DiscoverBJKS Podcast104. James Shine: Integrating neuroscience with fMRI, collaboration, and the importance of dumb questions
104. James Shine: Integrating neuroscience with fMRI, collaboration, and the importance of dumb questions

104. James Shine: Integrating neuroscience with fMRI, collaboration, and the importance of dumb questions

Update: 2024-10-25
Share

Description

James (Mac) Shine is a PI and fellow at the University of Sydney. We talk about his background in sports, using fMRI to integrate various parts of neuroscience, collaboration, and much more.

BJKS Podcast is a podcast about neuroscience, psychology, and anything vaguely related, hosted by Benjamin James Kuper-Smith.

Support the show: https://geni.us/bjks-patreon

Timestamps
0:00:00 : Mac's sporting background
0:07:46 : Overview of Mac's review in Nature (w/ Emily Finn and Russell Poldrack)
0:14:03 : The role of great editors in improving scientists and their work
0:32:53 : Connecting different levels of description
0:40:07 : Integration and specialisation
0:48:49 : You can scan any animal with fMRI - but they're usually anaesthetised
0:54:13 : The transfer from human fMRI to animal electrophysiology
1:01:53 : N=1 studies and layer-fMRI in clinical neuroscience
1:16:17 : Collaboration and building a multidisciplinary lab
1:26:52 : The magic formula in science: annoyance, excitement, and a constructive mindset
1:34:51 : Writing grants as a test to oneself, and the art of reframing
1:41:52 : A book or paper more people should read
1:43:37 : Something Mac wishes he'd learnt sooner
1:45:43 : Advice for PhD students/postdocs

Podcast links


Mac's links


Ben's links


References and links

OHMB interview: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ucDj_94ovaU

Boyden, ... & Deisseroth (2005). Millisecond-timescale, genetically targeted optical control of neural activity. Nature Neuroscience.
Finn, Poldrack & Shine (2023). Functional neuroimaging as a catalyst for integrated neuroscience. Nature.
Friston, ... (2017). Active inference: a process theory. Neural Computation.
Munn, ... Larkum & Shine (2023). A thalamocortical substrate for integrated information via critical synchronous bursting. PNAS.
Newbold, ... & Dosenbach (2020). Plasticity and spontaneous activity pulses in disused human brain circuits. Neuron.
Pezzulo & Cisek (2016). Navigating the affordance landscape: feedback control as a process model of behavior and cognition. TiCS.
Poldrack, ... (2015). Long-term neural and physiological phenotyping of a single human. Nature Communications.
Rao & Ballard (1999). Predictive coding in the visual cortex: a functional interpretation of some extra-classical receptive-field effects. Nature Neuroscience.
Shine, ... (2011). Visual misperceptions and hallucinations in Parkinson's disease: dysfunction of attentional control networks?. Movement Disorders.
Shine, ... & Poldrack (2016). The dynamics of functional brain networks: integrated network states during cognitive task performance. Neuron.
Shine, ... & Poldrack (2016). Temporal metastates are associated with differential patterns of time-resolved connectivity, network topology, and attention. PNAS.
Shine & Poldrack (2018). Principles of dynamic network reconfiguration across diverse brain states. NeuroImage.

Comments 
loading
In Channel
loading
00:00
00:00
1.0x

0.5x

0.8x

1.0x

1.25x

1.5x

2.0x

3.0x

Sleep Timer

Off

End of Episode

5 Minutes

10 Minutes

15 Minutes

30 Minutes

45 Minutes

60 Minutes

120 Minutes

104. James Shine: Integrating neuroscience with fMRI, collaboration, and the importance of dumb questions

104. James Shine: Integrating neuroscience with fMRI, collaboration, and the importance of dumb questions