 
                                Stephen Pierzchajlo
@pierzchajlo
PhD candidate @Stockholm_Uni. Interested in cog. neuroscience/olfaction; metascience; stats/math; I run #ReproducibiliTea at SU.
ID: 1071049227633971200
07-12-2018 14:30:09
118 Tweet
94 Followers
643 Following
 
         
         
         
        If you are attending #ECNP2021, come by session S.14 ‘Novel approaches to understand the social brain' on Monday! I will be presenting some exciting new results about the neural basis of helping behaviour under threat (with Andreas Olsson) #ECNPtweets
 
        Great overview of fear responses, altruism and how they come together by Joana B Vieira in this weeks podcast episode (in English). The rest of the episode is in Swedish and is just as good with Philip Pärnamets! open.spotify.com/show/16oXOYDMk…
 
         
        📢Check out our new preprint "Help or flight: Neural defensive circuits promote helping under threat in humans" bioRxiv Neuroscience, with Andreas Olsson. biorxiv.org/cgi/content/sh…
 
        Our new study - headed by Joana B Vieira - shows that defensive brain circuits promote helping under threat in humans. biorxiv.org/content/10.110…
 
                        
                    
                    
                    
                 
        Super happy to see our paper "Acute anxiety during the COVID-19 pandemic was associated with higher levels of everyday altruism" rdcu.be/cYTWh finally published at Scientific Reports. With Stephen Pierzchajlo Simon Jangard Abigail Marsh and Andreas Olsson 🧵
 
        Our eLife - the journal paper (with Andreas Olsson) on the role of the defensive circuitry in helping behaviour has been covered by Público (article in Portuguese).👇
 
         
         
         
         
        How does your brain make scents of the world? New study reveals surprising reliance on cross-sensory cues. #neuroscience #sensoryprocessing #ScienceTwitter Published in SfN Journals Research by Stephen Pierzchajlo @jokriolo Stockholm University Coverage by @CurlsPhD buff.ly/4aMuY6K
 
        Yes, our sense of smell is weak. But it compensates for its limited brain real estate by interacting with other senses. Stockholm University researchers share surprising insights Published in SfN Journals Research by Stephen Pierzchajlo @jokriolo Coverage by @CurlsPhD buff.ly/4aMuY6K
 
        Our opinion paper The convergence between defence and care in mammals is out today at Trends in Cognitive Sciences! With Andreas Olsson 🧵 authors.elsevier.com/a/1j5He4sIRvTA…
 
         
         
         
                         
                         
         
                         
                         
                         
                        