- Affective Computing
- Fluid Interfaces
Robert Stickgold is a professor of psychiatry at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and
Harvard Medical School. He received his BA from Harvard University and his PhD from the
University of Wisconsin, Madison, both in biochemistry. He had post-doctoral fellowships at
Stanford Medical School in neurochemistry (with Eric Shooter) and at Harvard Medical School
in neurophysiology (with Stephen Kuffler).
He has published two science fiction novels, and over 100 scientific publications, including papers in Science, Nature, and Nature Neuroscience. His work has been written up in Time, Newsweek, The New York Times, The Boston Globe Magazine, and Seed Magazine, and he has given invited talks around the world, including Brazil, Sweden, Switzerland, Japan, and The Netherlands. He has been a guest on The Newshour with Jim Leher and NPR’s Science Friday with Ira Flato several times, extolling the importance of sleep. He has spoken at the Boston Museum of Science, the American Museum of Natural History in New York, and NEMO, the Amsterdam museum of science.
His current work looks at the nature and function of sleep and dreams from a cognitive neuroscience perspective, with an emphasis on the role of sleep and dreams in memory consolidation and integration. He has been a pioneer in establishing the importance of sleep in offline memory processing, and has identified a range of memory types enhanced by sleep. In addition to studying the normal functioning of sleep, he is currently investigating alterations in sleep-dependent memory consolidation in patients with schizophrenia, autism spectrum disorder, and PTSD. His work is currently funded by NIMH.
He is coauthor, with Antonio Zadra, of the new book When Brains Dream.