Matthew Broome

628 Followers
827 Following
291 Posts
Director Institute for Mental Health at The University of Birmingham; Deputy editor The British Journal of Psychiatry; Clinical Research Lead, West Midlands NHIR CRN; Psychiatrist at Birmingham Women's and Children's NHS Foundation Trust.
UoB staff pagehttps://www.birmingham.ac.uk/staff/profiles/psychology/broome-matthew.aspx
Some publicationshttps://scholar.google.com/citations?user=qa-IIdwAAAAJ&hl=en&oi=ao
Renewing Phenomenological Psychopathologyhttps://www.birmingham.ac.uk/research/mental-health/renewing-phenomenological-psychopathology/renewing-phenomenological-psychopathology.aspx
Institute for Mental Healthhttps://www.birmingham.ac.uk/research/mental-health/index.aspx

@lisabortolotti @philosophy @philosophyofmind Motivated reasoning and other biases can be useful and healthy, but that doesn't make them epistemically innocent. There is a crucial difference btw, say, #epistemology and positive #psychology , and human flourishing isn't the only intrinsic value. A's allowing #bias in her reasoning is a reason for B to lower her epistemic #trust in A's #testimony, social- epistemologically speaking . Cf. also #ethics of #belief .

#philosophy

The dogs enjoy the morning too #dogsofmastodon

New (updated) #preprint!

Defining #neural #modularity is hard: much history. We used toy ANNs to show structural and functional definitions not tightly related, resource constraints important, and we need to start thinking about temporal dynamics.

🧵 with @GabrielBena #neuroscience

https://arxiv.org/abs/2106.02626

Dynamics of specialization in neural modules under resource constraints

It has long been believed that the brain is highly modular both in terms of structure and function, although recent evidence has led some to question the extent of both types of modularity. We used artificial neural networks to test the hypothesis that structural modularity is sufficient to guarantee functional specialization, and find that in general, this doesn't necessarily hold. We then systematically tested which features of the environment and network do lead to the emergence of specialization. We used a simple toy environment, task and network, allowing us precise control, and show that in this setup, several distinct measures of specialization give qualitatively similar results. We further find that in this setup (1) specialization can only emerge in environments where features of that environment are meaningfully separable, (2) specialization preferentially emerges when the network is strongly resource-constrained, and (3) these findings are qualitatively similar across the different variations of network architectures that we tested, but that the quantitative relationships depend on the precise architecture. Finally, we show that functional specialization varies dynamically across time, and demonstrate that these dynamics depend on both the timing and bandwidth of information flow in the network. We conclude that a static notion of specialization, based on structural modularity, is likely too simple a framework for understanding intelligence in situations of real-world complexity, from biology to brain-inspired neuromorphic systems. We propose that thoroughly stress testing candidate definitions of functional modularity in simplified scenarios before extending to more complex data, network models and electrophysiological recordings is likely to be a fruitful approach.

arXiv.org
Three Ancient Roman Coins That Were Part of a Hoard Found in the U.K. Were Mysteriously Swapped With Other, More Valuable Coins
https://news.artnet.com/art-world/ancient-roman-coins-swapped-with-more-valuable-coins-uk-2343962
Three Ancient Roman Coins That Were Part of a Hoard Found in the U.K. Were Mysteriously Swapped With Other, More Valuable Coins | Artnet News

Three Ancient Roman coins found in the English county of Cornwall were swapped with more valuable coins, it was revealed earlier this month.

Artnet News
Perpetual Peace to the Communist Manifesto, 53 years; a Theory of Justice to the present, 52. And there was a whole Hegel in between, as it were.
Finished Wolin’s Heidegger in Ruins last weekend - glad I read it. Has some flaws but disturbing implications. Anyone else here read?

I’m an author and journalist, hopeful about the #TwitterMigration.

I write about science and technology and their cultural effects. My books include Chaos, The Information, and Time Travel, as well as biographies of Richard Feynman and Isaac Newton.

I’m working on a history of the telephone.

#Introduction #authors #science #technology #Feynman #Newton #TimeTravel #Chaos #telephone

Maybe he thinks if he kills the name and the logo everyone will then forget the thing he has destroyed.

Brain Disorders in Entangled Brains: More on Mental Disorders as Brain Disorders

New substack post discussing mental-disorders-as-brain-disorders w ideas from Anneli Jefferson, Luiz Pessoa (@PessoaBrain ), Lisa Feldman Barrett, Kevin Mitchell (@WiringtheBrain ), Matthew Broome (@matthewrbroome ) & Lisa Bortolotti (@[email protected] )

https://awaisaftab.substack.com/p/brain-disorders-in-entangled-brains

Brain Disorders in Entangled Brains

More on Mental Disorders as Brain Disorders

Psychiatry at the Margins

Too late for @[email protected] or @[email protected] or @[email protected] or @[email protected] to claim as a tax-deductible expense for our @[email protected] on Audrey Hepburn. https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001gz1s

RT @[email protected]

This #frockingFabulous Givenchy frock was worn by Audrey Hepburn in 1957’s Love in the Afternoon... this little bit of #Fashionhistory sold for £42,000 last year. Via Kerry Taylor Auctions.

🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/MadameGilflurt/status/1611674237370273793

BBC Radio 3 - Free Thinking, Audrey Hepburn

Matthew Sweet marks the 30th anniversary of the death of this icon of film and fashion.

BBC