I am a visiting scholar at Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, at the University of California, Berkeley. My research studies the neural mechanisms that allow us to perceive our environment. I am particularly interested on how we detect regularities and statistical rules in sensory stimuli, and how we use those to form predictions about future events.
In the past, I have been investigating the neural and computational mechanisms underlying associative learning in humans and the neural mechanisms underlying the formation of auditory predictions in coma patients.
To study human cognition, I am using imaging (EEG, MEG, ECoG) and psychophysiological techniques (skin conductance, pupil size, startle responses), in combination with machine learning and modeling approaches. My goal is to characterise neural and computational mechanisms which allow typical individuals to perceive their environment and, ultimately, to examine how these are disrupted in patients with disorders of consciousness.
For additional information please check:
my publications on Google scholar or ORCiD
some of my badly commented code on Github