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Posts by Jamie Murray

Nobel Laureate Professor Edvard Moser will be talking this evening at 17:00. All welcome, especially members of the public.

5 days ago 1 1 0 0

Aww, this is devastating. It was always busy!

2 weeks ago 1 0 0 0

New Origin Story: on our fetish for self-categorisation & the obsession with the introvert-extrovert binary. Do these terms mean anything? Are they scientifically valid? Where did they come from? All will be answered in a story of psychoanalysis, neurotic conflict amd super-weird sex stuff.

4 weeks ago 145 13 17 4
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Well as some who is approaching 40 in a few months time this is just absolutely brutal.

*ps it makes sense in the context of the story ‘Red Rising’ in which people aren’t expected to live long, still…

4 weeks ago 1 0 0 0

That is some next level ASMR

1 month ago 1 0 0 0

I’m turning 40 this year. This certainly doesn’t help!

1 month ago 1 0 1 0
Experimentum: Trust and Parasocial Attatchment to AI in Higher Education Psychology experiments at the University of Glasgow

A thesis student is looking at parasocial attachment to generative AI in undergraduate and postgraduate students. The questionnaire will take about 10 minutes. Please pass the study link on to anyone who might be interested.

exp.psy.gla.ac.uk/project?para...

1 month ago 4 8 0 0
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Congratulations James! Cant wait to meet her.

2 months ago 1 0 0 0
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We’re hiring! The Suthana Lab @ Duke is looking for a Research Assistant to join our team studying human memory & real-world 🧠 dynamics using wearable tech & intracranial recordings.

Apply: careers.duke.edu/job/Durham-C...

You can also email suthanalab@duke.edu with CV/questions. Please share!

2 months ago 53 41 2 2
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I love a good rock climbing game. Grow Up was one of my favourites but Cairn is shaping up to be something special. The music, art direction, gameplay loop 😁

2 months ago 1 0 0 0

Brandon Sanderson? Those are some mighty tomes

3 months ago 0 0 1 0
Graphical Abstract. A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of the Relationships Between Active Outdoor Play and 24-Hour Movement Behaviours

Graphical Abstract. A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of the Relationships Between Active Outdoor Play and 24-Hour Movement Behaviours

New paper - A systematic review and meta-analysis of the relationships between active outdoor play and 24-hour movement behaviors.

#ActiveOutdoorPlay #PhysicalActivity #Sleep

doi.org/10.1016/j.js...

3 months ago 2 1 0 0
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Why Most Education Apps Fail carlhendrick.substack.com/p/why-most-e...

4 months ago 14 7 0 2

You then swear never to buy a coffee there again only to relent a few days later because we don’t like change.

4 months ago 1 0 1 0

Tony Squawk

4 months ago 1 0 0 0
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PhD Studentships in Transformative Humanities - Durham University

We’ve got 8 PhD studentships open in Durham for interdisciplinary research, especially projects sitting at the intersection of humanities and sciences. Many music psychology projects can tick these boxes! Feel free to get in touch www.durham.ac.uk/departments/...

4 months ago 30 34 0 0

Agree with the sentiment but can I just say kudos on the blockbuster robes.

4 months ago 1 0 1 0
APA PsycNet

New paper in Psych Review on a model of false recognition in Deese-Roediger-McDermott DRM task.

Not just recognition responses, but also associated RTs!

And not just the semantic task, but also the structural task - where words overlap in orthography/phonology!

A thread!

4 months ago 30 13 1 1

It's exam season. So, I wrote up my exam taking tips as a blog post. It comes with a set of PowerPoint slides, too. Wishing all students all the best for their exams! You've got this!

4 months ago 2 2 0 0
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New paper from the lab, "Perceiving Event Structure in Brief Actions," now out in Cognitive Psychology :)

Led by the inimitable Zekun Sun

This was my lab's first foray into event cognition

gift link: sciencedirect.com/science/arti...

4 months ago 68 23 2 3

Urgh, can’t have anything nice. Back to in person exams and now data collection.

5 months ago 0 0 0 0
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Life Sciences PhD studentships available in amazing Glasgow! Deadline Jan 12

General details here: www.gla.ac.uk/colleges/mvl...

My project, on cognitive mapping in 3D space in mice and humans, available here: www.gla.ac.uk/colleges/mvl...

5 months ago 11 8 1 0
Transparent and comprehensive statistical reporting is critical for ensuring the credibility, reproducibility, and interpretability of psychological research. This paper offers a structured set of guidelines for reporting statistical analyses in quantitative psychology, emphasizing clarity at both the planning and results stages. Drawing on established recommendations and emerging best practices, we outline key decisions related to hypothesis formulation, sample size justification, preregistration, outlier and missing data handling, statistical model specification, and the interpretation of inferential outcomes. We address considerations across frequentist and Bayesian frameworks and fixed as well as sequential research designs, including guidance on effect size reporting, equivalence testing, and the appropriate treatment of null results. To facilitate implementation of these recommendations, we provide the Transparent Statistical Reporting in Psychology (TSRP) Checklist that researchers can use to systematically evaluate and improve their statistical reporting practices (https://osf.io/t2zpq/). In addition, we provide a curated list of freely available tools, packages, and functions that researchers can use to implement transparent reporting practices in their own analyses to bridge the gap between theory and practice. To illustrate the practical application of these principles, we provide a side-by-side comparison of insufficient versus best-practice reporting using a hypothetical cognitive psychology study. By adopting transparent reporting standards, researchers can improve the robustness of individual studies and facilitate cumulative scientific progress through more reliable meta-analyses and research syntheses.

Transparent and comprehensive statistical reporting is critical for ensuring the credibility, reproducibility, and interpretability of psychological research. This paper offers a structured set of guidelines for reporting statistical analyses in quantitative psychology, emphasizing clarity at both the planning and results stages. Drawing on established recommendations and emerging best practices, we outline key decisions related to hypothesis formulation, sample size justification, preregistration, outlier and missing data handling, statistical model specification, and the interpretation of inferential outcomes. We address considerations across frequentist and Bayesian frameworks and fixed as well as sequential research designs, including guidance on effect size reporting, equivalence testing, and the appropriate treatment of null results. To facilitate implementation of these recommendations, we provide the Transparent Statistical Reporting in Psychology (TSRP) Checklist that researchers can use to systematically evaluate and improve their statistical reporting practices (https://osf.io/t2zpq/). In addition, we provide a curated list of freely available tools, packages, and functions that researchers can use to implement transparent reporting practices in their own analyses to bridge the gap between theory and practice. To illustrate the practical application of these principles, we provide a side-by-side comparison of insufficient versus best-practice reporting using a hypothetical cognitive psychology study. By adopting transparent reporting standards, researchers can improve the robustness of individual studies and facilitate cumulative scientific progress through more reliable meta-analyses and research syntheses.

Our paper on improving statistical reporting in psychology is now online 🎉

As a part of this paper, we also created the Transparent Statistical Reporting in Psychology checklist, which researchers can use to improve their statistical reporting practices

www.nature.com/articles/s44...

5 months ago 235 94 8 5

When does new learning interfere with existing knowledge in people and ANNs? Great to have this out today in @nathumbehav.nature.com

Work with @summerfieldlab.bsky.social, @tsonj.bsky.social, Lukas Braun and Jan Grohn
www.nature.com/articles/s41...

5 months ago 65 21 1 0
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Policy-Gradient Reinforcement Learning as a General Theory of Practice-Based Motor Skill Learning Mastering any new skill requires extensive practice, but the computational principles underlying this learning are not clearly understood. Existing theories of motor learning can explain short-term ad...

New Pre-Print:
www.biorxiv.org/cgi/content/...

We’re all familiar with having to practice a new skill to get better at it, but what really happens during practice? The answer, I propose, is reinforcement learning - specifically policy-gradient reinforcement learning.

Overview 🧵 below...

6 months ago 63 22 3 3
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Phase-locking saccades to posterior alpha oscillations improves the neural representation of visual objects during memory formation Visual memory formation begins with the intake and neural processing of discrete samples provided by gaze fixations and saccades. Past research has highlighted a functional relationship between the ti...

Memory might depend on when you look, not just what you see

Happy to share a new preprint from my postdoctoral work with Jed Meltzer, @drjenryan.bsky.social, and @rosannaolsen.bsky.social

Paper: doi.org/10.1101/2025...

6 months ago 24 9 1 1
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Wee trip to Belfast was fun. Lots to do at the titanic quarter alone!

6 months ago 0 1 0 0

This gives me much hope for the future of Psychology.
Over my career, I've seen many tech fads come and go (or often not go), each displacing the basic effort of theoretical clarity by something that works off laziness.
Here, the latest fad is being shown for what it is very early in its lifetime.

6 months ago 19 9 1 1
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Engrams Formed in Virtual Reality Exhibit Reduced Familiarity Upon Retrieval: Electrophysiological Correlates of Source Memory Retrieval Indicate Modality‐Dependent Differences in Recognition Memory The study examines whether the retrieval of virtual reality (VR)-engrams is more profoundly based on recollection than on familiarity compared to PC-engrams, and whether the encoding modality functio...

Engrams Formed in Virtual Reality Exhibit Reduced Familiarity Upon Retrieval: Electrophysiological Correlates of Source Memory Retrieval Indicate Modality-Dependent Differences in Recognition Memory
doi.org/10.1111/ejn....
#neuroscience

6 months ago 12 5 0 0

Open postdoc position👈
We have an open position, starting early 2026, to work on an exciting project aiming at better understanding the role of thalamo-cortical brain oscillations in perception with a comparative, cross-species (animal-human) component based on electrophysiology (incl. scalp EEG).

6 months ago 32 26 4 0