Nico Foley
nicofoley.bsky.social
Nico Foley
@nicofoley.bsky.social
Neuroscientist. Visual Attention: expectations, uncertainty, eye movements, retinotopy. Dynamical systems modeling. Networks and dimensional reduction. Circadian rhythms. Generally optimistic.
I’d foremost suggest that teens have no idea where they’ll wind up (I thought I was going to be a computer scientist, took zero classes on it, and wound up as a neuroscientist, having taken zero classes as an undergraduate).. but also RFKjr is going to provoke a mega backlash
December 7, 2025 at 4:36 AM
Sounds like WoW has entered EverQuest Gods of Discord territory
December 4, 2025 at 3:47 AM
I’ve never done psychedelics, but what’s described to me is not the same thing.. I feel like whatever my attention/wm systems are interrogating everything I’ve ever experienced, particularly reading.. there is enough rsfMRI of me in both motor locked, and too uncomfortable states to ask the question
November 25, 2025 at 7:31 AM
It was a general suggestion (second tense saves letters), what triggered the remark was the strong anticipation part, and whether that was in the ecological sense or how it’s more generally used (ie. Marshmallow experiments)
November 25, 2025 at 7:19 AM
I’m fondly remembering a cherished incident where the general consensus among the faculty present was that he’d lost the argument.. Prof. Turvey was an extraordinary scientist
November 25, 2025 at 7:15 AM
I say this as someone who’s likely abnormal in this area, but for me, I lie down, get still enough for sleep paralysis to kick in (no sleep required) and I’m off, much like a hyper-immersive video game where some other network in my brain is answering what I throw at it.. I can stop when I choose
November 25, 2025 at 7:13 AM
If you’ve never read any of the JJ Gibson/Ecological Psychology stuff, you would I think be interested.. they are called purple perils for a reason though (and while they have some good ideas they aren’t right.. I got Michael Turvey to appeal to his own authority in his basement pub)
November 24, 2025 at 5:28 AM
I filled out the survey, I would have written a quite different set of questions since my experience of world models (or I would probably call it internal experience) is very fluid and multimodal
November 24, 2025 at 3:54 AM
Barbara Tuchman had a good introduction to this in “A Distant Mirror: the Calamitous 14th Century” which is in part a biography of Enguerrand VII de Coucy, which is that while it is fair to judge on many issues, there is a certain level of alienness to historical cultures that can’t be bridged
November 23, 2025 at 3:52 AM
I’d say the evidence provided suggests the opposite.. due to cup width, surface tension and undocumented sip timing, it suggests that this was a good cup of coffee that you were reluctant to finish
November 20, 2025 at 3:35 AM
My experience most of that is due to a combination of three factors:
1) actual unicorns who can run multiple labs (when I did my PhD with Steve Grossberg he peaked at 26 current students)
2) collaborations which don’t have institutional weight (thinking Emery Brown 25y ago)
3) bullshit overselling
November 20, 2025 at 3:23 AM
Very cool stuff! I’m glad to see that LAMINART is still being developed.

I’ll have to think through compatibility carefully, but there is another (in part complementary) explanation for crowding in the Grossberg schema (dARTSCAN) which is that it’s a where-stream frontal-parietal phenomenon
Neural dynamics of object-based multifocal visual spatial attention and priming: Object cueing, useful-field-of-view, and crowding
How are spatial and object attention coordinated to achieve rapid object learning and recognition during eye movement search? How do prefrontal priming and parietal spatial mechanisms interact to determine the reaction time costs of intra-object ...
pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
November 17, 2025 at 10:41 PM
The idea that the steepness of the learning curve drives curiosity is elegant and parsimonious, but that when you try to make the definitions rigorous and design experiments to directly test, it seems as if the idea is at least incomplete
November 17, 2025 at 1:14 AM
Pierre-Yves Oudeyer and Adrien Baranes, among others, followed this up this line of thinking around 12 years ago, with a rigorous mathematical definition of curiosity.. I don’t think the monkey results were ever published, but under their criterion neither humans nor monkeys are curious
November 16, 2025 at 12:50 AM
His DC office lets you leave a message if you press 3
November 9, 2025 at 10:40 PM
When I was living in Prague (~20 years ago) the fare system was you either bought tickets (stamped at boarding) or had a photo-pass, there were random checks at any time during travel, fine was equivalent to a 6 month pass.. I didn’t see any fare evasion (I got checked about once a month)
November 9, 2025 at 8:42 PM
I think there is a dichotomy between the constant lies of the authoritarian right and the endemic hallucinations of LLMs, and that things like deep convolutional networks can do amazing things that no one notices
November 1, 2025 at 8:18 PM
For the record, Apple doesn’t either.. need to reverify my MacBook WiFi logins from my phone all the time
November 1, 2025 at 12:30 AM
I can confirm that I am extra careful and nitpicking with authors I know and respect for two reasons 1) I probably tend to agree with them, which means blind-spots through inattention and 2) I want them to produce the best work (that I know they can do)
October 31, 2025 at 2:35 PM
There’s actually an equestrian statue of Franz Siegel at the end of my block.. if only he’d have been half as good a commander as a recruiter
October 30, 2025 at 2:10 PM
I’m reading Pride and Pleasure by Amanda Vaill about the Schuyler sisters, and it is fabulous
October 28, 2025 at 10:56 AM
NYC for life!
October 28, 2025 at 10:37 AM