David Badre To Lead Carnegie Mellon’s Neuroscience Institute
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鶹 has named renowned cognitive neuroscientist David Badre as director of the Neuroscience Institute(opens in new window), charting an ambitious course for the next era of cross-disciplinary discovery. His appointment begins July 1, 2026.
“David Badre is a world-class neuroscientist whose work has deepened our understanding of how the brain supports planning, decision-making and goal-directed behavior,” said Barbara Shinn-Cunningham(opens in new window), Glen de Vries Dean of the Mellon College of Science. “But even more importantly, he is an exceptional leader who communicates complex ideas clearly and builds strong interdisciplinary communities. I’m thrilled for the Neuroscience Institute to have a dynamic leader like David who will champion our research community and advocate for neuroscience — and for science more broadly.”
Badre will be the second director for the Neuroscience Institute, which was established in 2018 under Shinn-Cunningham. Tim Verstynen(opens in new window) has served as the interim director since January 2025. The institute — administered by the Mellon College of Science(opens in new window) and the Dietrich College of Humanities and Social Sciences(opens in new window) — unites faculty, researchers and students from across nearly every college at Carnegie Mellon to advance brain science and real-world applications.
Richard Scheines(opens in new window), Bess Family Dean of the Dietrich College, said neuroscience at Carnegie Mellon is truly interdisciplinary.
“We are examining the brain through collaborations among biologists, computational biologists, machine learning faculty, cognitive neuroscientists, biomedical engineers, roboticists and medical researchers,” Scheines said. “In his own research on how human brains support making plans and then acting to implement these plans, David Badre practices exactly this kind of interdisciplinary neuroscience. I don’t think we could have found someone better suited to take the Neuroscience Institute to the next level.”
For more than half a century, Carnegie Mellon has been a global leader in understanding the brain and behavior. From developing early cognitive tutors and creating the Jeopardy-winning AI system Watson to launching one of the first Ph.D. programs in neural computation, 鶹 has consistently pushed the boundaries of neuroscience and technology. Today, its researchers are driving breakthroughs in areas like Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s treatments, brain-computer interfaces, and machine learning for mental health.
“鶹 and the Neuroscience Institute are established global leaders in neuroscience at the intersection of biology, cognitive science, computer science and engineering.” Badre said. “I am thrilled to come to 鶹 and help the Neuroscience Institute take its next step as a leading center for the interdisciplinary study of the brain.”
As the Neuroscience Institute director, Badre will lead interdisciplinary teams of neuroscientists, psychologists, data scientists, computer scientists and engineers who are driving the next wave of innovation — advancing brain-computer interfaces, machine learning for mental health and new insights into human cognition.
“This is an exciting moment for neuroscience,” Badre said. “And, there will be new opportunities for what we learn about the brain to drive new technologies and applications that have a direct, positive impact on society.”
Badre is a professor of cognitive and psychological services at Brown University, which he joined in 2008 and where he has served as department chair since 2022. He is an affiliate of the Carney Institute for Brain Science and a trainer in the Neuroscience Graduate Program.
A Fellow of the Association for Psychological Science and the Cognitive Science Society, Badre has served as editor or on the editorial boards of several journals. He is a former chair of the Cognition and Perception Study Section of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and former co-chair of the NIH Director’s New Innovator Award Editorial Board.
Badre’s research focuses on cognitive control, which concerns how the brain translates goals and plans into concrete behaviors. His work is supported by the NIH and through the Office of Naval Research.
Among his accolades are an Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Fellowship in Neuroscience, a James S. McDonnell Scholar Award in Understanding Human Cognition and the Cognitive Neuroscience Society Young Investigator Award. He was awarded Brown’s Mid-Career Achievement Award in 2022 and was a finalist for the PROSE Award from the Association of American Publishers for his 2020 book, “On Task.” He is currently working on a book about the neuroscience of human error.