Reading List 297

readinglist
Published

May 30, 2025

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.

Enjoy!

—the superlab

1

A vector calculus for neural computation in the cerebellum
Fakharian MA, Shoup AM, Hage P, Elseweifi HY, Shadmehr R
Science 388:869–875

2

Bioresorbable, wireless dual stimulator for peripheral nerve regeneration
Ahn H-Y et al.
Nat Commun 16:4752

3

Flexible sensitivity to inputs during skilled tongue movements
Dasgupta R, Dong M, O’Connor DH
bioRxiv:2025.05.18.654702

4

Math and biology meet in the cerebellum
Churchland MM, Sawtell NB
Science 388:820–821

5

Bilateral integration in somatosensory cortex is controlled by behavioral relevance
Park H, Keri HVS, Yoo C, Bi C, Pluta SR
Nat Neurosci:1–11

6

Mastering diverse control tasks through world models
Hafner D, Pasukonis J, Ba J, Lillicrap T
Nature 640:647–653

7

The history and future of resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging
Biswal BB, Uddin LQ
Nature 641:1121–1131

8

Dynamic basal ganglia output signals license and suppress forelimb movements
Falasconi A, Kanodia H, Arber S
Nature:1–10

9

Unravelling neuromechanical constraints to finger independence
Mulla DM, Tilley PM, Keir PJ
bioRxiv:2025.05.23.655831

10

A hypothalamus–brainstem circuit governs the prioritization of safety over essential needs
Krauth N, Sach LK, Sitzia G, Clemmensen C, Kiehn O
Nat Neurosci:1–13

11

Learning dynamics of RNNs in closed-loop environments
Ger Y, Barak O
arXiv [csLG]


Superlab Papers

A Python toolbox for representational similarity analysis
van den Bosch JJF, Golan T, Peters B, Taylor J, Shahbazi M, Lin B, Charest I, Diedrichsen J, Kriegeskorte N, Mur M, Schuett H
bioRxiv:2025.05.22.655542


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.