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Louise Whiteley

Researcher at University of Copenhagen

Publications -  24
Citations -  529

Louise Whiteley is an academic researcher from University of Copenhagen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Set (psychology) & Neuroethics. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 24 publications receiving 481 citations. Previous affiliations of Louise Whiteley include University of British Columbia & University College London.

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Implicit knowledge of visual uncertainty guides decisions with asymmetric outcomes

TL;DR: The data support the idea that flexible representations of uncertainty are pre-existing, widespread, and can be propagated to decision-making areas of the brain.
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Endogenous GABA controls oligodendrocyte lineage cell number, myelination, and CNS internode length

TL;DR: It is shown that endogenously released GABA, acting on GABAA receptors, greatly reduces the number of oligodendrocyte lineage cells, implying that, during development, GABA can act as a local environmental cue to control myelination and thus influence the conduction velocity of action potentials within the CNS.
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Neurobiological narratives: experiences of mood disorder through the lens of neuroimaging.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors conducted 12 semi-structured interviews with adults diagnosed with major depression or bipolar disorder, probing their experiences with mental health care and their perspectives on the prospect of receiving neuroimaging for prediction, diagnosis and planning treatment.
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Attention in a Bayesian framework

TL;DR: It is argued that a fundamental bottleneck emerges naturally within Bayesian models of perception, and this observation is used to frame a new computational account of the need for, and action of, attention – unifying diverse attentional phenomena in a way that goes beyond previous inferential, probabilistic andBayesian models.
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Effects of category-specific costs on neural systems for perceptual decision-making

TL;DR: It is shown that prospective losses systematically bias the perception of noisy face-house images, and asymmetries in category-specific cost were associated with enhanced blood-oxygen-level-dependent signal in a frontoparietal network.