In addition, we found that participants leveraged explicit knowledge about the pairs associations to predict targets, but not distractors, revealing a dissociable impact of implicit and explicit learning on predictive functioning. (8/8)
11.10.2024 13:41 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
This cross-modal interaction effect suggests that predictions may be coordinated at a supra-modal level. This strategy optimizes resource allocation by prioritizing processing based on the behavioral relevance of each prediction. (7/8)
11.10.2024 13:40 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
Our results showed that performance was influenced by the fulfillment of expectations in the target modality. Prediction violations in the distractor modality had a similar impact, but only when predictions in the attended modality were correct. (6/8)
11.10.2024 13:40 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
We investigated whether prediction violations in the distractor modality impacted the predictive performance in the attended modality. We also examined whether explicit knowledge about the associations modulated the strength of prediction effects. (5/8)
11.10.2024 13:39 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
To test these hypotheses, in two behavioral experiments, participants were exposed to concurrent visual and auditory stimulus transitions governed by independent probabilistic rules, while performing a perceptual task on only one sensory modality. (4/8)
11.10.2024 13:38 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
We wondered whether, in such scenarios, predictions in each sensory modality are generated and contrasted through parallel, modality-specific predictive systems, or are they jointly regulated? (3/8)
11.10.2024 13:36 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
We are often surrounded by predictable events across sensory modalities, yet our attention must shift between them. For example, when driving, we attend to predictive visual cues on the road while listening to predictable music patterns. (2/8)
11.10.2024 13:35 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
Anticipating multisensory environments: Evidence for a supra-modal predictive system
Our perceptual experience is generally framed in multisensory environments abundant in predictive information. Previous research on statistical learniβ¦
Very happy to announce that the latest work "Anticipating multisensory environments: Evidence for a supra-modal predictive system" from @alepebel.bsky.social @fuentemilla.bsky.social and myself has been published in Cognition!
www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
11.10.2024 13:31 β π 8 π 5 π¬ 1 π 0
Checking google scholar for recent articles with the phrase "certainly, here is a":
13.03.2024 16:24 β π 2012 π 1034 π¬ 52 π 128
Check our new article on the prevalence of anhedonia in individuals with stroke π§
www.frontiersin.org/articles/10....
07.02.2024 17:36 β π 4 π 2 π¬ 1 π 0
Bluesky is officially βopenβ now (no more invites). So just a reminder to not engage with trolls and bad actors, there is no algorithm here to promote or spread them, replying to them is what puts them on everybodyβs timelines. So block and give no oxygen.
06.02.2024 14:45 β π 24974 π 12036 π¬ 166 π 290
As part of my research, I need as many people as possible to respond and spread the word about this online survey on Natural Singing! Can you help me?
Link to the survey: ubpsychology.eu.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_...
Thank you!
03.01.2024 18:35 β π 14 π 14 π¬ 3 π 2
Postdoctoral researcher in cognitive neuroscience at LMU, Munich
π PhD student at Cognition & Brain Plasticity Unit (University of Barcelona) | https://www.ub.edu/brainvitge/member/4983/
πΉ Pianist - Classical & contemporary music
NCCs & theories of consciousness, philosophy in neurobiology
Senior research fellow & head of the Dept. of Analytic Philosophy at the Institute of Philosophy of the Czech Academy of Sciences in Prague
https://sites.google.com/view/tommarvan/homepage
MSc student in Brain and Mind Science at University College London
Assistant professor at the Department of Cognitive Neuroscience of the University of Maastricht, studying the Neuroscience of false percepts.
Girl Dad
Assistant Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience | UConn Psych Sci | attention, cognition, mental health, development, environment, personalized neuroscience
@acornlab.bsky.socialβ¬
arielleskeller.wixsite.com/attention
appliedcognitionlab.psychology.uconn.edu
An open-source data analysis environment for reproducible neuroimaging: http://neurodesk.org @sbollmann.bsky.social
Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience.
Co-director of York Neuroimaging Centre (YNiC).
Interested in memory, spatial navigation and brain imaging.
He/Him
http://www.aidanhorner.org/
Cognitive neuroscientist interested in high level vision (faces, scenes etc.), learning and plasticity. All views are my own.
RamΓ³n y Cajal researcher on Cognitive Neuroscience at Universitat AutΓ²noma de Barcelona (Spain). Researcher delving into multisensory perception, prediction, and decision-making. Leading a new research group. π§ π #Prediction #Cognition #Neuroscience
Cognitive neuroscientist investigating the role of brain oscillations.
http://www.neuosc.com
Researcher at Google and CIFAR Fellow, working on the intersection of machine learning and neuroscience in MontrΓ©al (academic affiliations: @mcgill.ca and @mila-quebec.bsky.social).
philosopher: consciousness, rationality, self-evidencing, contemplation
https://www.monash.edu/m3cs
Cognitive neuroscientist @NYU interested in the neural mechanisms underlying multimodal perception and prediction.π§
Marie SkΕodowska-Curie Fellow @cimecunitrento.bsky.social (Trento, IT) pondering how we (learn to) communicate before and beyond words. https://ambrafer.github.io/
Academic nomad | Wandering neuroscientist | Climate worrier | Assistant Professor @ Leiden University, views very obviously mine | https://anneurai.net/
Brain, minds, & consciousness. Also interested in design, visual arts, biology, space, typography, and anticipation. Also known as « Axel from Belgium »
Neuro prof at Princeton, social media cynic.
Psychologist and neuroscientist. Studying how we perceive, act and decide
Reader (Associate Professor) - Birkbeck, University of London
https://psyc.bbk.ac.uk/uncertainty/