📦 Oculizer is open source! If you're interested in programmable lighting or audio analysis, feel free to check it out and contribute.
https://t.co/fI944cfSEA
#Python#Music#Lighting#OpenSource (7/7)
🧵 Excited to share Oculizer, a Python module I've been developing for the past year! It enables automated control of programmable lighting fixtures, making them react to music in real-time. Here's how it works... (1/7)
🧪 While not part of my official research, I'm hoping this project could eventually help study how light-sound combinations influence crowd psychology and behavior in different environments. (6/7)
Thrilled to see our paper on conversation & “the self” out in @PNASNews. The brilliant @c_welk & @thaliawheatley were a joy to work with on this! Check out first-author @c_welk’s thread below! https://t.co/JFf5aLy3m3
How do we reach agreement? @HaranSened,@shannon47burns@DianaTamir@falklab @L_MwilambweT, Lily Tsoi and I just published a preprint on the conversational dynamics supporting agreement. Dive in to see how exploring diverse perspectives makes a difference. [1/8] 🧵
Had a great weekend hanging with other conversation researchers during the DIMS symposium at UCLA! Shout out to @GraceQMiao for assembling such a dream team of scientists. I'm stoked for the future (and present!) of conversation research ☺️
We're hiring! @DartmouthPBS is searching for a new full-time tenure-track Assistant Professor studying social interaction. We're open to a wide variety of methods and perspectives. Review of applications starts Oct 15. Details here: https://t.co/quwItqAuqA
Congratulations to our @Dartmouth WISP (Women In Science Project) intern Katherine (Kathy) Jia '27 for winning Runner Up at this year's M.A.D. (Made At Dartmouth) Research Video Contest with this submission on her work with @BullsLandry in @SCRAP_Lab: https://t.co/TxpOQRmAqR
By insisting that every brain-behavior association study include hundreds or even thousands of participants, we risk stifling innovation. Smaller studies are essential to test new scanning paradigms.
By Emily S. Finn
https://t.co/eg9AtTRYyb
Experts who write fearfully about misinformation often depict humans as gullible saps whose zombie minds are infected by lies spread by social media.
In this week's @NewYorker, I argue that these writers get something fundamentally wrong how beliefs work: https://t.co/ha4MHOWevV
We're excited for the alpha release of our Chatify 🤖package in collaboration with @neuromatch! Chatify adds an LLM-powered "AI tutor" widget to Jupyter notebooks.
Try it by adding this code to the top cell:
!pip install chatify
%load_ext chatify
Link: https://t.co/f4fxgN8Rgq
This year I am particularly looking for prospective graduate students who are interested in studying social cognition by using deep neural networks as cognitive models to explain the computations performed by social brain circuits.