Summary
Christopher Steele is an Associate Professor and cognitive neuroscientist with 13 years of research experience probing how expertise reshapes brain function and white-matter connectivity. Based in Montreal, he combines longitudinal and computational anatomy approaches developed during postdoctoral work at McGill and the Max Planck Institute to model connectional architecture underlying motor plasticity and cerebellar structure. He has progressed from MA/PhD training in experimental psychology to leading lab-based and collaborative projects that integrate imaging, quantitative methods, and tool development. Colleagues know him for bridging rigorous theory with practical computational tools—a trait rooted in early training across biology, computer science, and privacy-aware research administration.
13 years of coding experience
9 years of employment as a software developer
Diploma for Graduates, Psychology, Diploma for Graduates, Psychology at University of Otago
PhD, Experimental Psychology, PhD, Experimental Psychology at Concordia University
Cognitive Neuroscience, Cognitive Neuroscience at University of Oxford
Exchange, Biology & Computer Science, Exchange, Biology & Computer Science at University of East Anglia
BSc (Hons), Biology, BSc (Hons), Biology at Simon Fraser University
Japanese