Denis Chaimow
@denischaimow.bsky.social
65 followers 63 following 11 posts
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Reposted by Denis Chaimow
Reposted by Denis Chaimow
romy-lorenz.bsky.social
What started as a journal club on layer decoding turned into a project thanks to @karolisdegutis.bsky.social. Our preprint challenges a widespread assumption in the field: MVPA is not immune to vascular confounds in laminar GE-BOLD decoding, as shown using a mechanistic laminar response model.
karolisdegutis.bsky.social
Happy to see this out: our new preprint shows that laminar GE-BOLD fMRI decoding isn’t immune to vascular draining biases. Simulations reveal false positives due to multivariate signal spread across layers, but oversampling + deconvolution can (sometimes) improve specificity.
Reposted by Denis Chaimow
karolisdegutis.bsky.social
Happy to see this out: our new preprint shows that laminar GE-BOLD fMRI decoding isn’t immune to vascular draining biases. Simulations reveal false positives due to multivariate signal spread across layers, but oversampling + deconvolution can (sometimes) improve specificity.
Reposted by Denis Chaimow
imagingneurosci.bsky.social
New paper in Imaging Neuroscience by Fakhereh Movahedian Attar, Nikolaus Weiskopf, et al:

Short association fibres form topographic sheets in the human V1–V2 processing stream

doi.org/10.1162/imag...
denischaimow.bsky.social
I’d like to thank everyone involved in the project! @romy-lorenz.bsky.social, @karolisdegutis.bsky.social, Daniel Haenelt, Robert Trampel, @nikweiskopf.bsky.social
denischaimow.bsky.social
We argue that our results are biologically plausible, considering both previous research and methodological aspects of layer fMRI acquisition and analysis. Consequently, the functional role of human dlPFC layers, especially deep layers, in working memory remains uncertain.
denischaimow.bsky.social
Using confidence interval estimation and a series of control analyses, we show that the failure to replicate was likely not an issue of low sensitivity, data quality or methodological choices, such as automatic segmentation and ROI selection.
denischaimow.bsky.social
We replicated the superficial layer involvement in working memory manipulation but found no evidence for deep layer-specific activation during motor response. Instead, we observed activation across both layers.
denischaimow.bsky.social
We used a fully automated, pre-registered analysis pipeline, that included automatic ROI definition by combining anatomical information (HCP MMP 1.0 atlas) with functional activation.
denischaimow.bsky.social
Excited to share our latest preprint: "Challenges in replicating layer-specificity of working memory processes in the human prefrontal cortex.”, where we attempted to replicate layer-specific fMRI findings in the human dlPFC during a working memory task.
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
Challenges in replicating layer-specificity of working memory processes in human dlPFC
Although working memory reliably activates the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC), the functional significance of its distinct cytoarchitectonic layers is not well understood in humans. A recent f...
www.biorxiv.org
denischaimow.bsky.social
I’d like to thank everyone involved in the project! @romy-lorenz.bsky.social, @karolisdegutis.bsky.social, Daniel Haenelt, Robert Trampel and @nikweiskopf.bsky.social
denischaimow.bsky.social
We argue that our results are biologically plausible, considering both previous research and methodological aspects of layer fMRI acquisition and analysis. Consequently, the functional role of human dlPFC layers, especially deep layers, in working memory remains uncertain.
denischaimow.bsky.social
Using confidence interval estimation and a series of control analyses, we show that the failure to replicate was likely not an issue of low sensitivity, data quality or methodological choices, such as automatic segmentation and ROI selection.
denischaimow.bsky.social
We replicated the superficial layer involvement in working memory manipulation but found no evidence for deep layer-specific activation during motor response. Instead, we observed activation across both layers.
Reposted by Denis Chaimow
biorxivpreprint.bsky.social
Challenges in replicating layer-specificity of working memory processes in human dlPFC https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.01.31.635930v1