Publications by authors named "C B Stringer"

A recently excavated Neanderthal skeleton from southern France has yielded DNA from a distinct lineage, different from other late Neanderthals. This suggests Neanderthals expanded and diversified about 120,000 years ago, and some of that diversity persisted in Europe until near the time of their extinction.

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Simultaneous recordings from hundreds or thousands of neurons are becoming routine because of innovations in instrumentation, molecular tools, and data processing software. Such recordings can be analyzed with data science methods, but it is not immediately clear what methods to use or how to adapt them for neuroscience applications. We review, categorize, and illustrate diverse analysis methods for neural population recordings and describe how these methods have been used to make progress on longstanding questions in neuroscience.

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This study analyzes the effects of bioclimate and masticatory factors on the regional variability of human cranial forms across 150 ethnic groups worldwide. Morphometric variables were generated using principal component analysis applied to 3D homologous models. Relationships between cranial form and bioclimate (temperature and precipitation) and masticatory factors (infratemporal space) were tested considering sampling bias due to past population movements during the late Pleistocene and/or early- to mid-Holocene.

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Article Synopsis
  • The text discusses the challenges in analyzing large-scale neural data and highlights the importance of visualization methods to identify activity patterns in neurons.* -
  • It introduces 'Rastermap', a new visualization technique that organizes neurons based on their activity patterns and allows researchers to explore recordings from various animal models, including mice and zebrafish.* -
  • The effectiveness of Rastermap is benchmarked through simulations, and the text also notes that there are specific high-dimensional scenarios where this method and similar algorithms may fail to provide clear insights.*
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Article Synopsis
  • Theories suggest that eye movement decisions while reading are influenced by both visual and linguistic factors.
  • In experiments that masked spaces and letters, it was found that both hearing and deaf readers have similar perceptual and word identification spans but differ in reading efficiency.
  • Deaf readers showed a better reading rate, especially when engaging with leftward text, indicating they might rely more on leftward visual information despite similarities in eye movement spans.
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