layout | title | parent | has_children | has_toc | nav_order |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
default |
Social Brain Re-Configuration Project |
Documentation |
false |
false |
3 |
Examining how the social brain re-configures during an emotion recognition task
Examine changes in modularity and flexibility from baseline through an emotion recognition task in a cross-sectional sample from childhood through young adulthood. This project will take two approaches to identifying the social brain: (1) seed-based using personalized networks and (2) based on a literature of the putative social brain. Modularity and flexibility changes over the course of these two task sessions are the primary outcome of interest.
Isabella (Isa) Stallworthy
Theodore Satterthwaite & Danielle Bassett
Team member who replicates analyses, as stipulated in the Project Reproducibility Guide
Include people here as they make contributions (useful as our memory is imperfect and it is bad to forget contributions in long-running projects)
July 2023
See the Stages of a Project page Setting up project, establishing hypotheses, learning methods, literature review
Philadelphia Neurodevelopment Cohort (PNC)
Link to github repository for the project
Full path to project path on relevant computing cluster (i.e., CUBIC, PMACS, etc)
For project communication
For task tracking and keeping project meetings on track; provide link.
A good place to aggregate and share articles, manuscript drafts, etc; provide link.
soc brain reconfig
I.e., citations to poster presentations, links to preprints, final publication citation
This section is the bulk of the project page, and can be broken up as best fits the project. Remember that this should be acessible prose that allows your replicator, reviewer, or interested reader to step through your code and understand how the code corresponds to the findings described in the paper. At a minimum, there should be clear documentation regarding sample selection (e.g., inclusion/exclusion), preprocessing (e.g., container version, data freeze), and hypothesis testing (usually in the form of an analytic notebook). See the Project Reproducibility Guide for more information.