journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38521638/cluster-kinds-and-the-developmental-origins-of-consciousness
#21
LETTER
Henry Taylor, Andrew J Bremner
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
February 29, 2024: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38423829/the-computational-structure-of-consummatory-anhedonia
#22
REVIEW
Anna F Hall, Michael Browning, Quentin J M Huys
Anhedonia is a reduction in enjoyment, motivation, or interest. It is common across mental health disorders and a harbinger of poor treatment outcomes. The enjoyment aspect, termed 'consummatory anhedonia', in particular poses fundamental questions about how the brain constructs rewards: what processes determine how intensely a reward is experienced? Here, we outline limitations of existing computational conceptualisations of consummatory anhedonia. We then suggest a richer reinforcement learning (RL) account of consummatory anhedonia with a reconceptualisation of subjective hedonic experience in terms of goal progress...
February 28, 2024: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38418366/how-is-helping-behavior-regulated-in-the-brain
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Meng Zhang, Guohua Chen, Rongfeng K Hu
In humans and other animals, individuals can actively respond to the specific needs of others. However, the neural circuits supporting helping behaviors are underspecified. In recent work, Zhang, Wu, and colleagues identified a new role for the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) in the encoding and regulation of targeted helping behavior (allolicking) in mice.
February 27, 2024: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38413257/curiosity-and-the-dynamics-of-optimal-exploration
#24
REVIEW
Francesco Poli, Jill X O'Reilly, Rogier B Mars, Sabine Hunnius
What drives our curiosity remains an elusive and hotly debated issue, with multiple hypotheses proposed but a cohesive account yet to be established. This review discusses traditional and emergent theories that frame curiosity as a desire to know and a drive to learn, respectively. We adopt a model-based approach that maps the temporal dynamics of various factors underlying curiosity-based exploration, such as uncertainty, information gain, and learning progress. In so doing, we identify the limitations of past theories and posit an integrated account that harnesses their strengths in describing curiosity as a tool for optimal environmental exploration...
February 26, 2024: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38395706/the-neurobiology-of-interoception-and-affect
#25
REVIEW
M J Feldman, E Bliss-Moreau, K A Lindquist
Scholars have argued for centuries that affective states involve interoception, or representations of the state of the body. Yet, we lack a mechanistic understanding of how signals from the body are transduced, transmitted, compressed, and integrated by the brains of humans to produce affective states. We suggest that to understand how the body contributes to affect, we first need to understand information flow through the nervous system's interoceptive pathways. We outline such a model and discuss how unique anatomical and physiological aspects of interoceptive pathways may give rise to the qualities of affective experiences in general and valence and arousal in particular...
February 22, 2024: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38388258/common-and-distinct-neural-mechanisms-of-attention
#26
REVIEW
Ruobing Xia, Xiaomo Chen, Tatiana A Engel, Tirin Moore
Despite a constant deluge of sensory stimulation, only a fraction of it is used to guide behavior. This selective processing is generally referred to as attention, and much research has focused on the neural mechanisms controlling it. Recently, research has broadened to include more ways by which different species selectively process sensory information, whether due to the sensory input itself or to different behavioral and brain states. This work has produced a complex and disjointed body of evidence across different species and forms of attention...
February 22, 2024: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38378379/improving-intergroup-relations-with-meta-perception-correction-interventions
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Samantha L Moore-Berg, Boaz Hameiri
We explore meta-perceptions (i.e., what we think others think about reality), their impact on intergroup conflict, and the interventions correcting these often-erroneous perceptions. We introduce a two (direct or indirect) by two (with or without framing) framework classifying these interventions, and we critically assess the benefits and constraints of these approaches.
February 19, 2024: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38632008/what-is-abstract-about-seeing-social-interactions
#28
LETTER
Liuba Papeo
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
February 17, 2024: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38341322/rationality-preferences-and-emotions-with-biological-constraints-it-all-starts-from-our-senses
#29
REVIEW
Rafael Polanía, Denis Burdakov, Todd A Hare
Is the role of our sensory systems to represent the physical world as accurately as possible? If so, are our preferences and emotions, often deemed irrational, decoupled from these 'ground-truth' sensory experiences? We show why the answer to both questions is 'no'. Brain function is metabolically costly, and the brain loses some fraction of the information that it encodes and transmits. Therefore, if brains maximize objective functions that increase the fitness of their species, they should adapt to the objective-maximizing rules of the environment at the earliest stages of sensory processing...
February 9, 2024: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38331595/simplifying-social-learning
#30
REVIEW
Leor M Hackel, David A Kalkstein, Peter Mende-Siedlecki
Social learning is complex, but people often seem to navigate social environments with ease. This ability creates a puzzle for traditional accounts of reinforcement learning (RL) that assume people negotiate a tradeoff between easy-but-simple behavior (model-free learning) and complex-but-difficult behavior (e.g., model-based learning). We offer a theoretical framework for resolving this puzzle: although social environments are complex, people have social expertise that helps them behave flexibly with low cognitive cost...
February 7, 2024: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38280837/representational-structures-as-a-unifying-framework-for-attention
#31
REVIEW
Angus F Chapman, Viola S Störmer
Our visual system consciously processes only a subset of the incoming information. Selective attention allows us to prioritize relevant inputs, and can be allocated to features, locations, and objects. Recent advances in feature-based attention suggest that several selection principles are shared across these domains and that many differences between the effects of attention on perceptual processing can be explained by differences in the underlying representational structures. Moving forward, it can thus be useful to assess how attention changes the structure of the representational spaces over which it operates, which include the spatial organization, feature maps, and object-based coding in visual cortex...
January 27, 2024: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38280836/participant-diversity-is-necessary-to-advance-brain-aging-research
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gagan S Wig, Sarah Klausner, Micaela Y Chan, Cameron Sullins, Anirudh Rayanki, Maya Seale
An absence of population-representative participant samples has limited research in healthy brain aging. We highlight examples of what can be gained by enrolling more diverse participant cohorts, and propose recommendations for specific reforms, both in terms of how researchers accomplish this goal and how institutions support and benchmark these efforts.
January 26, 2024: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38246816/a-synergetic-turn-in-cognitive-neuroscience-of-brain-diseases
#33
REVIEW
Agustin Ibanez, Morten L Kringelbach, Gustavo Deco
Despite significant improvements in our understanding of brain diseases, many barriers remain. Cognitive neuroscience faces four major challenges: complex structure-function associations; disease phenotype heterogeneity; the lack of transdiagnostic models; and oversimplified cognitive approaches restricted to the laboratory. Here, we propose a synergetics framework that can help to perform the necessary dimensionality reduction of complex interactions between the brain, body, and environment. The key solutions include low-dimensional spatiotemporal hierarchies for brain-structure associations, whole-brain modeling to handle phenotype diversity, model integration of shared transdiagnostic pathophysiological pathways, and naturalistic frameworks balancing experimental control and ecological validity...
January 20, 2024: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38245431/studying-large-language-models-as-compression-algorithms-for-human-culture
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nicholas Buttrick
Large language models (LLMs) extract and reproduce the statistical regularities in their training data. Researchers can use these models to study the conceptual relationships encoded in this training data (i.e., the open internet), providing a remarkable opportunity to understand the cultural distinctions embedded within much of recorded human communication.
January 19, 2024: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38296745/the-neurodevelopmental-origins-of-seeing-social-interactions
#35
LETTER
Emalie McMahon, Leyla Isik
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
January 9, 2024: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38199949/information-decomposition-and-the-informational-architecture-of-the-brain
#36
REVIEW
Andrea I Luppi, Fernando E Rosas, Pedro A M Mediano, David K Menon, Emmanuel A Stamatakis
To explain how the brain orchestrates information-processing for cognition, we must understand information itself. Importantly, information is not a monolithic entity. Information decomposition techniques provide a way to split information into its constituent elements: unique, redundant, and synergistic information. We review how disentangling synergistic and redundant interactions is redefining our understanding of integrative brain function and its neural organisation. To explain how the brain navigates the trade-offs between redundancy and synergy, we review converging evidence integrating the structural, molecular, and functional underpinnings of synergy and redundancy; their roles in cognition and computation; and how they might arise over evolution and development...
January 9, 2024: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38195365/towards-an-ai-policy-framework-in-scholarly-publishing
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zhicheng Lin
The rapid adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) tools in academic research raises pressing ethical concerns. I examine major publishing policies in science and medicine, uncovering inconsistencies and limitations in guiding AI usage. To encourage responsible AI integration while upholding transparency, I propose an enabling framework with author and reviewer policy templates.
January 8, 2024: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38195364/political-reinforcement-learners
#38
REVIEW
Lion Schulz, Rahul Bhui
Politics can seem home to the most calculating and yet least rational elements of humanity. How might we systematically characterize this spectrum of political cognition? Here, we propose reinforcement learning (RL) as a unified framework to dissect the political mind. RL describes how agents algorithmically navigate complex and uncertain domains like politics. Through this computational lens, we outline three routes to political differences, stemming from variability in agents' conceptions of a problem, the cognitive operations applied to solve the problem, or the backdrop of information available from the environment...
January 8, 2024: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38185605/socioeconomic-disparities-harm-social-cognition
#39
LETTER
Sol Fittipaldi, Joaquín Migeot, Agustin Ibanez
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
January 6, 2024: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38160068/in-praise-of-empathic-ai
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael Inzlicht, C Daryl Cameron, Jason D'Cruz, Paul Bloom
In this article we investigate the societal implications of empathic artificial intelligence (AI), asking how its seemingly empathic expressions make people feel. We highlight AI's unique ability to simulate empathy without the same biases that afflict humans. While acknowledging serious pitfalls, we propose that AI expressions of empathy could improve human welfare.
December 29, 2023: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
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