[HTML][HTML] Improving the study of brain-behavior relationships by revisiting basic assumptions

C Westlin, JE Theriault, Y Katsumi… - Trends in cognitive …, 2023 - cell.com
Neuroimaging research has been at the forefront of concerns regarding the failure of
experimental findings to replicate. In the study of brain-behavior relationships, past failures …

Multivariate connectivity: A brief introduction and an open question

M Fang, C Poskanzer, S Anzellotti - Frontiers in Neuroscience, 2023 - frontiersin.org
Cognitive processes engage multiple interacting brain regions. To study these interactions,
researchers analyze neural data with “connectivity” methods, that capture the temporal co …

Intracranial electroencephalography and deep neural networks reveal shared substrates for representations of face identity and expressions

E Schwartz, A Alreja, RM Richardson… - Journal of …, 2023 - Soc Neuroscience
According to a classical view of face perception (;), face identity and facial expression
recognition are performed by separate neural substrates (ventral and lateral temporal face …

[PDF][PDF] Distinct Brain Regions Combine Auditory Representations with Different Visual Streams.

G Fajardo, M Fang, S Anzellotti - 2023 - files.osf.io
The superior temporal sulcus (STS) combines auditory and visual information. However, the
extent to which it relies on visual information from the ventral or dorsal stream remains …

Reevaluating the Ventral and Lateral Temporal Neural Pathways in Face Processing: Deep Learning Insights into Face Identity and Facial Expression Mechanisms

E Schwartz - 2024 - search.proquest.com
There has been much debate over how the functional organization of vision develops.
Contemporary theories that are inspired by analyzing neural data with machine learning …

Angular gyrus responses show joint statistical dependence with brain regions selective for different categories

M Fang, A Aglinskas, Y Li, S Anzellotti - Journal of Neuroscience, 2023 - Soc Neuroscience
Category selectivity is a fundamental principle of organization of perceptual brain regions.
Human occipitotemporal cortex is subdivided into areas that respond preferentially to faces …

[PDF][PDF] Category-selective neural responses are integrated in a topographically organized hub in the angular gyrus

M Fang, A Aglinskas, Y Li, S Anzellotti - PsyArXiv, 2019 - files.osf.io
Category-selectivity is a fundamental principle of organization of perceptual brain regions.
Human occipitotemporal cortex is subdivided into areas that respond preferentially to faces …