Speaker · Independent Researcher

The edges of consciousness, perception, and the brain.

Where neuroscience meets the experiences medicine cannot yet explain, and where certainty gives way to genuine inquiry.

Most of what exists cannot yet be measured, and consciousness itself remains unexplained. Certainty is the least scientific response.

The through line of the work
The work

At the border of brain and mind.

What we lose when we dismiss what we cannot yet explain.

Consciousness
and perception

how the mind builds reality

The brain
as a filter

what it quietly holds back

Medicine and
the unexplained

curiosity over quick answers
Signature keynote

One story, a larger question.

Keynote

Between Worlds

A traumatic brain injury in college brought stroke-like symptoms and a period of profoundly altered perception, followed by years of recovery and dismissal from the medical system. This talk uses that story to ask a larger question: in a universe where most of what exists cannot yet be measured, and consciousness itself remains unexplained, what do we make impossible simply by refusing to look? A case for inquiry, humility, and the right to wonder.

The Brain as a Filter

How research on neural inhibition reframes perception, drawing on studies of altered awareness following brain injury.

Medicine and the Right to Wonder

On diagnostic certainty and building clinical cultures that meet the unexplained with inquiry instead of shame.

Resilience After the Break

Rebuilding identity, language, and meaning after neurological trauma, for patients, caregivers, and clinical teams.

About

Melissa Jane.

Melissa Jane Arno is a speaker and independent researcher based in Pensacola, Florida, working where neuroscience, lived experience, and the questions medicine leaves open all meet.

Her path began on a conventional track, a top student, teaching assistant, and tutor headed toward graduate study in a clinical field. A traumatic brain injury in college brought stroke-like symptoms and a period of profoundly altered perception, followed by years of recovery and self-directed research. That experience reshaped her focus toward consciousness, the brain, and how the medical system responds to what it cannot yet measure.

Today her research draws on work from Baycrest Health Sciences, the Princeton engineering anomalies program, and the philosophy of William James, exploring perception, neural inhibition, and the ethics of dismissing experiences that fall outside current models. Her work is oriented toward doctoral research in neuroscience, and toward the wider conversation these questions deserve.

Background

Studied Clinical Exercise Science at Ithaca College, Honors. Certified Personal Trainer, Corrective Exercise Specialist, Nutrition Coach, Run Coach, and 200-Hour Registered Yoga Teacher. CPR and AED certified.

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