Prof. Dr. Louisa Kulke

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31 Posts
Professor at University of Bremen for #Developmental and #Educational #Psychology, research on #attention, #emotion, #social development, ambassador of #OpenScience #MotherInScience
Coregistration of EEG and eye-tracking in infants: check out our new recommendations for tips and tricks on making it work https://link.springer.com/article/10.3758/s13414-024-02857-y
Coregistration of EEG and eye-tracking in infants and developing populations - Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics

Infants cannot be instructed where to look; therefore, infant researchers rely on observation of their participant’s gaze to make inferences about their cognitive processes. They therefore started studying infant attention in the real world from early on. Developmental researchers were early adopters of methods combining observations of gaze and behaviour with electroencephalography (EEG) to study attention and other cognitive functions. However, the direct combination of eye-tracking methods and EEG to test infants is still rare, as it includes specific challenges. The current article reviews the development of co-registration research in infancy. It points out specific challenges of co-registration in infant research and suggests ways to overcome them. It ends with recommendations for implementing the co-registration of EEG and eye-tracking in infant research to maximise the benefits of the two measures and their combination and to orient on Open Science principles while doing so. In summary, this work shows that the co-registration of EEG and eye-tracking in infant research can be beneficial to studying natural and real-world behaviour despite its challenges.

SpringerLink
For this study it was very useful that we combined gaze measures and EEG because brain and gaze measures diverged. We don't always look where we pay attention #coregistrationForTheWin

Young infants are sensitive to social context: Our #preregistered paper with Sahura Ertugrul, Emely Reyentanz & Vanessa Thomas just got published in Developmental Science @WileyPsychology #EarlyChristmasPresent #OpenScience
http://doi.org/10.1111/desc.13468

The paper shows that infants inhibit gaze to strangers even if their neural responses show that they are attentive to / interested in the stranger. The same pattern we find in adults.

11 strategies for making reproducible research and open science training the norm at research institutions: our paper just got published in @eLife: elifesciences.org/articles/89736 - it was great being part of this large international collaboration with many great collaborators
Social behaviour in mice: they work to interact with others but avoid aggressive others. Dopaminergic neurons are activated in mice's social company. Great #SfN23 talk by Camilla Bellone #neuroscience2023 #SfN2023
People are able to predict others' attention and if they see somebody else's pattern of attention, they can even tell who it was. Exciting findings from Kisten Ziman #SfN2023 #SfN23
Flies', humans' and other animals' social behaviour: it may be useful to look at all of them to understand social neuroscience. #SfN2023 talk by Mala Murthy
Ready for #SfN2023 and looking forward to the latest #neuroscience news. Check out our presentation with infant EEG and eye-tracking in live social situations https://cattendee.abstractsonline.com/meeting/10892/presentation/39919 #SfN23 #neurokids
cAttendee

#LabMilestone: after months of hard work setting up our EEG and eye-tracking lab, we finally tested our first pilot participant and it worked! Very excited - thanks to my great team who put this together! You can sign up to take part here: neuro-kids.de #NeuroKids