🚨 We're very happy to introduce TRIBE v2: a foundation model of the brain's responses to sight, sound & language.
📄 Paper: ai.meta.com/research/pub...
▶️ Demo: aidemos.atmeta.com/tribev2/
💻 Code: github.com/facebookrese...
🤗 Model: huggingface.co/facebook/tri...
Posts by Aniol Santo-Angles
Code (python) is available at github: github.com/rl671/heterorc
Should be readily applicable to your own EEG/MEG decoding pipelines!
Great collaboration with @alexwoolgar.bsky.social @rhens.bsky.social , Sichao, Yanan, and John, during my time at @mrccbu.bsky.social & @theneuro.bsky.social ! (6/6)
How dynamics arise from the structure is my biggest interest. In this study, we started with a small step and asked how structure constrains dynamics. Spoiler: would that it were so simple… (1/6)
Our paper is out in @natneuro.nature.com!
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
We develop a geometric theory of how neural populations support generalization across many tasks.
@zuckermanbrain.bsky.social
@flatironinstitute.org
@kempnerinstitute.bsky.social
1/14
𝗛𝗼𝘄 𝗱𝗼 𝗯𝗿𝗮𝗶𝗻 𝗮𝗿𝗲𝗮𝘀 𝗿𝗲𝗹𝗮𝘁𝗲𝗱 𝘁𝗼 𝗳𝘂𝗻𝗰𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻?
"High-resolution activity maps of PFC did NOT align with cytoarchitecturally defined subregions."
Key tenet in neuroscience is that cytoarchitectonic boundaries correspond to functional ones.
NB: study in the mouse
#neuroskyence
doi.org/10.1038/s415...
With some trepidation, I'm putting this out into the world:
gershmanlab.com/textbook.html
It's a textbook called Computational Foundations of Cognitive Neuroscience, which I wrote for my class.
My hope is that this will be a living document, continuously improved as I get feedback.
Would love to hear expert views on this paper. It appears to show that the operationalization of brain activity the field has relied on for 3 decades—the BOLD response—is not actually a sensible measure of brain activity.
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
A must-read review. It argues that brain areas are only one of several organizing principles and are not especially central, given their weak correspondence to function. Cytoarchitecture and connectivity are a starting point, not the endpoint.
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
#neuroscience
Happy to share our new paper in @nathumbehav.nature.com: t.co/Ciq7AKvle5. Using 500k+ behavioral trials, we show that #serialdependence deviates from #Bayesian predictions, pointing to a new narrative about how recent experience shapes perception. @aozkirli.bsky.social @achetverikov.bsky.social
Doing a PhD is - at heart - one long discussion with your mentor. The discussion changes over time - with unexpected turns and ups & downs - but through it all is a pair of people discussing a topic endlessly to make sense of it.
PhD students: choose someone you like to talk to!
BOLD signal changes can oppose oxygen metabolism across the human cortex, Nature Neuroscience
fMRI signals “up,” but neural metabolism might be going “down.”
In our @natneuro.nature.com paper, we demonstrate that about 40% of voxels with robust BOLD responses exhibit opposite oxygen metabolism, revealing two distinct hemodynamic modes.
rdcu.be/eUPO8
funds @erc.europa.eu
#neuroskyence 🧵:
🚨 new preprint alert! biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
what is the architecture of an individual working memory?
1/n
Thanks to co-authors @YangJiarui2002 (X/twitter), Ying Zhou, @hannah-chu.bsky.social, @neurograce.bsky.social and @sreenivasanlab.bsky.social for their contributions to this work! 🎉
We found behaviorally relevant orthogonal subspaces during the retention period—replicating prefrontal intracranial results in non-human primates—but no evidence of sequential replay. This suggests the brain maintains sequences by transforming time into space!
Using broadband MEG with dimensionality reduction and multivariate decoding, we asked whether sequential items are preserved by replaying them in order or by organizing them into a low-dimensional neural manifold.
New preprint! 🎉 We investigate how the brain maintains multiple items in working memory, testing two competing hypotheses for sequential memory: neural subspaces vs. neural sequences.
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
It is actually an incredibly frustrating time to be a theoretical neuroscientist right now imo, for this reason
To those who access published (nonhuman) neurophysiology data & analysis code: what’s your favorite place to find it?
Colombo et al., Plos Biology, "Hemispherotomy leads to persistent sleep-like slow waves in the isolated cortex of awake humans"
journals.plos.org/plosbiology/...
mitochondria from bipolar patients are closer to the nucleus in these images; control patients' are spread out further
15 years in the making, we confirmed that mitochondria - the powerhouse of the cell - have an unusual localization in patients who experience psychosis (including schizophrenia and bipolar disorders). You’ll never guess what kind of patient cells we used to make this discovery… 🧵
It's never occurred to me that it IS an assumption. This is the most astonishing start to a paper I've read in years:
"Living organisms are assumed to produce same-species offspring. Here, we report a shift from this norm in Messor ibericus, an ant that lays individuals from two distinct species."
Talk: Cognition is Emergent - Earl K. Miller
Neuroscience and Philosophy Salon, 9-12-25
youtu.be/Sk4ehOcsDmM?...
Will try!
But I'll say in advance that I view the mouse brain as very different. Their anatomical connectivity is very high, with almost the entire cortex interconnected. Something like 97% if the Kennedy figures are right. Experiments in primates and humans are needed but obvly cannot be done now.
(1/26) Excited to share a new preprint led by grad student Albert Wakhloo, with me and Larry Abbott: "Associative synaptic plasticity creates dynamic persistent activity."
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
🚨New paper🚨
Neural manifolds went from a niche-y word to an ubiquitous term in systems neuro thanks to many interesting findings across fields. But like with any emerging term, people use it very differently.
Here, we clarify our take on the term, and review key findings & challenges rdcu.be/ex8hW
1/3) This may be a very important paper, it suggests that there are no prediction error encoding neurons in sensory areas of cortex:
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
I personally am a big fan of the idea that cortical regions (allo and neo) are doing sequence prediction.
But...
🧠📈 🧪
emotion wheel starting with "joy, fear, anger" in the center and then lapsing into gibberish
a friend of mine shared this ai-generated "emotion wheel" and unfortunately i have been laughing my ass off at it for like 15 minutes now. today i am feeling Fnliinneon
Because we must build good things while we scream about the bad, I have started a "Data for Good" team @data-for-good-team.bsky.social that partners with organizations needing short-term data science help. We have three projects ongoing & will add more as our capacity grows.
data-for-good-team.org
Depressed individuals often experience a profound slowing/standstill of time. Northoff argues this is due to a desynchronization between “self-time” (inner) and “world-time” (external); inner sense of time becomes abnormally slow, making external events feel overwhelmingly fast or unmanageable. This