Postdoctoral researcher at the Scene Grammar Lab studying attention, working memory, and temporal expectations
Dani Gresch
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New paper in PNAS! When the mind wanders, it often drifts to the body. We call this "body-wandering". These thoughts are often negative, but are associated with reduced ADHD & depression symptoms, driven by a distinct interoceptive-allostatic brain signature. pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2520822123
check out Dr. Williams' new paper on feature temporal predictions in dynamic search… first but not last from a fab PhD!
Check out this new cross-journal special Collection on Visual Imagery at Nature Communications, Communications Psychology and Scientific Reports: www.nature.com/collections/...! Get submitting!
@natcomms.nature.com, @commspsychol.nature.com
Attentional resources vary rhythmically, but what about susceptibility to #[email protected] &co show that theta & alpha phases modulate sensitivity & distractor impact, revealing rhythm-specific mechanisms shaping #attention & distractability @plosbiology.org 🧪 plos.io/4tU0vh4
New paper (first from my PhD!) out in Visual Cognition ✨ @tandfresearch.bsky.social
With the wonderful Sage Boettcher @dynacog-lab.bsky.social & Kia Nobre @brognition.bsky.social
We ask how temporal expectations can help us find targets in dynamic, cluttered environments when location is unknown.
Attention operates in a changing world, so attentional priority maps must likewise be dynamic. Our (Sage Boettcher, @visualattentionlab.bsky.social, @gwenlliams.bsky.social, Nir Shalev) TiCS paper argues this and propose key questions for future work hoping to account for dynamic priority maps.
Bots have made their way to Prolific experiments. Our lab has stopped online testing of adults entirely now for this reason - we want to know if what we study is real. Probably data collected 2-3 years ago are ok, but moving forward we just can't know. www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/...