2014 Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) conference
As part of a short course at Harvard University, Prof. Savoy was describing the hands-on sessions to the class: “You will have an MRI and a magnetoencephalography scanner available for a few hours. What would you like to study in the brain?”. In a silent classroom, I timidly suggested “Love!”. And there we went, designing an experiment and scanning our two infatuated “guinea pigs”. Unfortunately, our results were not very conclusive: our sample size was tiny, and our time frame was short.
However, several research groups have used advanced neuroimaging modalities to study the neural correlates of romantic love (Aron et al., 2005; Song et al., 2015).
I serve as chief executive officer of Imagilys. Our neuroimaging software suite, BrainMagix, has helped thousands of patients. Over the last 15 years, I have led the company from its first sales to concluding long-term agreements with world-class players in the medical industry