Human Brain Mapping 2009 – Presentations
I want to thank everyone at the Human Brain Mapping conference for their excellent comments and insight on my research. I had an unbroken string of amazing conversations with researchers from around the world – it was a real treat. Below you will find copies of both posters that I presented at HBM along with a copy of the slides that I used in my presentation. If you have any questions or would like larger copies of the figures please let me know.
The processing of internally-generated interoceptive sensation
Conference Poster: [PDF] [JPEG]
Presentation Slides: [PDF]
Neural correlates of interspecies perspective taking in the post-mortem Atlantic Salmon: An argument for multiple comparisons correction
Conference Poster: [PDF] [JPEG]
13 Responses to “Human Brain Mapping 2009 – Presentations”
David Perlman - June 30th, 2009
I am concerned about the omission of important information from your poster entitled “Neural correlates of interspecies perspective taking in the post-mortem Atlantic Salmon: An argument for multiple comparisons correction”. Any good scientist would want to know the details of post-scan culinary post-processing of the subject and the hedonic results of degustation of the subject when studying a population of salmon, even with N=1. I would be very appreciative if you would make this information publicly available. Thanks!
I actually have a post ready to go that answers important questions such as these – I am just waiting for the manuscript to get accepted before I upload it to the weblog. People do seem to be genuinely interested in why we would scan a fish in the first place and whether or not we ate the fish for dinner. All these questions, and more, will be answered in time! ~ Craig
What a dead salmon reminds us about fMRI analysis « Stanford Center for Law & the Biosciences Blog - September 18th, 2009
[…] Paper title: Neural correlates of interspecies perspective taking in the post-mortem Atlantic Salmon: An argument… […]
Troy Benjegerdes - September 21st, 2009
Fascinating.. Now, would you be willing to publish the raw data? What is the software that was used to do the post processing?
This really makes the case for reproducible research..
http://www.reproducibility.org/wiki/Main_Page
http://rr.epfl.ch/17/
One of my research areas has been high performance computing, and high-speed data transfer, so if it’s ‘just’ a matter of how to make a couple gigabytes of data public, please let me know, I’ll find someplace to put it. (email me at hozer@hozed.org )
Troy – Send me an email if you would like to take a crack at the salmon data. We used SPM to process the data in the Matlab computing environment. ~ Craig [Prefrontal]
Can a Dead Fish Prove that Modern Brain Studies Are Bunk? | Discoblog | Discover Magazine - September 21st, 2009
[…] research team says some studies do not do enough to rule out the false positives. Their results were presented at the 2009 Human Brain Mapping Conference in San […]
Neuromarketing » Are Brain Scan Findings Fishy? - September 30th, 2009
[…] a team led by Craig Bennett of UC Santa Barbara produced a paper impressively titled, Neural correlates of interspecies perspective taking in the post-mortem Atlantic Salmon: An argument…. In simpler terms, the team performed brain scans on dead salmon and measured […]
The Official Harvard Brain Blog - November 2nd, 2009
[…] of using the right statistic tools in fMRI, which has got quite a bit of voodoo heat recently. Prefrontal.org has the whole story. We promise this is funniest science poster you will read all […]
Lingoland » Arkiv » Post-mortem mentalization processes in the Atlantic Salmon - January 13th, 2010
[…] be careful when drawing conclusions from fMRI scans. The salmon scans (poster) and the story behind it. Skrevet af Anders K. Madsen | Ingen […]
Law and Biosciences Blog | What a dead salmon reminds us about fMRI analysis - February 7th, 2010
[…] Paper title: Neural correlates of interspecies perspective taking in the post-mortem Atlantic Salmon: An argument… […]
Das Gehirn eines toten Lachs … « Aus dem Hollerbusch - February 3rd, 2011
[…] feststellen, dass besondere Zusammenhänge entstehen?Nun, das wollte Craig Bennett wissen, und hat einen toten Lachs einer solchen Untersuchung unterzogen. Dem Tier wurden Photos gezeigt, auf denen Menschen in verschiedenen Situationen zu […]
Imaging cartographies and hetero-topological investigations. « Alexander I. Stingl's Blog - October 27th, 2011
[…] http://prefrontal.org/blog/2009/06/human-brain-mapping-2009-presentations/ see also: http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2009/09/fmrisalmon/ last accessed August 15th, […]
Jessie - June 10th, 2013
This is so clever and hilarious. My psych lecturer mentioned it in passing when discussing the common problems with fMRI, and I just had to look it up. Thank you for the laugh, and for pointing out the implications of the multiple comparisons problem!!
Inside the Quest to Use Neuroscience to Influence Which Brands Consumers Buy - The Wire - April 9th, 2018
[…] 2009, Californian scientists highlighted this problem in a humorous way. They introduced a dead salmon into an fMRI scanner and measured its brain […]
Inside the Quest to Use Neuroscience to Influence Which Brands Consumers Buy – Club SciWri - July 15th, 2018
[…] 2009, Californian scientists highlighted this problem in a humorous way. They introduced a dead salmon into an fMRI scanner and measured its brain […]
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