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Posts by Jeremy I. Borjon, PhD

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UH Receives $11.8M NIH Grant to Study Early Language Development in Toddlers | University of Houston University of Houston researchers will follow thousands of Houston toddlers to better understand how language develops in early childhood and why some children experience speech delays.

Proud to be one of many incredible investigators in this new Clinical Research Center on Developmental Language Disorders. We will follow 3,600 toddlers to better understand how language skills emerge and why some children experience delays.

Keep your eyes peeled. We'll be hiring soon! 👀

1 month ago 3 1 0 0
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Prof. @jeremyborjon.com and Manash are in Berlin at the @mps-cognition.bsky.social’s 13th MindBrainBody Symposium presenting a poster on some exciting preliminary data from the lab!

1 month ago 3 1 0 0

Amazing work by @tomalski.bsky.social and team! Very happy to see this out. Independent replication of earlier work from the lab AND an extension to younger months. Very exciting!

3 months ago 1 0 0 0
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Another wonderful lab dinner in the books and a big welcome to our new graduate student Laura!

8 months ago 5 1 0 0
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Thank you to EnvisionBOX (@wimpouw.bsky.social, @jamestrujillo.bsky.social, @babajideowoyele.bsky.social, and @sarkadava.bsky.social) for hosting an excellent summer school in Amsterdam on computer vision and advanced multimodal techniques. We learned a lot and had a great time!

9 months ago 8 4 0 0

This is the beauty and wonder that we are being told has no value—or is even antithetical to American values.

Well they're wrong, as anyone can see if they simply take a moment to imagine, truly imagine, what superpowers science gives us to see into worlds where we could otherwise never tread.

11 months ago 348 62 5 1
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Why Bell Labs Worked. Or, how MBA culture killed Bell Labs

In an age of triumphant managerialism, we must remember that giving researchers support, autonomy, and freedom results in miraculous things. Another point is that the government required AT&T to invest in basic research to avoid being treated as a monopoly. 1517.substack.com/p/why-bell-l...

11 months ago 89 39 2 1
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Autonomic physiological coupling of the global fMRI signal - Nature Neuroscience The brain and body are necessarily connected. Here the authors show that brain blood flow and electrical activity are coupled with systemic physiological changes in the body.

Autonomic physiological coupling of the global fMRI signal www.nature.com/articles/s41... "The global fMRI signal is a substantial component of the arousal response governed by the autonomic nervous system."

11 months ago 21 13 1 2
Home | Savensf

SaveNSF is a coalition of concerned scientists and allies who are working to save funding for scientific grants through the NSF.

The mission is to support and advocate for the continuation of vital research and innovation.

Join: www.savensf.com

11 months ago 230 173 2 6
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Federal research funding cut? Don’t stop now.
Two quick-response grants can help:
Spencer Foundation – bridge funding for education researchers: bit.ly/4jvA7oi
RWJF – racial & Indigenous health equity research support: bit.ly/44VUJ4D
#SRCD #ChildDevelopment

11 months ago 15 17 0 1
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Ever wonder what a neural network would look like in a novel organism w/o selection for specific structure and function? New #preprint with morphological, behavioral, electrophysiological, and transcriptomic analysis of a new kind of Xenobot with a nervous system:
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...

1 year ago 49 13 0 1

A tricky thing about modern society is that no one has any idea when they don’t die.

Like, the number of lives saved by controlling air pollution in America is probably over 200,000 per year, but the number of people who think their life was saved by controlling air pollution is zero.

1 year ago 62841 13000 1079 582
The cost of child poverty in 2023 The cost of child poverty extends beyond the physical and emotional hardship felt by children growing up in low-income families. In 2008, the total financial cost was estimated to be at least £25 bill...

@garyseconomics.bsky.social The key message is growing inequality drives poverty - agreed. But, what's the 'why care' for those harder to reach circles you mentioned? It feels like they need to hear a self-interested - or macro hook like (e.g. cpag.org.uk/news/cost-ch...). What's the best hook?

1 year ago 1 1 0 0
1 year ago 1 0 0 0
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Large AI models are cultural and social technologies Implications draw on the history of transformative information systems from the past

1. @alisongopnik.bsky.social, Cosma Shalizi, James Evans and myself have a new piece in Science on "AI" Large Models, pushing back against much of the collective wisdom about what they can and can't do. Official below, unpaywalled at henryfarrell.net/large-ai-mod... . So why this now?

1 year ago 447 189 21 50

I want the grad students funded and protected. I want the campuses vibrant and bustling. I want our society to understand that the well-being of scientists is critical infrastructure for the future. I want science culture to finally admit that too.

1 year ago 33 8 0 1
A research lab from Northwestern, chosen because it's generic and sort of zoomed out.  Three scientists are visible in lab coats, and there are benches and shelving, with glass along one wall showing another high-rise building nearby. Overhead fluorescents provide light.

A research lab from Northwestern, chosen because it's generic and sort of zoomed out. Three scientists are visible in lab coats, and there are benches and shelving, with glass along one wall showing another high-rise building nearby. Overhead fluorescents provide light.

This is a room where we turn very modest salaries and budgets (and lots of coffee) into new knowledge, life-saving innovations, and technology that feeds business growth.

It's literally the loom that spins hay into gold but these numpties are suddenly worried about the cost of hay.

1 year ago 11296 1668 232 43

The whole "$1 NIH dollar generates $2.50 in output" sells science wildly short. Scientific discovery and technological development is the foundation on which our entire society is built -- and that includes all the businesses that operate within it. The throughlines are shorter than you think: 1/n

1 year ago 63 26 1 2
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This framing is their framing, and NYT took the bait. The correct and accurate framing is: “Deep cuts to medical research threatens progress on cancer and heart disease research, costs the economy $80B, and threatens 300,000 jobs across red and blue states”

1 year ago 1393 460 21 16
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Found this gem in an arcane NSF doc...key to know:

The Constitution and law SUPERSEDES exec orders!

"In the event of a conflict between policies issued at a lower tier versus policies issued at a higher tier, the higher tier policy will take precedence"

nsf-gov-resources.nsf.gov/files/Resear...

1 year ago 195 93 3 9
excerpt reads: "I hear stories about directors who scream at actors, or they trick them somehow to get a performance. And there are some people who try to run the whole business on fear. But I think this is such a joke -- it's pathetic and stupid at the same time. 
     When people are in fear, they don't want to go to work. So many people today have that feeling. Then the fear starts turning into hate, and they begin to hate going to work. Then the hate can turn into anger and people can become angry at their boss and their work.
     If I ran my set with fear, I would get 1 percent, not 100 percent, of what I get. And there would be no fun in going down the road together. And it *should* be fun. In work and in life, we're all supposed to get along. We're supposed to have so much fun, like puppy dogs with our tails wagging. It's supposed to be great living; it's supposed to be fantastic."

excerpt reads: "I hear stories about directors who scream at actors, or they trick them somehow to get a performance. And there are some people who try to run the whole business on fear. But I think this is such a joke -- it's pathetic and stupid at the same time. When people are in fear, they don't want to go to work. So many people today have that feeling. Then the fear starts turning into hate, and they begin to hate going to work. Then the hate can turn into anger and people can become angry at their boss and their work. If I ran my set with fear, I would get 1 percent, not 100 percent, of what I get. And there would be no fun in going down the road together. And it *should* be fun. In work and in life, we're all supposed to get along. We're supposed to have so much fun, like puppy dogs with our tails wagging. It's supposed to be great living; it's supposed to be fantastic."

once again thinking about this passage from David Lynch's book Catching the Big Fish

1 year ago 9093 3476 43 133
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Does a Baby’s Heart Rate Determine Their Talking? Many things have to go right in order for babies to learn to talk. Recent research highlights the role of something that might come as a surprise: heart rate.

Beautiful blog post from @psychologytoday.com on our recent @pnas.org paper!

1 year ago 6 5 0 1

Ouch!

1 year ago 2 0 0 0
Dinner for One with Freddie Frinton and May Warden
Dinner for One with Freddie Frinton and May Warden YouTube video by Retro TV

Happy Dinner for One viewing to all who celebrate, same procedure as every year!

youtu.be/5n7VI0rC8ZA?...

1 year ago 1 1 0 0
An infant and parent talking together. Stock photo.

An infant and parent talking together. Stock photo.

Researchers tracked babies’ heart rates and found a decelerating heart rate was associated with the production of words, showing that the autonomic nervous system, which regulates heart rate, interacts with speech production. In PNAS: www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/...

1 year ago 15 2 0 0

Look maybe our research subjects cry or soil themselves at relatively high rates but at least we in #DevPsychSky are never left wondering whether babies are faking the data by asking ChatGPT #SoBlessed

1 year ago 47 2 3 0

And I’ll point out that in the case of success stories like Bell Labs or many tech research shops, the advances did not come from big vision but anarchic autonomy, researchers told, “Do whatever you want.” The breakthroughs were rarely in anticipated directions. 8/n

1 year ago 18 7 1 0
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Recognizability and timing of infant vocalizations relate to fluctuations in heart rate | PNAS For human infants, producing recognizable speech is more than a cognitive process. It is a motor skill that requires infants to learn to coordinate...

First paper from the lab is officially published in PNAS!

We demonstrate ongoing fluctuations in heart rate coincide with vocal production and word formation in 24-mo-old infants.

www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/...

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1 year ago 9 4 2 1

Howdy everyone! I’m an Assistant Professor of Psychology at the University of Houston. My lab focuses on how the systems within and around infants change over development to support the production of language.

For the latest and greatest about my lab’s progress please follow: BorjonLab.bsky.social

1 year ago 1 0 0 0