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Webinars

The Yale Center for the Science of Cannabis and Cannabinoids (YC-SCAN2) is proud to host an engaging monthly webinar series designed to support our center's mission of advancing research, dissemination, and education in the field of cannabis and cannabinoid science.

Through this series, we aim to:

  • Research: Conduct and share insights from a broad spectrum of studies, from basic science to advanced clinical trials exploring the benefits and risks of cannabis and cannabinoids.
  • Dissemination of Information: Provide regular, evidence-based updates to the scientific community and public, independently and in collaboration with relevant organizations.
  • Education: Train the next generation of researchers through partnerships with Yale’s training programs, mentoring fellows and postdocs in this rapidly evolving field.

Upcoming Webinars

Feb 202624Tuesday
  • Everyone
    Godfrey Pearlson, MA, MBBS

    Webinar: Yale Center for the Science of Cannabis and Cannabinoids "Driving While Stoned: Why It's Complicated" by Dr. Godfrey Pearlson

    We are pleased to welcome Dr. Godfrey Pearlson, MA, MBBS, as the featured speaker for the February YC-SCAN2 webinar, Driving While

    Stoned: Why It’s Complicated. Dr. Pearlson is a physician–scientist and internationally recognized leader in neuropsychiatric and substance use

    research, with extensive training at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, Columbia University, and the Johns Hopkins University Department

    of Psychiatry, where he ultimately served as Professor of Psychiatry and founding director of the Division of Psychiatric Neuroimaging.

    Dr. Pearlson is currently the founding director of the Olin Neuropsychiatry Research Center at the Institute of Living, where his work focuses on

    the translational neuroscience of major mental illness and substance use, including cannabis. In this webinar, he will draw on neuroimaging and

    translational research to cover the conceptual, scientific, and legal aspects of cannabis-impaired driving, examining how cannabis affects cognition

    and driving performance and why variability in impairment complicates detection, regulation, and policy.