joebarnby.bsky.social
cognitive computational scientist | Director of SoCR Lab | FENS-Kavli scholar | Founder at Hypatia & www.senscapes.com | social cog 🫂 decision making👆mental health 🧠| joebarnby.com
Between London 🇬🇧 & Perth 🇦🇺
79 posts
2,440 followers
1,425 following
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Cheers, Jamie! and congrats again on your recent success :)
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thanks Sohee ! :)
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Cheers Rob :)
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thanks Noham!
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Looking forward to working more with w. Mitul Metha, Amir Englund, Michael Moutoussis, and Syeda Tahir on this award that we've been trying to get funded (with lots of rejections!) over the last four years. Thanks to the Wellcome for believing in the project.
Watch out for postdoc ads soon! 👀
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Congrats Rick ! Sounds v cool
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Thanks for reading - I'd be keen to hear your thoughts!
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Oh! That's annoying sorry. Sometimes that link takes a few seconds for the psyarxiv preprint to load, but its also downloadable through my github here (as is the code for the paper):
github.com/josephmbarnb...
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Congrats on this paper Philipp! Your theoretical model (particularly the top stream on self/other precision) converges nicely with our recent findings about self-other disintegration in BPD: osf.io/preprints/ps...
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thanks rick!
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thanks alex!
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@alexandrapike.bsky.social @lei-zhang.bsky.social
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Con 3: given that the presenters have a generic style, the format is always the same and loses a bit of the human element of podcasting.
Haven't played around with it too much yes but on face value I can see some useful applications!
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Pro 2: useful to listen back to get an overall feel of the essence of the paper (but this is dependent on the accuracy of the LLM)
Con 2: Loses nuance of the message a bit... maybe not outside of a podcast anyway, but some noticeable raised eye brow moments
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Pro 1: makes a quick audio summary of the paper which widens accessibility for the time-poor scientist
Con 1: A pretty generic presentation... if you can get over the style (and sometimes the cringe turns-of-phrase) it is listenable
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Con 3: given that the presenters have a generic style, the format is always the same and loses a bit of the human element of podcasting.
Haven't played around with it too much yes but on face value I can see some useful applications!
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Pro 2: useful to listen back to get an overall feel of the essence of the paper (but this is dependent on the accuracy of the LLM)
Con 2: Loses nuance of the message a bit... maybe not outside of a podcast anyway, but some noticeable raised eye brow moments
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Pro 1: makes a quick audio summary of the paper which widens accessibility for the time-poor scientist
Con 1: A pretty generic presentation... if you can get over the style (and sometimes the cringe turns-of-phrase) it is listenable
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#neuroscience #neuroskyence #PsychSciSky
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#neuroscience #neuroskyence #PsychSciSky
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This huge multi-site collab involved lots of equally vital moving parts, so lots of gratitude to all involved - All are without Bluesky, I believe (hopefully not for long!)
All data & code here:
github.com/josephmbarnb...
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We discuss how this model and paradigm provide a means of testing social generalisation in health and disorder with crisp predictions and can explain separate computational and phenomenological observations in BPD. Much more in the paper! All comments are welcomed. 🧪
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We also show that irrespective of diagnosis, more reported trauma, paranoia, and trait mentalising skills reduce social contagion effects