Research friends, announcing a new venture! More coming soon... eyna.us
Research friends, announcing a new venture! More coming soon... eyna.us
Book cover. A silhouette of a person's head filled with colorful geometric shapesβperhaps symbolizing cognitive resources or deployment thereof. The style is attractive and modern, if generic. text: The Rational Use of Cognitive Resources Falk Lieder, Frederick Callaway, Thomas L. Griffithts
I'm excited to announce that I had my first (co-authored) book published today! "The Rational Use of Cognitive Resources" with Falk Lieder and Tom Griffiths (@cocoscilab.bsky.social ). You can read it for free! (see thread)
A new study from Anthropic finds that gains in coding efficiency when relying on AI assistance did did not meet statistical significance; AI use noticeably degraded programmersβ understanding of what they were doing. Incredible.
My lab is recruiting a postdoc and a full-time research technician to work on an NIH-funded project studying age-related changes in memory for naturalistic events. Behavior, fMRI, and blood-based biomarkers. 3+ years funding guaranteed.
Postdoc: tinyurl.com/ykjfbnj8
Tech: tinyurl.com/2f2hw3f5
Paper testing various detection models: bfi.uchicago.edu/wp-content/u...
Pangram: www.pangram.com
GPTZero also does very well, but higher false positive rates
There's a light at the end of this AI slop tunnel... very excited to see that Pangram has 99.98% accuracy in detecting AI writing, false alarm rate of .01%, and is validated in independent tests! (plus it's free, and easy to upload things to)
This -- a model bill to effectively decimate non-STEM research by requiring 3-3 teaching loads outside of "STEM or Americanism and western civilization" -- seems...extremely bad but also quite plausible.
ICYMI: Here's a recording of today's talk www.youtube.com/watch?v=z5ae...
@sebastianshorn.bsky.social
@kendraseaman.bsky.social
@kimberlychiew.bsky.social
@colleencfrank.bsky.social
@zitamayer.bsky.social
@cvlneuro.bsky.social
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!
I spend so much time verifying everything now from art to cited sources to photos to historical references to citations to quotes to legal and medical information that it's really hard to fathom how much work AI has collectively added to the world, not reduced
psych departments post a faculty job that has nothing to do with AI challenge
Three German universities offering post-docs for researchers "who cannot conduct or continue their work in the USA appropriately because of actual political pressure. "
www.uni-konstanz.de/zukunftskoll...
Memory problems will change how you see the world...literally π
Across two new papers, we examined the eye movement patterns of younger adults, older adults, individuals with mild cognitive impairment, and amnesic cases.
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3) This indicates that imagery can modify memory to accommodate anticipated changes, improving the ability to detect that a familiar face is presentβbut not the ability to pick that face out of a lineup. These findings thus identify a novel dissociation between old/new and forced-choice recognition.
2) At study, participants saw neutral faces and were cued to imagine them in happy or angry expressions. At test, old and new faces were shown as happy or angry. When old faces' test expression matched the imagined expression, old/new recognition was betterβbut forced-choice accuracy was unaffected.
1) Given that items don't look exactly the same at encoding and retrieval in real-world recognitionβincluding consequential uses of memory, like eyewitness memoryβDarya Zabelina and I examined whether visual imagery could be used to improve our ability to recognize people across appearance changes.
New paper out! Imagery can directionally modify memory encoding, to manipulate later recognition for changed faces. Essentially, imagery can be used to simulate effects of higher (or lower) study-test similarity for an item itself. @psychonomicsociety.bsky.social link.springer.com/article/10.1...
So happy to share our paper on the role of the hippocampus as a mismatch detector:
doi.org/10.1073/pnas...
We show that the hippocampus detects mismatches between ongoing experiences and episodic memories but not generalised schematic knowledge.
See π§΅for how we got here:
#neuroskyence #PsychSciSky
Very cool and strong effect for me!
It reminded me of this amazing fovea visualizer that I saw on the other platform a few years ago. Open it, make full screen, and see the extent of your fovea! π www.shadertoy.com/view/4dsXzM
We make predictions based on general knowledge and/or specific memories. Different brain areas are active when these distinct predictions are violated β and hippocampus selectively responds to prediction errors based on episodic memory.
Cool work by @chrismbird.bsky.social @ayab.bsky.social et al!
Cortico-hippocampal interactions underlie schema-supported memory encoding in older adults
New paper led by @shenyanghuang.bsky.social!
academic.oup.com/cercor/artic...
Older adults' memory benefits from richer semantic contexts. We found connectivity patterns supporting this semantic scaffolding.
Adaptive compression as a unifying framework for episodic and semantic memory
Perspective by David G. Nagy (@davidnagy.bsky.social), GergΕ OrbΓ‘n & Charley M. Wu (@thecharleywu.bsky.social)
Web: go.nature.com/3ZkmRLb
PDF: rdcu.be/epAQ0
Does the culture you grow up in shape the way you see the world? In a new Psych Review paper, @chazfirestone.bsky.social & I tackle this centuries-old question using the MΓΌller-Lyer illusion as a case study. Come think through one of history's mysteries with usπ§΅(1/13):
4) These results led us to propose a new theory of attentional guidance, which we term rational integration: different sources of information, in this case episodic memory and semantic knowledge, are rationally combined and prioritized based on their relative strength/precision to guide attention.
3) When only unconscious memory was availableβi.e., cases in which participants exhibited memory-driven performance improvements despite a confident lack of awareness for that memoryβmemory only guided search when semantic knowledge had failed to get the eyes to the target (aka, incongruent scenes).
2) We manipulated semantic knowledge via schema congruency (objects in congruent vs incongruent scene locations), and measured recognition memory for the scenes. When detailed recollection was available, memory was integrated with semantic knowledge to guide early eye movements during search.
1) The extent to which episodic memory guides visual search when semantic knowledge is available is debated. We found that whether memory influences search depends on what type of memory is available.
Our new paper on how episodic memory and semantic knowledge interact to influence eye movements during search is out now in Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, with @jmhenderson.bsky.social and Andy Yonelinas! (summary below) link.springer.com/article/10.3...
#psynomPBR @psychonomicsociety.bsky.social
Can you predict the future? Your brain and your eyes can.
π§΅
I had the honour of writing a @currentbiology.bsky.social Dispatch in which I discuss exciting new findings from @philippbuchel.bsky.social, Klingspohr, Kehl & Staresina (2024).
Read the Dispatch here:
doi.org/10.1016/j.cu...
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For my first post, I thought I'd share my first ever lab photos as PI that we took last week :) (+ the fact that I'm recruiting more PhD students for Fall 2025!) memlab.uark.edu