@DMN

146 Followers
146 Following
28 Posts

“The mind is its own place, and in itself can make a Heav'n of Hell, a Hell of Heav'n.”

John Milton

@dickretired
Unrelatedly, I wonder, especially since the last decade or so, &apart from DMN's major hubs, are there any differences between DMN's subcomponents back then when the DMN related research was in its infancy, & now, especially for the areas which are often intermixed with the salience network/reality monitoring areas, eg parts of ACC? Any change in the conceptualisation of DMN subcomponents, or is the ongoing inconsistency in its methodology something that we just have to live with?
Some of the opinions being said about ChatGPT tell us more about the opinion holder than about ChatGPT.

The purpose of models is not to fit the data but to sharpen the question.

-Samuel Karlin

Dear fellow scientists, feel free to promote your best work a bit more on here. It might feel three years old to you, but I might have missed it, or I have forgotten about it (which has more to do with my memory limitations than the quality of your work!). I might have moved on in my interests and your work is now something I should really read. Or I just need that fifth reminder to finally actually open that pdf in my reading folder!
@dickretired
I do wonder if you think that the Paracingulate sulcus (beyond the cingulate sulcus per se) is a promising/potential area that needs be thoroughly explored and investigated as a key area. If yes, why and how to proceed ( for eg cell recording or else) , thank you.

@DMN

Yes, interesting and unexpected. Rythms are everywhere, even in plants, and there are circadian ones, breathing ones and neural oscillatory ones of different frequencies. And we don’t understand them.

@dickretired @MolemanPeter

Here is a very interesting, yet kind of unrelated, paper with regards to readiness potential...

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1053811922008060

@dickretired

Wonderful, many thanks!

@dickretired
Curious to know similar comments about the fMRI studies regarding mirror and canonical neuron activations back in 2003 or so with James Row and others, how did that unfold and evolve over the years and where (and why) did it stop? Thanks