment of AD and other age-related dementias; and development of analgesic agents for chronic pain


  • Track 15-1Drug discovery
  • Track 15-2Neuropharmacological mechanisms
  • Track 15-3Neuroprotective measures
  • Track 15-4Neuroendocrine Regulation
  • Track 15-5Neurophysiological regulations mechanisms
  • Track 15-6Discography


Neurological Nursing is a very challenging nursing specialty dealing with assessment, nursing diagnosis, and management of many neurological disorders for which nurses provide patient care. They are expected to work at health care clinics, hospitals and Intensive rehabilitation and brain injury units assisting complex Neuro surgeries, or with procedures in Neurointerventional Radiology and even in Clinic research areas. This includes trauma, brain injuries, stroke, seizures, tumours, headaches, infections, and aneurysms, as well as a host of other neurological complexities.


  • Track 16-1Neurosurgery
  • Track 16-2Neurotrauma
  • Track 16-3Neuroscience critical/intensive care
  • Track 16-4long-term neurological conditions


Neuropsychiatry is a branch of medicine that deals with mental disorders attributable to diseases of the nervous system. It preceded the current disciplines of psychiatry and neurology.  However, psychiatry and neurology subsequently split apart and are typically practiced separately. Nevertheless, Neuropsychiatry has become a growing subspecialty of psychiatry and it is also closely related to the fields of neuropsychology and Behavioral Neurology, addresses clinical problems of cognition and/or behaviour caused by brain injury or brain disease. The division’s neuropsychiatry works collaboratively with the department’s neurologists to treat and manage the emotional and cognitive symptoms of neurological diseases. Such symptoms can include depression, anxiety, psychosis, hallucinations, and/or cognitive loss. Treatment can include psychotherapy and/or medication.


  • Track 17-1Neuropsychiatric disorders
  • Track 17-2Types of neuropsychiatric disorder
  • Track 17-3Neuropsychiatric symptoms
  • Track 17-4Treatment for Neuropsychiatric disorder
  • Track 17-5Mood awareness and attention
  • Track 17-6Neuropsychopharmacology


A Neurodegenerative disease includes Alzheimer's, Huntington's, Parkinson's, and the prion maladies, are genetically and pathologically linked to aberrant protein aggregation. AD, the most common type of dementia, is typically sporadic; however, rare mutations in several genes confer early onset. Release of the aggregation-prone peptides Aβ1–40 and Aβ1–42 by endoproteolysis of the amyloid precursor protein (APP) is associated with AD through an unknown mechanism that appears to be associated with Aβ aggregation. Typically, individuals who carry AD-linked mutations present with clinical symptoms during their fifth or sixth decade, while sporadic cases appear after the seventh decade. Although aggregation-mediated neurodegeneration emerges late in life, it is unclear whether this late onset is mechanistically linked to the aging process. Amyotrophiclateralsclerosis (ALS) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder of the motor neurons in the spinal cord, brainstem, and motor cortex.


  • Track 18-1Common Neurodegenerative Disorders
  • Track 18-2Mechanisms of neurodegenerative diseases
  • Track 18-3Neurodegenerative disease
  • Track 18-4Advances in Neurodegenerative
  • Track 18-5Novel Insights for Parkinson disease
  • Track 18-6Schizophrenia & Mental Health
  • Track 18-7Dementia and Apathy


Vascular dementia is the broad term for dementia associated with problems of circulation of blood to the brain. Vascular brain injury (VBI) is widely recognized as a common cause of cognitive impairment (vascular cognitive impairment) culminating in vascular dementia. Most vascular dementia cases are sporadic and share risk factors with peripheral vascular disease. Vascular dementia is not a single disease; it is a group of syndromes relating to different vascular mechanisms.


  • Track 19-1Cerebrovascular disease
  • Track 19-2Erythrocyte sedimentation rate
  • Track 19-3Hypercholesterolemia
  • Track 19-4Cognitive impairment


Dementia is usually caused by degeneration in the cerebral cortex, the part of the brain responsible for thoughts, memories, actions, and personality. Death of brain cells in this region leads to the cognitive impairments that characterise dementia. Causes of dementia include head injury, brain tumours, infections, hormone disorders, metabolic disorders, hypoxia, nutritional deficiencies, drug abuse, or chronic alcoholism. Unfortunately, most disorders associated with dementia are progressivedegenerative and irreversible. The two major degenerative causes of dementia are Alzheimer's disease and vascular dementia Multiple neuropathologic processes may underlie dementia, including both neurodegenerative diseases and vascular disease. Dementia is most common in elderly individuals, with advancing age being the strongest risk factor.


  • Track 20-1Symptoms of Dementia
  • Track 20-2Mixed dementia
  • Track 20-3Stroke & Dementia
  • Track 20-4Causes of Dementia
  • Track 20-5Treatments for Dementia