• A
  • A
  • A
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
Regular version of the site

HSE Development Programme until 2030

Illustration for news: First Caucasus School on Experimental Research and Cognitive Sciences Takes Places in Adygea

First Caucasus School on Experimental Research and Cognitive Sciences Takes Places in Adygea

On September 17–20, 2025, the First Caucasus School on Experimental Research and Cognitive Sciences took place at the Gornaya Legenda venue of Adyghe State University (ASU). The event was organised by the ASU Experimental Linguistics Laboratory, the HSE Centre for Language and Brain, and the HSE Centre for Sociocultural and Ethnolinguistic Studies. The school brought together over 50 participants—students, doctoral candidates, and early-career researchers from across Russia, along with lecturers and speakers from France, Serbia, China, Turkey, Kazakhstan, and Uzbekistan.

Illustration for news: Centre for Language and Brain Conducts First Neurolinguistic Field Study of Reading in Yakut

Centre for Language and Brain Conducts First Neurolinguistic Field Study of Reading in Yakut

In July, a team from the HSE Centre for Language and Brain, in collaboration with the Centre for the Study, Preservation, and Development of Native Languages of the Academy of Sciences of the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia), conducted the first-ever neurolinguistic expedition to the village of Churapcha to study reading in the Yakut language using electroencephalography (EEG). For the first time, EEG data from 43 adults and behavioural data from 40 children was collected during the two-week expedition.

Illustration for news: HSE Scientists Explain How to Identify Brain Areas Critical for Language Function During Surgery

HSE Scientists Explain How to Identify Brain Areas Critical for Language Function During Surgery

The HSE Centre for Language and Brain conducted a course on tractography, a method that enables visualisation of key brain connections and helps surgeons avoid damaging language-critical areas during surgery. The course was attended by neurosurgeons and radiologists from Moscow and other Russian regions who are interested in methods of preoperative language mapping.