Reading List 240

readinglist
Published

April 12, 2024

More than 20 trainees and PIs from the Sensorimotor Superlab at Western University contribute to this reading list. Here are the articles that have interested us this week.

In addition we have a special section devoted to posters and talks being presented by Superlab members at the 2024 Neural Control of Movement meeting in Dubrovnik, Croatia, next week. Check it out.

Enjoy!
—the superlab

1

Functional recruitment and connectivity of the cerebellum supports the emergence of Theory of Mind in early childhood
Manoli A, Van Overwalle F, Grosse Wiesmann C, Valk SL
bioRxiv:2024.04.02.586955

2

Deciphering neuronal variability across states reveals dynamic sensory encoding
Akella S, Ledochowitsch P, Siegle JH, Belski H, Denman DJ, Buice MA, Durand S, Koch C, Olsen SR, Jia X
bioRxiv:2024.04.03.587408

3

Subtle visual latency can profoundly impair implicit sensorimotor learning
Hadjiosif AM, Abraham G, Ranjan T, Smith MA
bioRxiv:2024.03.14.585093

4

Toward a neuroscience of natural behavior
Cisek P, Green AM
Curr Opin Neurobiol 86:102859

5

De Novo sensorimotor skill learning through reuse of movement components
Gabriel GA, Mushtaq F, Morehead JR
bioRxiv:2024.02.20.581156

6

A cerebellar population coding model for sensorimotor learning
Wang T, Ivry RB
bioRxiv:2023.07.04.547720

NCM 2024 Posters and Talks

Tuesday, Individual Talks 1 (3-5pm)

Is there more to sequence learning than better anticipation?
Mehrdad Kashefi

Wednesday, Panel 3 (8-10am)

Closing the loop: The role of feedback in neural population dynamics
Jonathan Michaels, Britton Sauerbrei, Amy Orsborn, Laureline Logiaco

Wednesday, Poster Session

2-D-34
String-pulling behavior in the aging marmoset
Mathilde Bertrand

2-D-35
Characterizing marmoset forelimb coordination in string-pulling
Michael Karkuszewski

2-G-87
Using artificial neural networks to identify a neural basis of savings in motor learning
Mahdiyar Shahbazi

Friday, Poster Session

4-A-2
What makes some chords hard to play? Exploring the role of muscle synergies, biomechanical and cognitive factors of difficulty
Ali Ghavampour

4-D-40
Sequential planning is not always associated with a reaction time cost
Armin Panjehpour


Archive

You can look at an archive of our previous posts here: https://superlab.ca

Disclaimer

Articles appear on this list because they caught our eye, but their appearance here is not necessarily an endorsement of the work. We hope that you find something on this list you might not otherwise have come across—but, as always, please read with a critical eye.