Sabine Kastner

Gender bias in academia: A lifetime problem that needs solutions

Summary:

Despite increased awareness of the lack of gender equity in academia and a growing number of initiatives to address issues of diversity, change is slow, and inequalities remain. A major source of inequity is gender bias, which has a substantial negative impact on the careers, work-life balance, and mental health of underrepresented groups in science. Here, we argue that gender bias is not a single problem but manifests as a collection of distinct issues that impact researchers’ lives. We disentangle these facets and propose concrete solutions that can be adopted by individuals, academic institutions, and society.

Authors:

  • Anaïs Llorens

  • Athina Tzovara

  • Ludovic Bellier

  • Ilina Bhaya-Grossman

  • Aurélie Bidet-Caulet

  • William K Chang

  • Zachariah R Cross

  • Rosa Dominguez-Faus

  • Adeen Flinker

  • Yvonne Fonken

  • Mark A Gorenstein

  • Chris Holdgraf

  • Colin W Hoy

  • Maria V Ivanova

  • Richard T Jimenez

  • Soyeon Jun

  • Julia WY Kam

  • Celeste Kidd

  • Enitan Marcelle

  • Deborah Marciano

  • Stephanie Martin

  • Nicholas E Myers

  • Karita Ojala

  • Anat Perry

  • Pedro Pinheiro-Chagas

  • Stephanie K Riès

  • Ignacio Saez

  • Ivan Skelin

  • Katarina Slama

  • Brooke Staveland

  • Danielle S Bassett

  • Elizabeth A Buffalo

  • Adrienne L Fairhall

  • Nancy J Kopell

  • Laura J Kray

  • Jack J Lin

  • Anna C Nobre

  • Dylan Riley

  • Anne-Kristin Solbakk

  • Joni D Wallis

  • Xiao-Jing Wang

  • Shlomit Yuval-Greenberg

  • Sabine Kastner

  • Robert T Knight

  • Nina F Dronkers

Date: 2021

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2021.06.002

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Temporal dynamics and response modulation across the human visual system in a spatial attention task: an ECoG study

Abstract:

The selection of behaviorally relevant information from cluttered visual scenes (often referred to as “attention”) is mediated by a cortical large-scale network consisting of areas in occipital, temporal, parietal, and frontal cortex that is organized into a functional hierarchy of feedforward and feedback pathways. In the human brain, little is known about the temporal dynamics of attentional processing from studies at the mesoscopic level of electrocorticography (ECoG), that combines millisecond temporal resolution with precise anatomical localization of recording sites. We analyzed high-frequency broadband responses (HFB) responses from 626 electrodes implanted in 8 epilepsy patients who performed a spatial attention task. Electrode locations were reconstructed using a probabilistic atlas of the human visual system. HFB responses showed high spatial selectivity and tuning, constituting ECoG response fields (RFs), within and outside the topographic visual system. In accordance with monkey physiology studies, both RF widths and onset latencies increased systematically across the visual processing hierarchy. We used the spatial specificity of HFB responses to quantitatively study spatial attention effects and their temporal dynamics to probe a hierarchical top-down model suggesting that feedback signals back propagate the visual processing hierarchy. Consistent with such a model, the strengths of attentional modulation were found to be greater and modulation latencies to be shorter in posterior parietal cortex, middle temporal cortex and ventral extrastriate cortex compared with early visual cortex. However, inconsistent with such a model, attention effects were weaker and more delayed in anterior parietal and frontal cortex.




Authors:

  • Anne B. Martin

  • Xiaofang Yang

  • Yuri B. Saalmann

  • Liang Wang

  • Avgusta Shestyuk

  • Jack J. Lin

  • Josef Parvizi

  • Robert T. Knight

  • Sabine Kastner

Date: 2019

DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1889-18.2018

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Neural mechanisms of sustained attention are rhythmic

ABSTRACT

Classic models of attention suggest that sustained neural firing constitutes a neural correlate of sustained attention. However, recent evidence indicates that behavioral performance fluctuates over time, exhibiting temporal dynamics that closely resemble the spectral features of ongoing, oscillatory brain activity. Therefore, it has been proposed that periodic neuronal excitability fluctuations might shape attentional allocation and overt behavior. However, empirical evidence to support this notion is sparse. Here, we address this issue by examining data from large-scale subdural recordings, using two different attention tasks that track perceptual ability at high temporal resolution. Our results reveal that perceptual outcome varies as a function of the theta phase even in states of sustained spatial attention. These effects were robust at the single-subject level, suggesting that rhythmic perceptual sampling is an inherent property of the frontoparietal attention network. Collectively, these findings support the notion that the functional architecture of top-down attention is intrinsically rhythmic.





AUTHORS

  • Randolph F. Helfrich

  • Ian C. Fiebelkorn

  • Sara M. Szczepanski

  • Jack J. Lin

  • Josef Parvizi

  • Robert T. Knight

  • Sabine Kastner

Date: 2018

DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2018.07.032

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Bringing Kids into the Scientific Review Process

ABSTRACT

Frontiers for Young Minds puts kids in charge of scientific publications by having them control the review process. This provides kids the ability to shape the way science is taught and to better understand the scientific method.



AUTHORS

  • Robert T. Knight

  • Sabine Kastner

Date: 2017

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2016.12.002

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