
Phone
Addresses
- Department of Neurosurgery - Research Laboratories (Office)
- Smith Medical Research Building S101D Mail Stop: BCM240 Houston, Texas 77030 United States
Websites
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Positions
- Assistant Professor
- Neurosurgery (Primary) & Neuroscience (Secondary)
- Baylor College of Medicine
- Houston, TX, US
Education
- Postdoctoral Training at Stanford University
- Department of Psychology
- Postdoctoral Training at Stanford University
- Department of Neurology & Neurological Sciences
- PhD from Swinburne University of Technology
- Neuroscience
- BSc from Swinburne University of Technology
- Psychophysiology
Honors & Awards
- Career Development Award
- K99/R00
- Dean's Postdoctoral Fellowship
Professional Interests
- Human Cognitive Neurophysiology & Neuromodulation
- Memory & Perception
- Neural Implant Technology
Selected Publications
- Bartoli E, Bosking W, Chen Y, Li Y, Sheth SA, Beauchamp MS, Yoshor D, Foster BL. "Functionally distinct gamma range activity revealed by stimulus tuning in human visual cortex." Curr Biol. 2019 October;29(20):3345-3358. Pubmed PMID: 31588003
- Fox KCR, Foster BL, Kucyi A, Daitch AL, Parvizi J. "Intracranial electrophysiology of the human default network." Trends Cogn Sci.. 2018 April;22(4):307-324. Pubmed PMID: 29525387
- Foster BL, Rangarajan V, Shirer WR, Parvizi J. "Intrinsic and task-dependent coupling of neuronal population activity in human parietal cortex." Neuron. 2015;22(86):578-90. Pubmed PMID: 25863718
- Foster BL, Parvizi J. "Direct cortical stimulation of human posteromedial cortex." Neurology. 2017 January Pubmed PMID: 28100728
- Foster BL, Kaveh A, Dastjerdi M, Miller KJ, Parvizi J. "Human retrosplenial cortex displays transient theta phase locking with medial temporal cortex prior to activation during autobiographical retrieval." J. Neurosci.. 2013;19(33):10439-46. Pubmed PMID: 23785155
- Foster BL, Dastjerdi M, Parvizi J. "Neural populations in human posteromedial cortex display opposing responses during memory and numerical processing." Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 2012;18(109):15514-9. Pubmed PMID: 22949666
Funding
- Pathway to Independence Award - K99/R00
- Grant funding from National Institute of Mental Health
- Spatiotemporal investigations of parietal cortex contributions to episodic memory.
- Research Project Grant - R01
- Grant funding from National Institute of Mental Health
- Sensory reinstatement in human neocortex
