Juan Linde-Domingo
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lindedomingo.bsky.social
Juan Linde-Domingo
@lindedomingo.bsky.social
Episodic memory, perception and working memory aficionado. I love drawing and studying brains. Ramon y Cajal fellow. University of Granada. CIMCYC (Granada, Spain).

www.lindedomingo.com
Pinned
New paper out! 🎉 “Evolving Engrams Demand Changes in Effective Cues” (Hippocampus). In this opinion piece, we discuss how retrieval processes can be enhanced and offer an alternative to one of the field’s few enduring principles: encoding specificity. onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/...
Evolving Engrams Demand Changes in Effective Cues
A longstanding principle in episodic memory research, known as the encoding specificity hypothesis, holds that an effective retrieval cue should closely match the original encoding conditions. This p...
onlinelibrary.wiley.com
Reposted by Juan Linde-Domingo
High-level visual surprise is rapidly integrated during perceptual inference!

🚨 New paper 🚨 out now in @cp-iscience.bsky.social with @paulapena.bsky.social and @mruz.bsky.social

www.cell.com/iscience/ful...

Summary 🧵 below 👇
Rapid computation of high-level visual surprise
Health sciences
www.cell.com
December 5, 2025 at 2:37 PM
New preprint w/ Malin Styrnal & @martinhebart.bsky.social

Have you ever computed noise ceilings to understand how well a model performs? We wrote a clarifying note on a subtle and common misapplication that can make models appear quite a lot better than they are.

osf.io/preprints/ps...
OSF
osf.io
December 5, 2025 at 11:47 AM
Reposted by Juan Linde-Domingo
📣 Our latest brain-to-text decoding results from our Brain team is out:

"Towards decoding individual words from non-invasive brain recordings"

📄 www.nature.com/articles/s41...

👥 Led by Stéphane d'Ascoli & w/ Corentin Bel, Jérémy RAPIN, Hubert Banville, Yohann Benchetrit and Christophe Pallier
December 4, 2025 at 2:41 PM
Reposted by Juan Linde-Domingo
I’m proud of @estebanbt.bsky.social and his first-author PhD work. The article highlights how breathing shapes remembering by coordinating key neural signatures of retrieval.
Thanks to @lmumuenchen.bsky.social for the nice coverage: www.lmu.de/en/newsroom/...
December 4, 2025 at 8:40 AM
Reposted by Juan Linde-Domingo
new paper in TICS officially out today. great learning from and writing with Anastasia, and super cool cover art from Prof. Pinar Yoldas.
www.cell.com/trends/cogni...
Sensory reformatting for a working visual memory
A core function of visual working memory (WM) is to sustain mental representations of recent visual inputs, thereby bridging moments of experience. This is thought to occur in part by recruiting early...
www.cell.com
December 4, 2025 at 1:21 AM
Reposted by Juan Linde-Domingo
🚨 Fully funded PhD scholarship to work with me, Ali Mazaheri, Dhruv Parekh, and Katrien Segaert at the University of Birmingham on new brain-based tools to improve diagnoses of consciousness after severe brain injury.

🚨 Deadline: 9th January 2026

Full details and application form: lnkd.in/ejZkfFbW
LinkedIn
This link will take you to a page that’s not on LinkedIn
lnkd.in
December 3, 2025 at 9:56 AM
Reposted by Juan Linde-Domingo
Do you have an open working memory dataset and want it to be findable and reused? You can now add it to the Open WM Data Hub: williamngiam.github.io/OpenWMData! The collection of datasets tagged with useful metadata is steadily growing thanks to a small team of volunteers!
OpenWMData
A collection of publicly available working memory datasets
williamngiam.github.io
December 1, 2025 at 11:28 PM
Asking informally: does anyone know someone who might be interested in a postdoc focused on understanding changes in memory representations driven by attention using EEG? ⚡️Thanks!
December 1, 2025 at 5:03 AM
Reposted by Juan Linde-Domingo
New preprint alert!

Cognitive maps are flexible, dynamic, (re)constructed representations

#psychscisky #neuroskyence #cognition #philsky 🧪
OSF
osf.io
November 26, 2025 at 6:11 PM
Reposted by Juan Linde-Domingo
New paper! Brains stretch representations along task-relevant dimensions. Spike timing is important.
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
#neuroscience
Adaptive stretching of representations across brain regions and deep learning model layers - Nature Communications
How the brain adapts its representations to prioritize task-relevant information remains unclear. Here, the authors show that both monkey brains and deep learning models stretch neural representations...
www.nature.com
November 21, 2025 at 2:44 PM
It is amazing how much this video is helping me again. Now preparing an introduction regarding the hippocampal anatomy for a NeuroCog course ❤️.

vimeo.com/323365182?fl...
Morphology of Memory: The Anatomy of the Human Hippocampus
The hippocampus is a part of the brain known to be critical for learning and memory. It is made up of many interconnected regions with distinct characteristics.…
vimeo.com
November 22, 2025 at 9:46 AM
Reposted by Juan Linde-Domingo
Do you recommend any particular platform / approach for tracking usage of open access materials? Not just download counts but also asking some simple information of the user before they can download (like EEGLAB, Fieldtrip, SPM, etc all do). Any pointers much appreciated!
November 17, 2025 at 4:18 PM
This season is ❤️.
November 16, 2025 at 6:12 PM
I just had a quick diagonal look but this seems like must-read for PhD candidates in their first year (but not only 😅, good advises and reminder also for me). Great!
Our paper on improving statistical reporting in psychology is now online 🎉

As a part of this paper, we also created the Transparent Statistical Reporting in Psychology checklist, which researchers can use to improve their statistical reporting practices

www.nature.com/articles/s44...
November 15, 2025 at 4:00 PM
How lower and higher level representational features influence memory vividness? Quite interesting question and a nice research ->

Morales-Torres, R., Davis, S. W., & Cabeza, R. (2025). What makes memories vivid? Journal of Experimental Psychology: General.

psycnet.apa.org/doiLanding?d...
APA PsycNet
psycnet.apa.org
November 11, 2025 at 11:02 AM
Reposted by Juan Linde-Domingo
Now out in #ScienceAdvances: @baiweiliu.bsky.social and I ask how internal (goal) and external (sensory) selection are coordinated during visual search. The key insight: internal and external selection are not inherently serial, but may develop in parallel in the human brain: doi.org/10.1126/scia...
Concurrent selection of internal goals and external sensations during visual search
Internal and external selection processes can codevelop in time to yield efficient search behavior.
doi.org
November 10, 2025 at 12:00 PM
Reposted by Juan Linde-Domingo
Noise ceilings are really useful: You can estimate the reliability of your data and get an index of how well your model can possibly perform given the noise in the data.

But, contrary to what you may think, noise ceilings do not provide an absolute index of data quality.

Let's dive into why. 🧵
November 7, 2025 at 2:58 PM
Reposted by Juan Linde-Domingo
My prediction is that LLM peer review will slow down science. It will do this for precisely the same reasons that contemporary peer review does and some extra ones. Start by reading @hansonmark.bsky.social thread below, then read on. 🧵
Just tried q.e.d. by @odedrechavi.bsky.social et al. with a few papers including by myself & others where I knew a claim within was flawed based on a misunderstanding of the signal.

1) it was impressive. I see what the hype is about.
2) it hallucinated.

www.qedscience.com

Overly long #SciPub🧵 1/n
q.e.d Science
Critical Thinking AI for constructive criticism and science evaluation
www.qedscience.com
November 6, 2025 at 9:30 PM
Reposted by Juan Linde-Domingo
📢The #CIMCYCSessions are back!

The first session of the #AI, #Mind and #Brain season will take place next Thursday, November 13, 2025.

📍The session will be conducted entirely online.

More info: cimcyc.ugr.es/en/informati...
November 6, 2025 at 11:47 AM
Reposted by Juan Linde-Domingo
Look at the distribution of z-values from medical research!
November 4, 2025 at 10:36 PM
Really enjoying teaching Cognitive Neuroscience to bachelor students. However, the biggest challenge is striking a balance between “we seem to know this” and “this is still uncharted territory” 😅.

I hope we are not driving them bananas
November 5, 2025 at 4:56 PM
Really enjoyed reading this one 😀. A nice conceptual reframing regarding the state of episodic memories. Particularly useful to rethink how some of our ongoing cue-manipulation work in the lab might be pushing memories along different axes of this 3D space-state.
November 5, 2025 at 11:20 AM
Reposted by Juan Linde-Domingo
Please repost! I am looking for a PhD candidate in the area of Computational Cognitive Neuroscience to start in early 2026.

The position is funded as part of the Excellence Cluster "The Adaptive Mind" at @jlugiessen.bsky.social.

Please apply here until Nov 25:
www.uni-giessen.de/de/ueber-uns...
November 4, 2025 at 1:57 PM
Exciting times! These days we are setting up our new EEG equipment. It feels like Christmas in November 😅.
November 3, 2025 at 7:44 PM
Preparing a journal club reading about such a nice paper -> Entorhinal grid-like codes for visual space during memory formation

www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Entorhinal grid-like codes for visual space during memory formation - Nature Communications
Eye movements during scene viewing are tied to grid-like codes in the entorhinal cortex. Grid signals are specific to later remembered scenes, covary with activity in visuo-oculomotor regions, and are...
www.nature.com
October 29, 2025 at 12:59 PM