Advertisement · 728 × 90

Posts by Carlos G. Correa

Post image

Over 600 New Yorkers attended our Virtual Town Hall today to advocate for state-based science funding! We were joined by researchers, patients, institutions, and elected officials. @amsnyc.bsky.social @nycures.bsky.social @uawregion9a.bsky.social

3 months ago 12 8 1 1
Preview
Fund NY Science

More than 1,000 researchers across New York have signed the Open Letter registering support for @governor.ny.gov to fund live-saving science! Add your name here: fundnyscience.org

3 months ago 5 5 0 0

I’m excited to share my recent preprint on a neural network model of free recall that learns multiple memory strategies including the memory palace!

www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...

6 months ago 34 16 1 2

seems that RFK is clearing the path for his CDC to do tuskegee syphillis experiments as a matter of course. in other news, RFK is a genuine monster who relishes in the pain and suffering of those he feels he has control or dominion over

6 months ago 10358 3294 188 95
Preview
Discovering cognitive strategies with tiny recurrent neural networks - Nature Modelling biological decision-making with tiny recurrent neural networks enables more accurate predictions of animal choices than classical cognitive models and offers insights into the underlying cog...

Thrilled to see our TinyRNN paper in @nature! We show how tiny RNNs predict choices of individual subjects accurately while staying fully interpretable. This approach can transform how we model cognitive processes in both healthy and disordered decisions. doi.org/10.1038/s415...

9 months ago 329 141 9 4

Despite the world being on fire, I can't help but be thrilled to announce that I'll be starting as an Assistant Professor in the Cognitive Science Program at Dartmouth in Fall '26. I'll be recruiting grad students this upcoming cycle—get in touch if you're interested!

11 months ago 143 24 17 4
email starting, "The U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) has undertaken a review of its award portfolio. Each award was carefully and individually reviewed, and the agency has determined that termination of certain awards is necessary because they are not in alignment with current NSF priorites."

email starting, "The U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) has undertaken a review of its award portfolio. Each award was carefully and individually reviewed, and the agency has determined that termination of certain awards is necessary because they are not in alignment with current NSF priorites."

yesterday, my postdoc funding (salary and research funds) was cancelled by the National Science Foundation, effective immediately. I received the same generic, vaguely threatening, typo-ridden email as many of my colleagues who have had their awards terminated recently. (1/n)

11 months ago 603 271 41 28

You already know the Ship of Theseus, but do you also know the Ship of Thesis? It was constructed out of 3 loosely related papers which tell the tales of heroic quests and mythic psychodrama. It was only constructed once and then allowed to sink into oblivion.

1 year ago 62 8 0 0
Advertisement

One neat direction I've heard of is @psychboyh.bsky.social & Robert Wilson's work using LLMs to process think-aloud data. 2024.ccneuro.org/pdf/67_Paper...

1 year ago 15 1 2 0

Shout out to my incredible co-authors: Sophia Sanborn (@naturecomputes.bsky.social), Mark Ho (@markkho.bsky.social), Fred Callaway (@fredcallaway.bsky.social), Nathaniel Daw (@nathanieldaw.bsky.social), and Tom Griffiths (@cocoscilab.bsky.social).

1 year ago 5 1 0 0

Check out our preprint thread for more details!

bsky.app/profile/did:...

1 year ago 6 0 1 0
Post image

My paper on hierarchical plans is out in Cognition!🎉

tldr: We ask participants to generate hierarchical plans in a programming game. People prefer to reuse beyond what standard accounts predict, which we formalize as induction of a grammar over actions.

authors.elsevier.com/a/1kBQr2Hx2x...

1 year ago 99 37 1 3

Lightbot was originally built by Danny Yaroslavski. We build on an open-source version by Laurent Haan (github.com/haan/Lightbot).

Animation in first post was inspired by M. C. Escher’s Ascending and Descending and the game Monument Valley.

7/7

2 years ago 4 0 0 0

Huge thanks to my incredible co-authors: Sophia Sanborn, @markkho.bsky.social, @fredcallaway.bsky.social, @nathanieldaw.bsky.social, & @cocoscilab.bsky.social. I am incredibly grateful for their insights and support!

6/7

2 years ago 6 0 1 0

For more details, check out the paper!

Preprint: arxiv.org/abs/2311.18644

Playable demo: carlos.correa.me/cocosci-ligh...

Experiment code: github.com/cgc/cocosci-...

Analysis code: github.com/cgc/lightbot...

5/7

2 years ago 5 1 1 0
Post image

We find that people have a bias towards reuse, beyond the reuse that naturally occurs when minimizing program length. Drawing from theories of word learning, we account for this by modeling participants' program-writing as if they were creating & using an action grammar.

4/7

2 years ago 6 0 1 0
Post image

Importantly, a program isn't just a sequence of instructions. Participants can define and use parts of programs (called processes), making it possible to write shorter, more compact programs.

3/7

2 years ago 5 0 1 0
Post image

We use a process-tracing paradigm where people create hierarchical plans. Based on the educational game Lightbot, research participants drag and drop instructions to write programs. Lightbot follows these instructions, with the goal of activating all lights.

2/7

2 years ago 4 0 1 0
Advertisement

Note: This thread is a repost from X (formerly twitter): twitter.com/_cgcorrea/st... The thread over there has several animations, which are only stills here.

1.5/7

2 years ago 4 0 1 0
Post image Post image

Human behavior is hierarchically structured. But what determines *which* hierarchies people use? In a preprint, we run an experiment where people create programs that correspond to hierarchies, finding that people prefer structures with more reuse.

arxiv.org/abs/2311.18644

1/7

2 years ago 24 7 1 3