
Elizabeth Riley
Cornell University · Nutrition
Active 1959–2024
Research topics
- Artificial Intelligence
- Neuroscience
- Computer Science
- Psychology
- Cognitive psychology
- Medicine
Selected publications
Grounding the Attentional Boost Effect in Events and the Efficient Brain
Frontiers in Psychology · 2022 · 43 citations
- Psychology
- Cognitive psychology
- Neuroscience
(ABE), participants perform two tasks at once: memorizing a series of briefly presented stimuli (e.g., pictures of outdoor scenes) for a later memory test, and responding to other concurrently presented cues that meet pre-defined criteria (e.g., participants press a button for a blue target square and do nothing for a red distractor square). However, rather than increasing dual-task interference, attending to a target cue boosts, rather than impairs, subsequent memory for concurrently presented information. In this review we describe current data on the extent and limitations of the attentional boost effect and whether it may be related to activity in the locus coeruleus neuromodulatory system. We suggest that insight into the mechanisms that produce the attentional boost effect may be found in recent advances in the locus coeruleus literature and from understanding of how the neurocognitive system handles stability and change in everyday events. We consequently propose updates to an early account of the attentional boost effect, the dual-task interaction model, to better ground it in what is currently known about event cognition and the role that the LC plays in regulating brain states.
NeuroImage · 2021 · 38 citations
- Artificial Intelligence
- Computer Science
- Artificial Intelligence
The locus coeruleus (LC) plays a central role in regulating human cognition, arousal, and autonomic states. Efforts to characterize the LC's function in humans using functional magnetic resonance imaging have been hampered by its small size and location near a large source of noise, the fourth ventricle. We tested whether the ability to characterize LC function is improved by employing neuromelanin-T1 weighted images (nmT1) for LC localization and multi-echo functional magnetic resonance imaging (ME-fMRI) for estimating intrinsic functional connectivity (iFC). Analyses indicated that, relative to a probabilistic atlas, utilizing nmT1 images to individually localize the LC increases the specificity of seed time series and clusters in the iFC maps. When combined with independent components analysis (ME-ICA), ME-fMRI data provided significant improvements in the temporal signal to noise ratio and DVARS relative to denoised single echo data (1E-fMRI). The effects of acquiring nmT1 images and ME-fMRI data did not appear to only reflect increases in power: iFC maps for each approach overlapped only moderately. This is consistent with findings that ME-fMRI offers substantial advantages over 1E-fMRI acquisition and denoising. It also suggests that individually identifying LC with nmT1 scans is likely to reduce the influence of other nearby brainstem regions on estimates of LC function.
Frequent coauthors
- 18 shared
Michael Esterman
VA Boston Healthcare System
- 16 shared
Joseph DeGutis
Harvard University
- 14 shared
Nicole L. Ward
Vanderbilt University
- 14 shared
Shoshana M. Rosenberg
- 9 shared
Patrick Wakely
- 9 shared
Eric P. Winer
Yale Cancer Center
- 8 shared
Heather A. Parsons
- 8 shared
Ann H. Partridge
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Similar researchers at Cornell University
- Resume-aware match score
- Save to shortlist
- AI-drafted outreach
See your match with Elizabeth Riley
PhdFit ranks faculty by your research interests, methods, and publications — grounded in their actual work, not templates.
- Free to start
- No credit card
- 30-second signup