Ambra Ferrari

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123 Posts
Cognitive neuroscientist, postdoc at CIMeC (University of Trento, Italy). Here to chat about (neuro)science and its links to education and society.
Webpagehttps://ambrafer.github.io/
Scholarhttps://shorturl.at/lvCIK
Twitterhttps://twitter.com/ambrafer
Blueskyhttps://bsky.app/profile/ambrafer.bsky.social
One month left to submit an abstract to Highlights in the Language Sciences, marking the end of the Language in Interaction 10-year Programme in Nijmegen, NL. **FREE** registration/submission, stellar invited speakers: https://hils2024.nl
@neuroscience @cognition @cogsci
Highlights in the Language Sciences – CONFERENCE 2024

How do we communicate with babies? Here is a little contribution that I wrote for Het Talige Brein, a blog for science outreach run by some of my lab mates (feel free to reach out for refs)
https://taalenhersenen.wordpress.com/2023/11/29/hoe-kunnen-we-communiceren-met-babys/

@neuroscience @cogsci
@neuro

How can we communicate with babies?

Few things are as frustrating to caregivers as not knowing what their fussy baby needs, while they hopelessly ask: “What’s going on? Do you need to sleep? Or do you want milk?”. H…

Het Talige Brein
#multisensory pals! Special issue out now ‘Decision and control processes in multisensory perception’ edited by Chris Fetsch and Uta Noppeney:
https://tinyurl.com/2mfmvzkf
@cognition @cogsci
⭐️Big News⭐️I got a #MSCA Postdoctoral Fellowship to study multimodal communication at CIMeC (University of Trento). Thanks @mscactions for the great opportunity!
For future applicants - see my thoughts, tips and experience here: https://twitter.com/ambrafer/status/1627626051332349955
@academicchatter
#academicchatter #postdoc
Ambra Ferrari on Twitter

“⭐️Big News⭐️I got a #MSCA Postdoctoral Fellowship to study multimodal communication at @cimec_unitrento @UniTrento. Thanks @MSCActions for the great opportunity! For future applicants: my thoughts, tips and experience below🧵1/17 @AcademicChatter @timeshighered @PostDocsForum”

Twitter
We then consider David Pitcher's proposal of a lateral visual pathway specifically dedicated to the dynamic aspects of social perception and reconceive it from a multimodal perspective (“lateral processing pathway”).
We start from Judith Holler's psycholinguistic framework that characterises face-to-face communication at three parallel processing levels: multiplex signals, multimodal gestalts and multilevel predictions.

"Updating contextual sensory expectations for adaptive behaviour" is out now in #JNeurosci
https://www.jneurosci.org/content/42/47/8855

w/ David Richter and @florisdelange

Relevant to folks interested in #perception #prediction #learning #neuroscience

See original thread with a quick overview on the bird: https://twitter.com/ambrafer/status/1597191073402654720

@neuroscience @neuro @cognition @cogsci @fmri

Updating Contextual Sensory Expectations for Adaptive Behavior

The brain has the extraordinary capacity to construct predictive models of the environment by internalizing statistical regularities in the sensory inputs. The resulting sensory expectations shape how we perceive and react to the world; at the neural level, this relates to decreased neural responses to expected than unexpected stimuli (“expectation suppression”). Crucially, expectations may need revision as context changes. However, existing research has often neglected this issue. Further, it is unclear whether contextual revisions apply selectively to expectations relevant to the task at hand, hence serving adaptive behavior. The present fMRI study examined how contextual visual expectations spread throughout the cortical hierarchy as we update our beliefs. We created a volatile environment: two alternating contexts contained different sequences of object images, thereby producing context-dependent expectations that needed revision when the context changed. Human participants of both sexes attended a training session before scanning to learn the contextual sequences. The fMRI experiment then tested for the emergence of contextual expectation suppression in two separate tasks, respectively, with task-relevant and task-irrelevant expectations. Effects of contextual expectation emerged progressively across the cortical hierarchy as participants attuned themselves to the context: expectation suppression appeared first in the insula, inferior frontal gyrus, and posterior parietal cortex, followed by the ventral visual stream, up to early visual cortex. This applied selectively to task-relevant expectations. Together, the present results suggest that an insular and frontoparietal executive control network may guide the flexible deployment of contextual sensory expectations for adaptive behavior in our complex and dynamic world. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The world is structured by statistical regularities, which we use to predict the future. This is often accompanied by suppressed neural responses to expected compared with unexpected events (“expectation suppression”). Crucially, the world is also highly volatile and context-dependent: expected events may become unexpected when the context changes, thus raising the crucial need for belief updating. However, this issue has generally been neglected. By setting up a volatile environment, we show that expectation suppression emerges first in executive control regions, followed by relevant sensory areas, only when observers use their expectations to optimize behavior. This provides surprising yet clear evidence on how the brain controls the updating of sensory expectations for adaptive behavior in our ever-changing world.

Journal of Neuroscience