skip to content

Adaptive Brain Lab

 

A new publication by Dr. Vasilis Karlaftis, Dr. Andrew Welchman and Professor Zoe Kourtzi answers how we extract meaningful structure and make predictions in novel environments.

Modelling human behavior and brain structure, they provide evidence that individuals adapt to the environment statistics using different strategies. Maximizers vs. matchers engage dissociable structural brain networks, suggesting alternate brain routes to learning predictive statistics.

Read the full article: www.eneuro.org/content/5/3/ENEURO.0382-17.2018

 

Twitter Feed

Latest news

Postdoc position in MRI Physics for Neuroscience

29 April 2024

An exciting opportunity to work with the Adaptive Brain Lab ( https://www.abg.psychol.cam.ac.uk ) and a talented team on MRI Physicists (Cambridge, Purdue University) at the interface of cutting-edge MRI sequence development and translation to human and animal Neuroscience. Apply by 30/05/24 : https://www.jobs.cam.ac.uk/...

Cambridge ReseARch Trail

18 March 2024

Learn more about ABL’s work as part of the 2024 Cambridge Festival. There is an augmented reality Cambridge ReseARch trail which can be followed by downloading the app, "Cambridge AR Trail", from the relevant app store or by scanning the QR codes on posters at each trail location to get exploring. Further details about the...

What is Brain Plasticity?

1 March 2024

The Adaptive Brain Lab features in BBC's Brain Hacks. https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/ m001qr3k/brain-hacks to find more details.