Sidebar


Login

  • Forgot Login?
  • Sign up

Resources

  • IBCSR Research Review
    • About
    • Issues
    • Online Database
  • ExploringMyReligion.org
  • ScienceOnReligion.org
  • Journal: Religion, Brain & Behavior
    • Journal Information
  • Research Project Portals
    • Simulating Religion Project
    • Modeling Religion Project
    • Neuroscience and Religious Cognition Project
    • Quantifying Religious Experience Project
    • Spirituality and Health Causation Project
    • Cognitive Style and Religious Attitudes Project
    • Spectrums Project
    • Sex Differences and Religion Project
    • Comparative Cultural Systems Project Portal
  • Professional Opportunities
IBCSR
  • Home
  • Publications
    • Journal: Religion, Brain & Behavior
    • IBCSR Research Review
  • Activities
    • Boston SSR Colloquium
    • Activities
    • Past Activities
  • Media
    • Videos
  • About Us
    • Basic Information
    • What Does "Bio-Cultural" Mean?
    • Reflection on the Institute's Vision
    • Our Mission
    • Contact Us
  • Membership

Institute Researchers

IBCSR Administrative and Editorial Staff

Current Staff

teed brian sq200

Brian Teed

IBCSR Administrator, 2015-2016

Brian has a Master’s degree from Boston University School of Theology where he focused on existential and philosophical theology. He holds a BA in sociology. Brian ensures that IBCSR and its lab both run smoothly, working closely with Wesley Wildman and Patrick McNamara. He also participates in some of the institute's research projects.

Former Staff

James Haag

James Haag

ASSISTANT EDITOR FOR RELIGION, BRAIN & BEHAVIOR, 2010-2013

James Haag brings a PhD in religion and science, as well as considerable experience, to his work as Assistant Editor on the Taylor & Francis journal Religion, Brain & Behavior. He is Adjunct Lecturer in Philosophy at Suffolk University in Boston, MA. More information about James is available on Academia.edu.

Dan Finkel

Dan Finkel

EDITORIAL ASSISTANT FOR RELIGION, BRAIN & BEHAVIOR, 2010-2012

Dan is a PhD candidate in Anthropology at the University of Connecticut. His dissertation research focuses on the role of music and synchrony in social bonding, using a combination of fieldwork, lab experiments, and quantitative cross-cultural analysis. He has background and training in the neuroscience of social cognition, human behavioral ecology, and religion, and incorporates these perspectives in his research.

Jordan Kiper

Jordan Kiper

EDITORIAL ASSISTANT FOR RELIGION, BRAIN & BEHAVIOR, 2012-2013

Jordan Kiper is a PhD candidate in Anthropology at the University of Connecticut. Besides having graduate certificates in cognitive science, human rights, and quantitative research methods, he also possesses an MA in philosophy and a BA in art history. His research centers on the evolution of religion and morality, and also the effects of various forms of propaganda on human behavior.

April Minsky

April Minsky

Research Assistant, Neuroscience and Religious Cognition Project, 2013-2015

April was the head research assistant for the Neuroscience and Religious Cognition Project, affiliated with IBCSR and the Boston VA. She works closely with Patrick McNamara and Wesley Wildman. April graduated with a B.A. in psychology from Simmons College.

Ian Cooley

Ian Cooley

EDITORIAL ASSISTANT FOR RELIGION, BRAIN & BEHAVIOR, 2013-2014
DOCTORAL FELLOW, 2012-2014

Ian Cooley is a doctoral student in the Division of Religious and Theological Studies at Boston University. His present interests are focused primarily upon the phenomenology of religious experience, particularly as it pertains to our encounter with Otherness, and how such analyses might be applied to an understanding of scientific inquiry. He is also developing an increasingly nagging interest in the role that semantically open forms of language play both in the construction of experiential depth and in establishing a conceptual space for religiously interpretable engagements with existence. He is currently working with Dr. Wesley Wildman on the Quantifying Religious Experience Project (QRXP), and he is the editorial assistant for the Institute's journal, Religion, Brain & Behavior.

Page 3 of 3
  • Start
  • Prev
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • Next
  • End

Latest

  • Privacy Statement
  • Boston Colloquium on Scientific Study of Religion
  • IBCSR Research Review Issues
  • The cognitive science of religion
  • What is modeling?

Popular

  • IBCSR and High-Level Education
  • IBCSR Directors
  • IBCSR Research Associates
  • IBCSR Post-Doctoral Fellows
  • Religion, Brain & Behavior Information

Bibliographies

The Spirituality, Medicine & Health Bibliography uses a rich categorization scheme and annotations. Free for everyone.

 
  • You are here:  
  • Home
  • Purity III - Corporate
  • About the Institute
  • Institute Researchers
feed-image RSS Feed
Bootstrap is a front-end framework of Twitter, Inc. Code licensed under MIT License. Font Awesome font licensed under SIL OFL 1.1.