Reading List 311

readinglist
Published

November 7, 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 neuroimaging database combining movie-watching, eye-tracking, sensorimotor mapping, and cognitive tasks
Levchenko E, Chow-Wing-Bom H, Dick F, Tierney A, Skipper JI
bioRxiv:2025.09.25.678556

2

Contextual effects during sensorimotor adaptation are an emergent property of population coding in a cerebellar-inspired model
Wang T, Ivry RB
Sci Adv 11:eadr4540

3

Specialized structure of neural population codes in parietal cortex outputs
Safaai H, Wang AY, Kira S, Blanco Malerba S, Panzeri S, Harvey CD
Nat Neurosci:1–11

4

Motor learning after stroke: what we’ve learned and what lies ahead
Koch ET, Dukelow SP, Cluff T
Brain:awaf388

5

Agile and cooperative aerial manipulation of a cable-suspended load
Sun S, Wang X, Sanalitro D, Franchi A, Tognon M, Alonso-Mora J
Sci Robot 10:eadu8015

6

Single-cell, multi-region profiling of the macaque brain across the lifespan
Yang W et al.
bioRxiv:2025.10.31.685880

7

Striatal pathways for action counting and steering
Fallon IP, Roshchina M, Hong F, Fernandez S, Ruan S, Yin HH
bioRxiv:2025.11.02.686102

8

A probabilistic histological atlas of the human brain for MRI segmentation
Casamitjana A et al.
Nature:1–8

9

Dissociable roles of primary motor and supplementary motor cortex in shaping the neural drive to muscle
Escalante YR, Lei Y
bioRxiv:2025.10.28.685170

10

The missing half of the neurodynamical systems theory
Wang X-J
The Transmitter: Neuroscience News and Perspectives

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.