Research groups
Colleges
Websites
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Personal webpage
Personal webpage
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Dementia Research Oxford
Oxford University webpage
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Neurological Conditions Theme, BRC
Biomedical Research Centre
Biography
Masud is Professor of Neurology & Cognitive Neuroscience at the University of Oxford. He co-leads the Dementia Theme of the Oxford NIHR Biomedical Research Centre and is Editor-in-Chief of Brain. Together with Cornelia van Duijn, he leads Dementia Research Oxford.
Between 2013-23 he held a Principal Fellowship at Oxford, awarded by The Wellcome Trust. He is a Professorial Fellow at New College. Previously he was Professor of Clinical Neurology at UCL & The National Hospital for Neurology & Neurosurgery, London and Deputy Director of the UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience.
Masud read Physiological Sciences / Medicine (1981-84) at Oxford before completing his PhD here in 1987. He held a Harkness Fellowship and was a postdoctoral fellow at MIT, prior to returning to Oxford to finish his clinical degree. After Neurology training in London, he held a joint appointment as Consultant Neurologist and Wellcome Trust Senior Fellow (2000-12), first at Imperial College, then at UCL.
Awards
- Graham Bull Prize in Clinical Science, Royal College of Physicians London
- Elizabeth Warrington Prize, British Neuropsychological Society.
- Fellow of Academy of Medical Sciences
- Fellow of American Academy of Neurology
- Fellow of European Academy of Neurology
Masud Husain
MA DPhil BMBCh FRCP FMedSci FAAN FEAN
Professor of Neurology & Cognitive Neuroscience
- Professorial Fellow, New College
- Co-lead, Dementia Theme, Oxford Health NIHR Biomedical Research Centre
- Co-lead, Dementia Research Oxford
- Editor-in-Chief, Brain
Memory and motivation in health and dementia
Research Summary
My research focuses on
- Memory in healthy individuals and patients with memory disorders
- Motivation and apathy in healthy people and patient groups
We're funded by The Wellcome Trust and the NIHR Oxford Health BRC.
We see patients in the Cognitive Disorders Clinic at the John Radcliffe Hospital and the Cognitive Neuropsychology Centre, Dept of Experimental Psychology.
Our research on fundamental mechanisms underlying attention, working memory and motivated decision-making in healthy people is conducted in our research centres at the Dept of Experimental Psychology and the West Wing, John Radcliffe Hospital.
Key publications
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The computational cost of active information sampling before decision-making under uncertainty.
Journal article
Petitet P. et al, (2021), Nat Hum Behav
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Cerebrovascular risk factors impact frontoparietal network integrity and executive function in healthy ageing.
Journal article
Veldsman M. et al, (2020), Nat Commun, 11
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Neuroscience of apathy and anhedonia: a transdiagnostic approach.
Journal article
Husain M. and Roiser JP., (2018), Nat Rev Neurosci, 19, 470 - 484
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Changing concepts of working memory.
Journal article
Ma WJ. et al, (2014), Nat Neurosci, 17, 347 - 356
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Dynamic shifts of limited working memory resources in human vision.
Journal article
Bays PM. and Husain M., (2008), Science, 321, 851 - 854
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Functional role of the supplementary and pre-supplementary motor areas.
Journal article
Nachev P. et al, (2008), Nat Rev Neurosci, 9, 856 - 869
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Abnormal temporal dynamics of visual attention in spatial neglect patients.
Journal article
Husain M. et al, (1997), Nature, 385, 154 - 156
Recent publications
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Detection of cognitive deficits years prior to clinical diagnosis across neurological conditions
Journal article
Tai XY. et al, (2025), Brain Communications
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Active information sampling in health and disease
Journal article
Attaallah B. et al, (2025), Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews, 175
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General paresis of the insane: a diagnosis not to forget.
Journal article
Husain M., (2025), Brain, 148, 2593 - 2594
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Dynamic updating of spatial working memory across eye movements: a computational investigation of transsaccadic integration
Preprint
Zhao S. et al, (2025)
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OCTAL (Oxford Cognitive Testing Portal): A remote, cross-cultural cognitive assessment detects domain-specific aging and dementia
Preprint
Zhao S. et al, (2025)
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Self- versus caregiver-reported apathy across neurological disorders
Journal article
Zhao S. et al, (2025), Brain Communications
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Goal-directedness deficit in Huntington's disease.
Journal article
Morris L-A. et al, (2025), Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci
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Responses to ‘On the responsibilities of intellectuals and the rise of bullshit jobs in universities’
Journal article
Husain M., (2025), Brain, 148, e48 - e49
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Vascular health has an impact on brain health
Journal article
Husain M., (2025), Brain, 148, 1439 - 1440
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Working memory filtering at encoding and maintenance in healthy ageing, Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease.
Journal article
Toniolo S. et al, (2025), Sci Rep, 15
