Event

Feindel Brain and Mind Seminar Series: How the human brain thinks about itself: metacognition, reality monitoring and conscious experience

Wednesday, December 10, 2025 13:00to14:00
De Grandpré Communications Centre, The Neuro

The Feindel Brain and Mind Seminar Series will advance the vision of Dr. William Feindel (1918–2014), Former Director of the Neuro (1972–1984), to constantly bridge the clinical and research realms. The talks will highlight the latest advances and discoveries in neuropsychology, cognitive neuroscience, and neuroimaging.

Speakers will include scientists from across The Neuro, as well as colleagues and collaborators locally and from around the world. The series is intended to provide a virtual forum for scientists and trainees to continue to foster interdisciplinary exchanges on the mechanisms, diagnosis and treatment of brain and cognitive disorders.


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Host: Ross Otto


How the human brain thinks about itself: metacognition, reality monitoring and conscious experience

Abstract: The human brain has a remarkable ability to monitor and evaluate its own mental states, known as metacognition. Metacognition enables us to recognise gaps in our knowledge and collaborate effectively. Conversely, problems with metacognition are linked to maladaptive behaviours, such as endorsing false beliefs or being unaware of our limitations. In my talk I will review the development of experimental and modelling tools that allow us to isolate how metacognitive capacity relates to human brain function and supports a rich awareness of our skills and capabilities. I will describe the psychological structure of metacognition across different tasks, and outline evidence for a hierarchical framework in which self-performance is tracked over multiple interacting timescales, allowing people to construct and update internal models of ability in a range of domains. In the second part of the talk I will describe recent behavioural and neuroimaging experiments which ask how and whether people are able to tell the difference between reality and imagination - a core function of perceptual metacognition. I’ll end by considering the implications of a science of metacognition and reality monitoring for theories of human consciousness.

Stephen Fleming

Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London

Headshot portrait of Stephen Fleming

Stephen Fleming is Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience at UCL’s Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience and Department of Experimental Psychology, and Group Leader at the Max Planck UCL Centre for Computational Psychiatry. He holds degrees in Psychology and Physiology (University of Oxford) and a PhD in Cognitive Neuroscience (UCL), and subsequently pursued postdoctoral training at New York University.

Stephen's research on human consciousness and metacognition (https://metacoglab.org) has been recognised by awards including the British Academy Wiley Prize in Psychology (2016), the Philip Leverhulme Prize in Psychology (2018), the British Psychological Society Spearman Medal (2019), and selection as a Fellow of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR)'s Brain, Mind and Consciousness Program (2023). He has received fellowships from the Wellcome Trust and ERC, and is currently co-Director of ETHOS, an adversarial collaboration testing higher-order theories of consciousness funded by the Templeton World Charity Foundation. In 2025 Stephen was awarded the Francis Crick Medal and Lecture by the Royal Society for tackling foundational questions about the neurobiology of conscious experience, and advancing our understanding of the neural and computational basis of metacognition. His 2021 book Know Thyself: The New Science of Self-Awareness has been translated into 7 languages and was the subject of features in Science Magazine, New Scientist, the Financial Times and The New Yorker.

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The Neuro (Montreal Neurological Institute-Hospital) is a bilingual academic healthcare institution. We are a McGill research and teaching institute; delivering high-quality patient care, as part of the Neuroscience Mission of the McGill University Health Centre. We are proud to be a Killam Institution, supported by the Killam Trusts.

 

 

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