Elise Piazza
@elisepiazza.bsky.social
570 followers 300 following 19 posts
-Assistant Professor @URochester studying naturalistic, interactive human communication and speech/music perception 🧠 -PI of the SoNIC Lab (piazzalab.com) -BA @Williams | PhD @UCBerkeley | Postdoc @Princeton -Halfling bard irl 🎶 -she/her 🌈
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elisepiazza.bsky.social
The daily news is so rapid and horrific that I almost missed that Jane Goodall passed away today. One my greatest scientific achievements to date was being interviewed on NPR's Science Friday right after her. www.sciencefriday.com/episodes/oct...
elisepiazza.bsky.social
My cousin is a social worker at a public school in Rochester, and she can't stop talking about how much this no-cellphone policy has already transformed her school community: kids are looking up and interacting more in the halls, engaging more in the classroom, seem happier, etc. Start of a new era?
elisepiazza.bsky.social
Excited to share a new preprint from our lab! Led by @qingzhirubyzeng.bsky.social, with @coralineiordan.bsky.social + @aaronstevenwhite.io
qingzhirubyzeng.bsky.social
/1 New preprint alert! 💫“Expertise Shapes the Multidimensional Perception of Stories”! 💫 We generated a novel corpus of improvised spoken stories using diverse prompts designed to elicit creative and complex narrative structure.
doi.org/10.31234/osf...
OSF
doi.org
elisepiazza.bsky.social
The SoNIC Lab is in San Francisco for #CogSci2025; come check out our latest research!
Reposted by Elise Piazza
jayneuro.bsky.social
Music is an incredibly powerful retrieval cue. What is the neural basis of music-evoked memory reactivation? And how does this reactivation relate to later memory for the retrieved events? In our new study, we used Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind to find out. www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
Music-evoked reactivation during continuous perception is associated with enhanced subsequent recall of naturalistic events
Music is a potent cue for recalling personal experiences, yet the neural basis of music-evoked memory remains elusive. We address this question by using the full-length film Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind to examine how repeated musical themes reactivate previously encoded events in cortex and shape next-day recall. Participants in an fMRI study viewed either the original film (with repeated musical themes) or a no-music version. By comparing neural activity patterns between these groups, we found that music-evoked reactivation of neural patterns linked to earlier scenes in the default mode network was associated with improved subsequent recall. This relationship was specific to the music condition and persisted when we controlled for a proxy measure of initial encoding strength (spatial intersubject correlation), suggesting that music-evoked reactivation may play a role in making event memories stick that is distinct from what happens at initial encoding. ### Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest. National Institutes of Health, https://ror.org/01cwqze88, F99 NS118740, R01 MH112357
www.biorxiv.org
elisepiazza.bsky.social
Come to @qingzhirubyzeng.bsky.social 's lightning talk tomorrow at PEER2025!
aaronstevenwhite.io
The PEER2025 schedule is up! 👇
peer-workshop.bsky.social
PEER2025 is coming up fast (Friday, April 18)!
elisepiazza.bsky.social
Congratulations to @qingzhirubyzeng.bsky.social for winning a Best Poster Award at UR's Graduate Research Day. This is actually the second time Ruby has won this award, in two different years and for two different projects. Wow!!
elisepiazza.bsky.social
Congratulations to @rcassanocoleman.bsky.social for winning an Open Scholarship Award for making her research accessible and reproducible to the community! Our lab is so proud of her! opensci.lib.rochester.edu/open-scholar...
Stay tuned for some updates to our lab "resources" page.
Reposted by Elise Piazza
chowleen.bsky.social
They were careless people, Tom and Daisy- they smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness or whatever it was that kept them together, and let other people clean up the mess they had made.

-FS Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby, published 4/10/1925.
Original 1925 jacket cover of The Great Gatsby

The Great Gatsby
Here is a novel, glamorous, ironical, compassionate a marvellous fusion into unity of the curious incongruities of the life of the period which reveals a hero like no other one who could live at no other time and in no other place. But he will live as a character, we surmise, as long as the memory of any reader lasts.
"There was something gorgeous about him, some heightened sensitivity to the promises of life. ..
It was an
extraordinary gift for hope, a romantic readiness such as I have never found in any other person and which it is not likely I shall ever find again?"
It is the story of this Jay Gatsby who came so mysteriously to West Egg, of his sumptuous er-tertainments, and of his love for Daisy Buchanan a story that ranges from pure lyrical beauty to sheer brutal realism, and is infused with a sense of the strangeness of human circumstance in a heedless universe.
It is a magical, living book, blended of irony, romance, and mysticism.
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
The
GREAT GATSBY
FITZGERALD
Reposted by Elise Piazza
alondra.bsky.social
Research universities are often the largest employers in their region. They are often the primary health care providers to communities. This funding shift will not only reduce US research leadership, it will put working people out of work and reduce healthcare access.
alondra.bsky.social
Excellent 🧵 on this evening's NIH announcement of a dramatic reduction in indirect rates for research institutions, which amounts to a generational restructuring of the US research and development ecosystem. These cuts are effective immediately, not just for new grants but for existing ones.
carlbergstrom.com
6. The policy does not just affect funding going forward. All existing NIH grants will have their indirect rates cut to 15% as of today, the date of issuance.

For a large university, this creates a sudden and catastrophic shortfall of hundreds of millions of dollars against already budgeted funds.
Reposted by Elise Piazza
miriamgoldstein.bsky.social
Just in case you thought that removing DEI criteria would mean that everyone is competing equally: NIH is removing grad students from underrepresented backgrounds from the applicant pool altogether. Their applications will not be considered. Other students, not from these backgrounds, will be.
Update: They were removed from our reviewer assignments completely. I'm so sorry to all those graduate students. 

Anonymous to protect the identity of the NIH employee I spoke to...I am on study section next month to discuss F awards. We were just instructed to put the F31-Diversity applications on the bottom of our priority list for review because there is a chance we may not be able to review them. My heart is breaking for the grad students and their mentors that put so much work into these just for them to be disqualified and thrown out.
Reposted by Elise Piazza
samwang.bsky.social
NIH funding supports the vast majority of all biomedical research in the United States. Virtually every advance in American medicine and biological science comes from NIH. This is a blow against American science.

Call Congress, 202-224-3121.
liebschutz.bsky.social
All NIH study sections canceled indefinitely. This will halt science and devastate research budgets in universities.
elisepiazza.bsky.social
Awesome paper alert! Excited to finally see those wobbling blobs make their debut...and in PNAS!
coralineiordan.bsky.social
New paper story time (now out in PNAS)! We developed a method that caused people to learn new categories of visual objects, not by teaching them what the categories were, but by changing how their brains worked when they looked at individual objects in those categories.

www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/...
Sculpting new visual categories into the human brain | PNAS
Learning requires changing the brain. This typically occurs through experience, study, or instruction. We report an alternate route for humans to a...
www.pnas.org
Reposted by Elise Piazza
matthiasnau.bsky.social
Want to make beautiful scientific figures? Easy!

The NIH released a library of 2000+ free scientific illustrations called *BioArt*.

Check it out! bioart.niaid.nih.gov

#AcademicSky #PsychSciSky 🧠🟦 🧪
Reposted by Elise Piazza
dquiroga.bsky.social
Have you ever had a song stuck in your head?

Then you might be interested in our new #musicscience work just published in PLOSBiology

doi.org/10.1371/jour...

We used decoding to investigate how the brain represents perceived and imagined musical sounds.

Check it out!
elisepiazza.bsky.social
Led jointly by postdoc Sarah Izen and PhD student Riesa Cassano-Coleman (rcassanocoleman.bsky.social). Come by Riesa's #Psychonomics poster (Saturday 7:45-9:15, #7059), which mainly discusses Expt 3.

You can hear our wacky scrambled music here: osf.io/mej7a/

#musicscience
elisepiazza.bsky.social
This is a beast of a study! E.g., Experiment 3 alone uncovers new fundamentals of musical event segmentation (a relatively understudied topic). One takeaway here: musicians are more likely than non-musicians to perceive long-timescale (multi-phrase) events.
elisepiazza.bsky.social
In general, we show that non-musicians use context quite effectively, which is surprising b/c this is relatively high-level tonal context (not driven by dynamics/timbre/tempo/pitch proximity). But musicians do perform better overall across tasks (including identifying the degree of scrambling).
elisepiazza.bsky.social
Our lab has a new #musiccognition preprint out! This is a comprehensive look at how listeners integrate musical context across multiple timescales to complete a diverse array of tasks: memory, prediction, and event segmentation. osf.io/preprints/ps...
elisepiazza.bsky.social
My entire lab will be there! 😀
elisepiazza.bsky.social
Please add me--thanks!
Reposted by Elise Piazza
georgetakei.bsky.social
Today is Transgender Day of Remembrance. Each year, the trans community loses too many lives, especially trans women of color, to hate and violence.

More than ever, we must stand by our trans family and support them, hold space for them, and insist the scapegoating and targeting stop.

Now.
Reposted by Elise Piazza
taylorwwebb.bsky.social
Excited to announce that I'll be starting a lab at the University of Montreal (psychology) and Mila (Montreal Institute of Learning Algorithms) starting summer 2025. More info to come soon, but I'll be recruiting at the Masters and PhD levels. Please share / get in touch if you're interested!