Associate, Marketing and Community Development at BrightTALK
Location:
San Francisco Bay Area
Industry:
Internet
Work:
BrightTALK - San Francisco since Oct 2012
Associate, Marketing and Community Development
Ian Lyons - Perugia, Italy Nov 2010 - Oct 2012
Consultant
The Umbra Institute - Perugia Area, Italy May 2010 - Aug 2012
IT Specialist/Registrar/Office Manager
Wheaton College Library Information Services Jan 2007 - Jun 2010
Public Services Assistant and Peer Trainer
Vermont Energy Investment Corporation Jun 2009 - Aug 2009
Internet Marketing Intern
Education:
Wheaton College (MA) 2006 - 2010
Bachelor of Arts (B.A.), International Relations & Italian Studies
Università per Stranieri di Perugia 2009 - 2009
C2, Cultura Italiana
Università degli Studi di Firenze 2008 - 2009
Middlebury College 2008 - 2008
CVU
Skills:
HTML CSS PHP JavaScript InDesign Photoshop Social Media Marketing Adobe Premiere Pro Network Administration Website Administration Wordpress Development WordPress Google Analytics SEO
Beilock and doctoral student Ian Lyons asked 14 adults with math anxiety to verify the results of an equation such as (a*b) c = d or work on word puzzles -- where subjects discerned whether a string of letters makes an English word if the spelling is reversed --while in a fMRI. Beilock and Lyons f
Date: Nov 05, 2012
Category: Health
Source: Google
Math problems can trigger physical pain, study says
Researchers examined the brain activity of 28 subjects as they were told they were about do math and while they were completing math problems, said Dr. Ian Lyons, a post-doctoral fellow from the Department of Psychology at Western University in London, Ont.
Date: Nov 05, 2012
Category: Health
Source: Google
When people worry about math, the brain feels the pain
"The brain activation does not happen during math performance, suggesting that it is not the math itself that hurts; rather the anticipation of math is painful," added Ian Lyons, a 2012 PhD graduate in psychology from UChicago and a postdoctoral scholar at Western University in Ontario, Canada.
with the experience of physical pain and visceral threat detection. The study led by Ian Lyons found that in individuals who experience high levels of anxiety when facing maths tasks, the anticipation of maths increases activity in regions of the brain associated with the physical sensation of pain.