Neuropsychology Day 2026 — Event-Announcement Social Posts
Event-Announcement Posts — Neuropsychology Day 2026 at The Neuro (McGill)
Section titled “Event-Announcement Posts — Neuropsychology Day 2026 at The Neuro (McGill)”Separate from the article-promotion track. These posts announce Ksenia’s presentation on May 11 at the Montreal Neurological Institute-Hospital.
Shared image set across platforms:
baseworks-degrees-of-freedom-control-in-non-habitual-movement-v2.webp(featured event banner, from the WP post)Montreal-Neurological-Institute-scaled.webp(The Neuro building, reused from 2025)- Neuro + McGill logos composite (optional, where useful)
- A photo of Ksenia at last year’s Neuropsychology Day if one exists and is on the CDN; otherwise the featured banner carries the post
Voice: neutral professional. Describe the presentation and the event directly. No “excited to announce” framing. Ksenia’s contribution is a research presentation, not a talk or lecture — use “presentation” / “presents” throughout.
1. LinkedIn post (Patrick Oancia, personal account)
Section titled “1. LinkedIn post (Patrick Oancia, personal account)”Feed post, not an article. Company page reshares a few hours later with a brief note (drafted at the bottom).
Image: the featured event banner. If LinkedIn allows a second image in the post, add the Neuro building photo.
Ksenia Shcherbakova returns this year to present current Baseworks research on degrees-of-freedom control at the 27th Annual Neuropsychology Day & Brenda Milner Lecture at The Neuro (Montreal Neurological Institute-Hospital) on May 11.
Her presentation is titled “Predictable Failure Patterns in Non-Habitual Movement: Evidence for Undertrained Degrees-of-Freedom Control.” The work documents a class of predictable failure patterns in healthy adults, where movement coordination breaks down in specific non-habitual tasks regardless of general physical background. The findings point to a central process that appears systematically undertrained in the adult population, and they open a set of implications for motor learning, rehabilitation, and movement education.
The event runs from 11:30 AM to 5:00 PM. Ksenia presents from 2:30 to 3:45 PM. The day’s keynote, “Neurobiological Basis of Psychosis,” is delivered by Dr. Bruce L. Miller (UCSF). The full program brings together researchers, students, and clinicians working on learning, memory, attention, and neuropsychology.
Open to the public and free of charge. If you’re in Montreal or within reach of it, the event page has the full program.
Event details and registration: https://baseworks.com/event/neuropsychology-day-2026-degrees-of-freedom-control/
#baseworks_method #baseworks_sense_control_adapt #baseworks_physical_intelligence #MotorControl #Neuroscience #Neuropsychology
Baseworks company page reshare note (post a few hours after Patrick’s post)
Section titled “Baseworks company page reshare note (post a few hours after Patrick’s post)”Ksenia Shcherbakova returns this year to present current Baseworks research on degrees-of-freedom control at the 27th Annual Neuropsychology Day & Brenda Milner Lecture at The Neuro (Montreal Neurological Institute-Hospital) on May 11. Open to the public and free of charge. Full details at the link.
2. Facebook posts — two separate posts
Section titled “2. Facebook posts — two separate posts”One from Patrick’s personal profile (first-person), one from the Baseworks page (third-person). Same carousel on both. Article/event URL included in each body so Facebook renders a link-preview card.
Carousel (in order, both posts):
- Featured event banner (
baseworks-degrees-of-freedom-control-in-non-habitual-movement-v2.webp) - The Neuro building photo
- Neuro + McGill logos composite
- Optional: a photo of Ksenia presenting at the 2025 event (if on CDN)
2a. Patrick Oancia (personal profile)
Section titled “2a. Patrick Oancia (personal profile)”First-person. Posts first.
Ksenia Shcherbakova returns this year to present current Baseworks research on degrees-of-freedom control at the 27th Annual Neuropsychology Day & Brenda Milner Lecture at The Neuro (Montreal Neurological Institute-Hospital) on May 11.
Her presentation is titled “Predictable Failure Patterns in Non-Habitual Movement: Evidence for Undertrained Degrees-of-Freedom Control.” The work documents a class of predictable failure patterns in healthy adults, where movement coordination breaks down in specific non-habitual tasks regardless of how physically experienced a person is. Last year’s presentation introduced the broader framework. This year’s is a specific empirical piece within it, and it points to a central process that appears systematically undertrained in the adult population.
Neuropsychology Day runs from 11:30 AM to 5:00 PM. Ksenia presents from 2:30 to 3:45 PM. The keynote, “Neurobiological Basis of Psychosis,” is delivered by Dr. Bruce L. Miller (UCSF). The day also includes oral sessions across the broader field of neuropsychology, learning, memory, and attention, and is attended by researchers, students, and clinicians from the Montreal research community and beyond.
The event is open to the public and free of charge. If you’re based in Montreal, or visiting, I’d like to see you there.
https://baseworks.com/event/neuropsychology-day-2026-degrees-of-freedom-control/
2b. Baseworks (company page)
Section titled “2b. Baseworks (company page)”Third-person. Posts a few hours after Patrick’s post.
Ksenia Shcherbakova returns this year to present current Baseworks research on degrees-of-freedom control at the 27th Annual Neuropsychology Day & Brenda Milner Lecture at The Neuro (Montreal Neurological Institute-Hospital) on May 11.
Ksenia’s presentation this year is titled “Predictable Failure Patterns in Non-Habitual Movement: Evidence for Undertrained Degrees-of-Freedom Control.” The work documents a class of predictable failure patterns in healthy adults, where movement coordination breaks down in specific non-habitual tasks regardless of how physically experienced a person is. Last year’s presentation introduced the broader framework. This year’s is a specific empirical piece within it, and it points to a central process that appears systematically undertrained in the adult population.
Neuropsychology Day runs from 11:30 AM to 5:00 PM. Ksenia presents from 2:30 to 3:45 PM. The keynote, “Neurobiological Basis of Psychosis,” is delivered by Dr. Bruce L. Miller (UCSF). The day also includes oral sessions across the broader field of neuropsychology, learning, memory, and attention, and is attended by researchers, students, and clinicians from the Montreal research community and beyond.
The event is open to the public and free of charge.
https://baseworks.com/event/neuropsychology-day-2026-degrees-of-freedom-control/
3. Instagram post (Baseworks account, unified voice)
Section titled “3. Instagram post (Baseworks account, unified voice)”~140 words, carousel. Hashtags in the first comment.
Carousel (in order):
- Featured event banner (
baseworks-degrees-of-freedom-control-in-non-habitual-movement-v2.webp) - The Neuro building photo
- Neuro + McGill logos composite
- A short key-detail card (date, time, location) if we have the time to build one; otherwise skip
Caption (copy-paste)
Section titled “Caption (copy-paste)”Ksenia Shcherbakova returns this year to present current Baseworks research on degrees-of-freedom control at the 27th Annual Neuropsychology Day & Brenda Milner Lecture at The Neuro (Montreal Neurological Institute-Hospital) on May 11.
Her presentation is titled “Predictable Failure Patterns in Non-Habitual Movement: Evidence for Undertrained Degrees-of-Freedom Control.” It documents a class of predictable failure patterns in healthy adults, where movement coordination breaks down in specific non-habitual tasks regardless of general physical background, and points to a central process that appears systematically undertrained in the adult population.
Ksenia presents from 2:30 to 3:45 PM. The event runs 11:30 AM to 5:00 PM. Open to the public and free of charge.
Link in bio for event details and registration.
First-comment hashtags (copy-paste)
Section titled “First-comment hashtags (copy-paste)”#baseworks_method #baseworks_sense_control_adapt #baseworks_PQ #baseworks_physical_intelligence #baseworks_approach #baseworks_framework #Neuroscience #Neuropsychology #MotorControl #sensorimotorlearning #proprioceptiveawareness #neuroplasticity #Montreal #McGillUniversity #TheNeuro
Publishing notes
Section titled “Publishing notes”- Post sequencing: LinkedIn post first (Patrick’s personal account), then Baseworks company page reshare a few hours later, then Facebook collaboration post, then Instagram. The article-promotion posts and the event-announcement posts can be spaced a day apart so neither audience sees both in the same session.
- Eventbrite registration link can appear as plain text inside any post body; the canonical public URL for the event is on baseworks.com.
- Do not use the #baseworks tag anywhere. Always #baseworks_method.
- No emojis. No exclamation marks.