Lauri Nummenmaa
PhD
latanu@utu.fi +358 29 450 3003 +358 50 574 7933 Assistentinkatu 7 Turku Appointments per request |
Emotions; Neuroimaging
Turku PET Centre
I did my undergraduate studies majoring in psychology at University of Turku, Finland. I defended my PhD on neurocognitive mechanisms of social attention at University of Turku in 2006. After that, I worked as a post-doc at the MRC CBU in Cambridge, UK studying neural mechanisms of face perception in Andy Calder’s group. I returned to Finland in 2008, to work as Academy of Finland junior fellow and subsequently as senior fellow at Turku Pet Center and Aalto University. After a four-year appointment as Assistant professor in cognitive neuroscience at Aalto University, I returned to the University of Turku with my laboratory. Currently I lead the Human Emotion Systems laboratory at Turku PET Centre and Department of Psychology, University of Turku.
Our group studies functional and molecular neural mechanisms of human emotions and social interaction in complex, life-like settings with magnetic resonance imaging, positron emission tomography, magneto- and electroencephalography and behavioural techniques. I have written over 100 scientific articles on brain basis of emotions and social cognition, and acquired more than 4M€ grant money for our group. Currently our research is funded by the European Research Council, the Academy of Finland, The Sigrid Juselius Stiftelse, Jane and Aatos Erkko foundation and Signe och And Gyllenberg's stiftelse
Our group focuses on training world-class PhDs, and junior & senior scientists in neuroscience and signal analysis.
- Anorexia nervosa is associated with higher brain mu-opioid receptor availability (2025)
- Molecular Psychiatry
- Bodily maps of exercise-induced feelings (2025)
- Scientific Reports
- Cerebral topographies of perceived and felt emotions (2025)
- Imaging neuroscience
- Exposure to bullying engages social distress circuits in the adolescent and adult brain (2025)
- Journal of Neuroscience
- GPT-4V shows human-like social perceptual capabilities at phenomenological and neural levels (2025)
- Imaging neuroscience
- Impact of Day Length on Brain Glucose Metabolism in Men: A Large-Scale Repeated Measures PET Study (2025)
- Journal of Biological Rhythms
- Obesity is associated with increased brain glucose uptake and activity but not neuroinflammation (TSPO availability) in monozygotic twin pairs discordant for BMI—Exercise training reverses increased brain activity (2025)
- Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism
- Pleasurable music activates cerebral µ-opioid receptors: a combined PET-fMRI study (2025)
- European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging
- Reduced relationship-specific social touching and atypical association with emotional bonding in autistic adults (2025)
- Molecular autism
- Reward responses to vicarious feeding depend on body mass index (2025)
- Cognitive, Affective, and Behavioral Neuroscience
- Sex differences in gaze patterns while viewing dynamic and static sexual scenes (2025)
- Maturitas
- Striatal cue-reactivity and neurotransmitter function in gambling disorder (2025)
- Journal of behavioral addictions
- Aberrant type 2 dopamine receptor availability in violent offenders with psychopathy (2024)
- NeuroImage
- Alterations in type 2 dopamine receptors across neuropsychiatric conditions: A large-scale PET cohort (2024)
- NeuroImage: Clinical
- A taxonomy for human social perception: Data-driven modeling with cinematic stimuli (2024)
- Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
- Bodily maps of musical sensations across cultures (2024)
- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
- Bodily Maps of Symptoms and Emotions in Parkinson's Disease (2024)
- Movement Disorders
- Embodied emotions in ancient Neo-Assyrian texts revealed by bodily mapping of emotional semantics (2024)
- iScience
- Endogenous opioid receptor system mediates costly altruism in the human brain (2024)
- Communications Biology
- Glucose metabolism and radiodensity of abdominal adipose tissue : A 5-year longitudinal study in a large PET cohort (2024)
- Clinical Endocrinology