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University of East Anglia | Norwich
Faculty

Dr. Jordan Tsigarides

Working in:

  • Bioelectronics and sensor systems
  • Digital Health
  • Neurofeedback
  • Virtual reality
  • Data science and biomarkers

My work focusses on the development and use of virtual reality interventions for the management of chronic pain. This includes research into brain-computer interfaces, personalised approaches using sensor-based technologies (eye tracking, EEG, ECG etc), and machine learning.

Centre for Pain Research, Leeds Beckett University | Leeds
Faculty

Prof. Mark Johnson

Working in:

  • Prosthetics and robotics
  • Non-invasive brain stimulation
  • Peripheral stimulation
  • Virtual reality
  • Other

I have conducted research on pain and its management for over 30 years. Areas of interest include response to electrophysical agents, individuality and pain, perceptual embodiment, epidemiology, pain education, pain and art, community-support-programmes for pain, and painogencity (health promotion). Methodologies include evidence syntheses (e.g., Cochrane reviews, meta-ethnography), human response to stimuli (quantitative sensory testing) and clinical trials. I have a long-standing interest in transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) and deliver a distance learning MSc module on Foundation Neuromodulation (implantable devices).

Anglia Ruskin University | Cambridge
Faculty

Dr. Jane Aspell

Working in:

  • Non-invasive brain stimulation
  • Virtual reality

My lab seeks to investigate the multisensory bodily basis for self-consciousness. We do this by creating ‘out of body’ illusions using virtual reality setups, and by measuring the integration of multisensory exteroceptive and interoceptive bodily signals in neurotypical participants, participants with autism, and participants living with chronic pain and depersonalisation.