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3. Ph.D. and stress: Uncertainity

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The third topic is on  Uncertainty . What does uncertainty mean in PhD life? First-year in PhD is fun. It is the year you think "everything is under control". After some time, problems escalate. It is frustrating because problems may delay experiments, data collection, analysis, papers and eventually PhD Thesis...When things go wrong, you feel stressed and you cannot see the light at the end of the tunnel... Do you have inconclusive data? Don't be afraid. I spent a considerable amount of time on one of my projects. Lots of experiments and lots of analysis... The results did not support our research question. My supervisor and I decided to leave this project behind and carry on with a different question. It is the right approach in science but I couldn't escape from the feeling that I gave this project a lot of effort for nothing (which was not true!). It was my third year and I was under a lot of stress. In the end, there was only one question in my mind, &qu

New Article on memory and eye movements!

Recognition of incidentally learned visual search arrays is supported by fixational eye movements. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition Efsun Annac,  Mathias Pointner,  Patrick H. Khader,  Hermann J. Müller,  Xuelian Zang, & Thomas Geyer Abstract: Repeated encounter of abstract target-distractor letter arrangements leads to improved visual search for such displays. This contextual-cueing effect is attributed to incidental learning of display configurations. Whether observers can consciously access the memory underlying the cueing effect is still a controversial issue. The current study uses a novel recognition task and eyetracking to tackle this question. Experiment 1 investigated observers’ ability to recognize or “generate” the display quadrant of the target in a previous search array when the target was now substituted by distractor element as well as where observers’ eye fixations would fall while they freely viewed the recognition display,

Vision Begins Before We Actually See Anything

Vision Begins Before We Actually See Anything : How does vision work, and what happens in the brain during the process? As simple as this question may sound, it has yet to be scientifically clarified in full. New research has now been able to show that the distribution of the two most important neurotransmitters in the brain changes as soon as we open our eyes, regardless of whether we actually see anything. Read more:  https://www.technologynetworks.com/neuroscience/news/vision-begins-before-we-actually-see-anything-312242 Reference:  Katarzyna Kurcyus, Efsun Annac, Nina M. Hanning, Ashley D. Harris, Georg Oeltzschner, Richard Edden and Valentin Riedl, Opposite dynamics of GABA and glutamate levels in the occipital cortex during visual processing, Journal of Neuroscience, November 14, 2018, DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1214-18.2018

The Blue Brain Cell Atlas

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The Blue Brain Project released their first digital 3D brain cell atlas. I found it super cool! Check it out! Here is the original article:  https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fninf.2018.00084/full?utm_source=FWEB&utm_medium=NBLOG&utm_campaign=ECO_FNINF_blue-brain-cell-atlas Try the Blue Brain Atlas here in this link:  https://bbp.epfl.ch/nexus/cell-atlas/?v=v2&std=1

Our collaborative work is published in the Journal of Neuroscience

Our collaborative work with Dr. Katarzyna Kurcyus and Nina M. Hanning is published in the Journal of Neuroscience with the title: Opposite dynamics of GABA and glutamate levels in the occipital cortex during visual processing Katarzyna Kurcyus ,  Efsun Annac ,  Nina M. Hanning ,  Ashley D. Harris ,  Georg Oeltzschner ,  Richard Edden  and  Valentin Riedl Abstract: Magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) measures the two most common inhibitory and excitatory neurotransmitters, GABA and glutamate, in the human brain. However, the role of MRS-derived GABA and glutamate signals in relation to system-level neural signaling and behavior is not fully understood. In this study, we investigated levels of GABA and glutamate in the visual cortex of healthy human participants (both genders) in three functional states with increasing visual input. Compared to a baseline state of eyes closed, GABA levels decreased after opening the eyes in darkness and Glx levels remained stable during eyes ope

Our paper is published in the British journal of Psychology

A secondary task is not always costly: Context‐based guidance of visual search survives interference from a demanding working memory task Efsun Annac, Xuelian Zang, Hermann J. M üller, & Thomas Geyer Abstract:  Repeatedly encountering a visual search display with the target located at a fixed position relative to the distractors facilitates target detection, relative to novel displays – which is attributed to search guidance by (acquired) long‐term memory (LTM) of the distractor ‘context’ of the target. Previous research has shown that this ‘contextual cueing’ effect is severely impeded during learning when participants have to perform a demanding spatial working memory (WM) task concurrently with the search task, though it does become manifest when the WM task is removed. This has led to the proposal that search guidance by LT context memories critically depends on spatial WM to become ‘expressed’ in behaviour . On this background, this study, of two experiments, asked: (

2. Ph.D. and stress: You are not alone

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You are not alone in this journey I started writing blog posts on Ph.D. and stress because for a long time I couldn't find anything on the internet to guide me on this subject. Every post I found was about either quitting Ph.D., or being depressed during Ph.D. None of the posts could reflect what I have been through or were a translation of what I felt. Today's post is to remind you that you are not alone . Ph.D. stress is something all Ph.D.'s should be aware of. Many times we don't even realize how demanding Ph.D. can be with its regular stress. Deadlines, experiments, meetings and all the problems you encounter with occupy your mind and make you feel like having a stressful day is a normal routine. However, dealing with stress in those busy days is not easy when you are overwhelmed with the work. Sometimes the frustration of not being able to deal with everything in a limited time makes your life miserable, and accept it or not, you are the only person who has t