You Cheng

You Cheng
Massachusetts General Hospital | MGH · Department of Neurology

Doctor of Philosophy

About

9
Publications
1,192
Reads
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65
Citations
Citations since 2017
7 Research Items
59 Citations
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Introduction
You (Lilian) Cheng currently works at the Department of Cognitive sciences, UC Irvine. She does research in Cognitive Psychology, Cognitive Neuroscience, and Computational Neuroscience. Their most recent publication is 'Telling right from right: the influence of handedness in the mental rotation of hands'.
Additional affiliations
July 2022 - present
Harvard Medical School
Position
  • PostDoc Position

Publications

Publications (9)
Preprint
Full-text available
Navigational trajectory planning requires the interaction of systems that include spatial orientation and memory. Here, we used a complex navigation task paired with fMRI pattern classification to examine head and travel direction tuning throughout the human brain. Rather than a single, static network, we report multiple simultaneous subnetworks th...
Article
Full-text available
Every year, millions of brain MRI scans are acquired in hospitals, which is a figure considerably larger than the size of any research dataset. Therefore, the ability to analyze such scans could transform neuroimaging research. Yet, their potential remains untapped since no automated algorithm is robust enough to cope with the high variability in c...
Article
Full-text available
Large scale digital data, which are becoming more prevalent, offer the potential to alleviate reproducibility concerns in psychology research findings. However, large scale digital data are not sufficient in and of themselves, thus necessitating the need for the development of machine learning (ML) pipelines that are capable of handling high dimens...
Preprint
Full-text available
We often assume that travel direction is redundant with head direction, but from first principles these two factors provide differing spatial information. Although head direction has been found to be a fundamental component of human navigation, it is unclear how self-motion signals for travel direction contribute to forming a travel trajectory. Emp...
Article
Full-text available
Neuromatch Academy (https://academy.neuromatch.io; (van Viegen et al., 2021)) was designed as an online summer school to cover the basics of computational neuroscience in three weeks. The materials cover dominant and emerging computational neuroscience tools, how they complement one another, and specifically focus on how they can help us to better...
Preprint
In the collective navigation scenario of a trio exploring in a foreign city, we propose a theoretical piece, which is a prescriptive guideline describing rational ways that can enable the trio to form a collective cognitive map. The guidelines center around three stages of exploration: the initial gathering of information, coming together to plan a...
Article
Full-text available
Background: This study investigated the impact of handedness on a common spatial abilities task, the mental rotation task (MRT). The influence of a right-handed world was contrasted with people's embodied experience with their own hands by testing both left- and right-handed people on an MRT of right- and left-hand stimuli. An additional considera...
Article
Full-text available
Third-party punishment, as an altruistic behavior, was found to relate to inequity aversion in previous research. Previous researchers have found that altruistic tendencies, as an individual difference, can affect resource division. Here, using the event-related potential (ERP) technique and a third-party punishment of dictator game paradigm, we ex...
Article
Full-text available
In social decision-making games, uninvolved third parties usually severely punish norm violators, even though the punishment is costly for them. For this irrational behavior, the conflict caused by punishment satisfaction and monetary loss is obvious. In the present study, 18 participants observed a Dictator Game and were asked about their willingn...

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