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  1. Pinned Tweet
    14 Jan 2019

    Our new article in is out: can we pay attention while we ? In this article from and in collaboration with and , we show that sleepers can attend to one speaker when two are talking at the same time.

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  2. Retweeted
    Jan 29

    Today I will be teaching my undergrad course "How to build a brain from scratch" for the 2nd year running. I've put the materials online - include a document with all lecture slides and notes, which is about as long as a decent novel. Enjoy!

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  3. Retweeted
    Jan 28

    A lire sur 16 pages dans le de février, mon grand sur le de aux . Un travail de longue haleine réalisé avec , qui a bravé falaises et épines pour photographier de minuscules et de gigantesques .

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  4. Jan 28

    We raise issues regarding the formulation of some of the premises of the unfolding argument. Most importantly, we sought to show that causal structure theories of consciousness are empirical and falsifiable, and very much within "the realm of science".

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  5. Jan 28
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  6. Retweeted
    Jan 28

    This time it IS out! Not Born Yesterday, arguing that people aren’t gullible. Psychology! Political science! History! Anthropology! Media studies! ToC below, and threads to follow with stuff I wish I’d put in the book

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  7. Retweeted
    Jan 28

    Hugo Mercier's new book is out today (). It's an extended version of his excellent paper "How gullible are we?" (). Mercier shows that people are not stupid. They have good mechanisms of epistemic vigilance.

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  8. Retweeted
    Jan 28

    Hugo Mercier's excellent and timely book is out today Not Born Yesterday | Princeton University Press

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  9. Retweeted
    Jan 26

    , & ; together to better understand . Announcing the publication of our interdisciplinary study of vision in FND. Available in Cortex: 1/6

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  10. Jan 25

    Great work from on an oft-overlooked fact in sleep research: a lot of people share their bed!

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  11. Retweeted
    Jan 24
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  12. Retweeted
    Jan 23
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  13. Retweeted

    Acoustic slow wave sleep enhancement via a novel, automated device improves executive function in middle-aged men

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  14. Retweeted
    Jan 22

    New research suggests PSG data + AI could herald new insights into insomnia. "We thus conclude that .... the exclusion of PSG recordings from the diagnosis of insomnia are no longer warranted and that clinicians should revisit the benefits of PSG recordings."

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  15. Jan 22
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  16. Jan 22

    Our article is part of a special issue in Sleep Medicine on "Artificial Intelligence and Sleep": check it out!

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  17. Jan 22

    This study was part of a broader project on the use of in sleep medicine with Paris-Descartes Uni, and funded by . I also thank the for its support!

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  18. Jan 22

    As we show, most of our analyses can be automatised and used to diagnose insomnia subtypes with very high accuracy. Quantitative analyses, and the existence of portable brain recording systems make now sleep recordings highly valuable!

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  19. Jan 22

    Overall, our results confirm that insomnia is not only about sleeping less: sleep itself is impacted. Global, visual analyses (classically done) are not enough. We argue that an increase in cortical excitability represents an interesting framework to understand and cure insomnia

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  20. Jan 22

    It is not only that wake oscillations are more prevalent. Insomnia affects sleep rhythms as well. The brain produces less slow waves; more and faster sleep spindles. This pattern could result from an increased cortical excitability: sleeping brains more awake than they should!

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  21. Jan 22

    In particular, insomnia patients show more wake-like rhythms during sleep. As if their brain was not separating wake and sleep as well as good sleepers.

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