If you're interested in a short behind-the-scenes of the retraction of a mega-metascience paper—the first of its kind (the retraction, not the paper)—this might be for you! Had to gloss over so many details to observe allotted time but happy to share an extended version of my slide deck with links.
Posts by Maria Ribeiro
A cool workshop on Emergence happening next week at the Fields institute in Toronto, and you can join for free! emergence-multiscale-neuro-workshop.github.io
Regular neck + full body stretches (it is all connected) plus back strengthening exercises. It turns out posture is not that important :)
Effective Business leaders: "It takes several months for new employees to become fully productive members of the team..."
Universities: EXCITING 6 MONTH POSITION REPLACING THE LAST PERSON WHO WAS HERE 6 MONTHS.
Modern theories of emotion (especially “interoceptive inference”) often cite William James as a key inspiration. But what did James actually say about emotion, and is it supported by the data? Here’s a brief look at the core arguments and classic evidence. 🧵
🧵1/7
New study: How do adolescent cognitive ability and education predict adult mental disorders?
🧠📚➜🧑⚕️
Using Norwegian register data (N = 272,351 men) of GP diagnoses and military assessed cognitive abilities.
👇
1/ New paper by Hame Park, (@AraziAyelet), Bharath Talluri, Marco Celotto, Stefano Panzeri, Alan Stocker & Tobias Donner published in Nature Communications – “Confirmation Bias through Selective Readout of Information Encoded in Human Parietal Cortex”: rdcu.be/etlR7. Here is a summary:
"exploratory data analysis is of great importance for those
domains of inquiry where explicit and mathematically precise
theories are lacking. ... results [..] can be completely opposite to what was expected, even though in hindsight..." #neuroscience#psychology
www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
When your statistical model "fits the data well" ...
In sum, causal studies are needed to elucidate the nature of the association between heart rate, the HEP and the neural processing of incoming sensory stimuli. We hope these findings will help unravel these interactions and inspire further studies.
In within-subject analyses, we did not find evidence that heart rate affects sensorimotor processing. The HEP changed with heart rate but was not affected by attention orienting. Heart rate and cardiac phase at the time of stimulus onset did not predict reaction time.
scatter plots illustrating the relationship between HAP amplitude and reaction time and heart rate
Participants with faster heart rates showed stronger HEPs in the frontal lobe and participants with stronger HEP over the motor cortex responded slower. These suggest that the HEP and heart rate might interfere with neural processing. However, causal interactions remain to be established.
We examined three questions. One, if attention orienting changed the neural response to the heartbeat (heartbeat-evoked potential, HEP). Two, if the HEP changed with heart rate and, three, if heart rate and the HEP were associated with sensorimotor processing of an auditory suprathreshold stimulus.
Graph showing change in heart rate from before a warning cue up to 8 seconds after. Heart rate decreases reaching a minimum around 3 seconds after.
Heart rate deceleration (bradycardia) is observed during states of focused attention, in response to a threat (fear response) or during attention orienting in expectation of an incoming stimulus (attentive anticipation). Yet the role of heart rate within these cognitive contexts remains unclear.
Our study on heart-brain interactions during attention orienting is finally out:
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/...
Open access preprint:
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
#neuroskyence #heart-brain #brain-body #EEG #CogSci #cardiac #neuroscience
🧵⬇️
Many insights (and some interesting open questions) from @ribeironeuro.bsky.social Keynote Talk at the #MindBrainBody Symposium on the psychophysiology of temporal attention, with a great focus on cardiac deceleration 🫀⏱️
#MBBS25
“‘No data speaks for itself,’ McCoy said, forceful.
‘Data just lies there. People speak.’”
I think that’s my organizing principle for 2025, courtesy of @diane.dianeduane.com’s classic SPOCK’S WORLD, which I finally read towards the end of last year
Logo of the MindBrainBody Symposium
📣 Come join us for the #MindBrainBody Symposium 2025!
📆 March 10-12, 2025
📍 Berlin & online
🔎 mindbrainbody.de
Keynotes:
- Ivan de Araujo
- Nadine Gogolla
- Maria Ribeiro @ribeironeuro.bsky.social
- Markus Ullsperger
- Tor Wager
- Veronica Witte @veronicawitte.bsky.social
#interoception
Brain-wide dynamics linking sensation to action during decision-making
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
The modulation of the HEP by heart rate emerged as a marker of neuronal gain modulated by arousal and associated with mental effort, suggesting that the impact of heart rate fluctuations on the brain depends on cognitive state.
The heartbeat-evoked potential (HEP) was stronger for slower heart rates. Surprisingly, this effect was stronger during periods of high mental effort, was absent during rest, and was related to the amplitude of phasic pupil responses. #pupil #arousal #heart-brain
Humans are better at detecting weak sensory signals during periods of slow heart rate. Our preprint explored the effect of heart rate on the brain by studying the link between heart rate and the heartbeat-evoked potential (the neural response to the heartbeat). #EEG
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...