Cognitive Science Group
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cogscigroup.bsky.social
Cognitive Science Group
@cogscigroup.bsky.social
Based in Córdoba, Argentina, our interdisciplinary team focuses on three main areas: states of consciousness, metacognition—the capacity to reflect on one’s own decisions—and the mechanisms that sustain attention.
https://cognitivesciences.github.io/
Our Registered Report on metacognition and the "richness of perception" debate is now online at Royal Society Open Science!
*Iconic versus working memory metacognition to evaluate the richness of perception: a registered report* doi.org/10.1098/rsos... by Comay, Solovey & Barttfeld.
November 12, 2025 at 12:45 PM
Part of our team (Sebastián Galván & @pablobarttfeld.bsky.social) collaborated in this new study led by J. Hazelton: "Cardiovascular risk factors and the allostatic interoceptive network in dementia". Now online at Cardiovascular Research: doi.org/10.1093/cvr/...
Cardiovascular risk factors and the allostatic interoceptive network in dementia
AbstractAims. Cardiovascular risk factors, such diabetes, hypertension, blood pressure, obesity, and smoking, are linked with allostatic-interoception – th
doi.org
October 23, 2025 at 5:39 PM
New study by @ncomay.bsky.social, @guillermosolovey.bsky.social & @pablobarttfeld.bsky.social at JEP:lmc: "Decisions are based on less information than metacognitive judgments in multialternative contexts" doi.org/10.1037/xlm0...
October 16, 2025 at 2:27 PM
Our spotlight article on Goueytes et al. (2025) study is now online at Trends in Neurosciences: "Pre- and post-decision signals of certainty in changing minds", by P. Barttfeld, @ncomay.bsky.social, I. Embon & @guillermosolovey.bsky.social www.cell.com/trends/neuro...
Pre- and post-decision signals of certainty in changing minds
In a recent study, Goueytes and colleagues combined computational modeling with intracranial recordings to dissect the neural basis of confidence and changes of mind. They reveal a temporally organize...
www.cell.com
October 9, 2025 at 1:22 PM
Interested in measuring vigilance, cognitive control and mind-wandering? Then you may like to check out our new article published in Behavior Research Methods: link.springer.com/article/10.3.... By Julieta Aguirre, Pablo Barttfeld, Elisa Martín-Arévalo, Juan Lupiáñez & Fernando Luna.
Testing thought-probe frequency for measuring mind-wandering along with vigilance and cognitive control loss: A study with the ANTI-Vea task - Behavior Research Methods
Vigilance decrement refers to the decline in sustained attention over time during prolonged tasks, which often leads to increased errors and accidents. However, to date, there are no experimental tasks that simultaneously measure changes in vigilance, cognitive control, and mind-wandering (MW) across time-on-task. We adapted the Attentional Network Test for Interactions and Vigilance–executive and arousal components (ANTI-Vea) task to integrate mind-wandering measures along with assessments of vigilance and cognitive control. By inserting thought probes (TPs) at different frequencies per block, we aimed to identify the optimal TP rate to capture mind-wandering changes without interfering with the measurement of vigilance, thereby providing an integrative assessment of changes in mind-wandering, cognitive control, and vigilance across time. We conducted two experiments: one in the laboratory with 90 students from the National University of Córdoba, Argentina, and another online, as a replication, with 180 students from the University of Granada, Spain. Participants were divided into three groups (4, 8, 12 TPs per block) and completed the ANTI-Vea-TP task. The results revealed that the inclusion of TPs was effective in detecting changes in mind-wandering over time-on-task. Moreover, TP frequency did not have a significant effect on mind-wandering reports, vigilance, or cognitive control over time-on-task. We discuss the potential suitability of this tool for investigating the interaction between vigilance, cognitive control, and mind-wandering, in both laboratory and online environments, which is essential for evaluating different theories of vigilance decrement.
link.springer.com
October 8, 2025 at 2:26 PM
Hi! We're an interdisciplinary group from Córdoba, Argentina, studying human cognition. The lab is leaded by Dr. Pablo Barttfeld (@pablobarttfeld.bsky.social), and our research focuses on three main areas: consciousness, metacognition & attention. Follow us to get all lab's news!
October 8, 2025 at 12:38 AM