CENTRE NEWS
- Ray Dolan awarded Ferrier Medal and Lecture 2019
- Steve Fleming awarded 2019 Spearman Medal
- Tobias Hauser awarded an Emerging Leaders Prize
- Steve Fleming awarded a Philip Leverhulme Prize
- 22/08/2018 - Prof Ray Dolan announced as recipient of the NSI Distinguished Investigator Award
- 20/07/2018 - Professor Eleanor Maguire elected to the British Academy
- 22/03/2018 - Robb Rutledge is a recipient of the 2018 APS Janet Taylor Spence Award
- Professor Eleanor Maguire elected Honorary Member of the Royal Irish Academy
- Professor Ray Dolan awarded the 2017 Brain Prize along with Professor Peter Dayan & Professor Wolfram Schultz
- 14/02/2017 - Professor Cathy Price featured in "Andrew Marr: My Brain and Me" programme on BBC2
- 2016 - The Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging successfully renewed its Centre status with funding from the Wellcome Trust for a further 5 years
- Wellcome Trust & WTCN YouTube videos

The Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging at UCL (incorporating the Leopold Muller Functional Imaging Laboratory and the Wellcome Department of Imaging Neuroscience) is an interdisciplinary centre for neuroimaging excellence.
Five new Principal Investigators have joined the scientific board in 2016:
Dr Steve Fleming, Dr Alex Leff, Dr Sven Bestmann, Professor Neil Burgess, Professor Peter Dayan.
We bring together clinicians and scientists who study higher cognitive function using neuroimaging techniques. Our goal is to understand how thought and behaviour arise from brain activity, and how such processes break down in neurological and psychiatric disease. Our research groups study all aspects of higher cognitive function including vision, hearing, memory, language, reasoning, emotion, decision making and social interactions.
Home to SPM, a standard tool for analysing neuroimaging data, the Centre seeks to answer fundamental questions about how the brain works in order to improve human and animal health. We host and train over 100 clinicians, scientists and support staff, and interact with over 200 collaborators both at UCL and throughout the world.
As well as conducting scientific research, we offer a wide range of educational and training opportunities to support the development of imaging neuroscience both nationally and internationally, and have an active public engagement agenda.