Advisory Board

Dr. David M. Eagleman

David M. Eagleman, Ph.D. is a neuroscientist at the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, TX, where he directs the Laboratory for Perception and Action as well as the Initiative on Neuroscience and Law. He is on the Editorial Boards of Journal of Vision and PLoS One.
 
His interests focus largely on how the brain constructs reality, and how different brains do so differently. To this end he uses computational simulations, psychophysics, and neuroimaging. He is the author of several books, including the upcoming Dethronement, an exploration of the work the brain does behind the scenes, and Wednesday is Indigo Blue, a book about synesthesia, a condition in which the senses are mixed. His work on time perception has been featured on Discovery Channel, History Channel, BBC, ABC, PBS, and most major print media.
 
David is the founder of several companies, and founded the Eagleman Prize in mathematics and physics. He has long been interested in the concept of “silicon immortality”. He is additionally the author of a book of fiction, Sum, which has been translated into 12 languages.
 
He authored Human time perception and its illusions and Neuroscience and the Law, and coauthored Brief subjective durations contract with repetition, A method for achieving an order-of-magnitude increase in the temporal resolution of a standard CRT computer monitor, Evidence against the snapshot hypothesis of illusory motion reversal, The Effect of Predictability on Subjective Duration, Vividness of mental imagery: individual variation can be measured objectively, and Motion signals bias position judgments: A unified explanation for the flash-lag, flash-drag, flash-jump and Frohlich effects.
 
David earned his B.A. at Rice University in 1993 and his Ph.D. at Baylor College of Medicine in 1998 with the thesis Computational properties of extracellular calcium dynamics.
 
Watch Synesthesia, Neuroscience Research at Salk Institute, San Diego, David Eagleman time perception neuroscience brain research free fall, Neuroscience and Law – Dr. David Eagleman, PhD, and What Do Temporal Measures Tell Us About Human Performance. Read his LinkedIn profile.