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    1. Neuroscience

    Updating the sulcal landscape of the human lateral parieto-occipital junction provides anatomical, functional, and cognitive insights

    Ethan H Willbrand, Yi-Heng Tsai ... Kevin S Weiner
    Revised
    Reviewed Preprint v2
    Updated
    • Fundamental
    • Compelling
    1. Neuroscience

    The nematode worm C. elegans chooses between bacterial foods as if maximizing economic utility

    Abraham Katzen, Hui-Kuan Chung ... Shawn R Lockery
    A worm with a nervous system of only 302 neurons satisfies the necessary and sufficient conditions for value-based decision making.
    1. Neuroscience

    Difficulty in artificial word learning impacts targeted memory reactivation and its underlying neural signatures

    Arndt-Lukas Klaassen, Björn Rasch
    Targeted memory reactivation improved memory performance of easy-to-learn words, but had no effect of difficult-to-learn words, which suggests a critical role of word learning difficulty in sleep associated memory reactivation.
    1. Neuroscience

    Nucleus accumbens dopamine tracks aversive stimulus duration and prediction but not value or prediction error

    Jessica N Goedhoop, Bastijn JG van den Boom ... Ingo Willuhn
    The extracellular concentration of dopamine in the nucleus accumbens core is progressively diminished by white noise, an underutilized, easy-to-titrate aversive stimulus, but is unaffected by white-noise intensity, context valence, and associated probabilistic contingencies.
    1. Structural Biology and Molecular Biophysics
    2. Plant Biology

    Mechanistic insight into a peptide hormone signaling complex mediating floral organ abscission

    Julia Santiago, Benjamin Brandt ... Michael Hothorn
    A plant peptide hormone controls organ shedding by acting as molecular glue that promotes the interaction between two membrane receptor kinases.
    1. Neuroscience
    2. Computational and Systems Biology

    The individuality of shape asymmetries of the human cerebral cortex

    Yu-Chi Chen, Aurina Arnatkevičiūtė ... Kevin M Aquino
    Asymmetries between the shape of the left and right human cortex are highly unique to individuals, akin to a neuroanatomical fingerprint, related to cognitive function, and primarily driven by person-specific environmental influences.
    1. Neuroscience

    Neural activity tracking identity and confidence in social information

    Nadescha Trudel, Patricia L Lockwood ... Marco K Wittmann
    People's confidence in information and their neural correlates in key regions of the social brain are more stable when tracking social advice compared to non-social information.
    1. Computational and Systems Biology
    2. Neuroscience

    A synergistic workspace for human consciousness revealed by Integrated Information Decomposition

    Andrea I Luppi, Pedro AM Mediano ... Emmanuel A Stamatakis
    Anaesthesia and disorders of consciousness both reduce the capacity of the human brain to integrate information, specifically targeting interactions within a shared circuit of regions in the brain’s default network.
    1. Neuroscience

    Human and macaque pairs employ different coordination strategies in a transparent decision game

    Sebastian Moeller, Anton M Unakafov ... Igor Kagan
    Using novel approach to study real-time social interactions shows that mutual action visibility facilitates static and dynamic coordination in both species, but whereas humans employ dynamic turn-taking to equalize rewards, macaques, after training with a human, compete between themselves.
    1. Neuroscience

    Topographic gradients of intrinsic dynamics across neocortex

    Golia Shafiei, Ross D Markello ... Bratislav Misic
    Intrinsic dynamics are shaped by the intersection of molecular, microstructural, connectomic, and activation gradients.