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Professor Redmond O'Connell

Professor in Decision Neuroscience (Psychology)
Professor in Decision Neuroscience (Trinity Inst. of Neurosciences (TCIN))
      
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Professor Redmond O'Connell

Professor in Decision Neuroscience (Psychology)

Professor in Decision Neuroscience (Trinity Inst. of Neurosciences (TCIN))


  Ageing, memory and other cognitive processes   Neurophysiology   Neuropsychology   Vision
Project Title
 Neural Mechanisms for Perceptual Decisions in Humans
From
April 2014
To
April 2017
Summary
How do we make reliable decisions about noisy sensory inputs? This fundamental question has drawn intense interest from mathematicians, experimental psychologists, cognitive neurophysiologists and engineers alike, culminating in the emergence of a rich theoretical framework for understanding perceptual decision making. At the center of this framework lies the notion of a "decision variable," which integrates sensory evidence over time and triggers the appropriate action upon accruing a criterion amount. Monkey electrophysiology studies have propelled the field forward by identifying neural signals in the brain that fit this role. However, progress in establishing the neural underpinnings of human decision making has been severely hampered by technical challenges. This has presented an enormous obstacle to the field, not only because more elaborate decision making situations can be examined more feasibly in humans, but because decision making, even when based on simple perceptions, may be fundamentally different in humans than in animals. The present proposal builds on a recent paradigm breakthrough that enables isolation of a genuine "decision variable" in a freely-evolving electrical scalp signal that precisely determines the timing and accuracy of perceptual reports. This provides an unprecedented, direct neurophysiological window onto the distinct parameters of the decision process (e.g. "drift rate", baseline and criterion levels) such that the underlying mechanisms of several major behavioral phenomena can be finally resolved. This proposal seeks to develop a systems-level understanding of perceptual decision making in the human brain by tackling four major questions: 1) How are decisions reached more quickly when based on stronger evidence? 2) How is the decision process strategically adapted to deal with prior information and speed pressure? 3) How does top-down spatial attention facilitate faster and more accurate decision making? 4) How does practice strengthen perceptuo-motor interactions and promote intentional decision making? Each of the experiments described in this proposal will definitively test key predictions from prominent theoretical models using robust neurophysiological measurements that have exquisite temporal resolution, are unencumbered by model assumptions, and require minimal signal transformation.
Funding Agency
US National Science Foundation
Programme
Cognitive Neuroscience
Project Title
 Pinpointing the neural mechanisms underpinning elevated intra-subject variability in ADHD
From
January 2015
To
Dec 2016
Summary
Background The cognitive impairments exhibited by individuals suffering from attention-deficit/hyperacitivity disorder (ADHD) vary considerably from person to person and consequently a major priority for research has been to identify core impairments that can be linked to disease-specific abnormalities. One of the most reliable hallmarks of ADHD is a difficulty maintaining consistent performance levels over time: known as 'intra-subject variability' (ISV). ISV has been revealed to be a stable and heritable trait but its neural origins remain poorly understood. A key challenge in the effort to explain ISV is that all cognitive tasks requires a complex series of brain mechanisms whose specific contribution to performance can be difficult to conclusively establish. Recently I developed a novel technique that enables the simultaneous monitoring of the critical processing stages of sensory encoding, decision formation and motor preparation, as well as crucial supporting factors of attention and arousal while participants perform a simple perceptual task. The signals can be measured on a trial-by-trial basis allowing them to be directly linked to the timing and accuracy of the participant's responses. In the present project I will utilize this technique to pinpoint the specific neural abnormalities that give rise to elevated ISV in ADHD. Method A group of 35 children and adolescents diagnosed with ADHD and a non-ADHD comparison group will undergo electroencephalogram (EEG) recording while they perform a simple perceptual task that requires detection of gradual contrast changes in a patterned stimulus. Group-level and single-trial neural signal analyses will be conducted to establish precisely which processing stages contribute to inconsistent performance in ADHD. Benefits of this research project Several competing explanatory accounts of elevated ISV in ADHD have been proposed but there has been a lack of conclusive evidence to adjudicate between them. Identifying the neural origins of ISV in ADHD is essential to our understanding of how this disorder impacts on brain function. This research has the potential to identify disease-specific biomarkers for ADHD that can contribute to improved strategies for earlier and more accurate diagnosis as well as providing novel targets for pharmacological and non-pharmacological intervention.
Funding Agency
Brain and Behaviour Research Foundaiton
Programme
NARSAD Young Investigator Grants
Project Title
 The impact of aging on perceptual decision making
From
Sept 2012
To
Sept 2015
Summary
Funding Agency
Irish Research Council
Programme
Embark
Project Type
Postrgraduate Scholarship

Details Date
Symposium Co-Chair, Neuroscience Ireland Annual Meeting, Dublin 2014
Symposium Convenor and Co-Chair, 'P3, the next 50 years', International Congress of Clinical Neurophysiology, Berlin 2014
Language Skill Reading Skill Writing Skill Speaking
English Fluent Fluent Fluent
French Fluent Medium Fluent
Details Date From Date To
Society for Neuroscience 2005 present
Society for Psychophysiological Research 2008 present
Neuroscience Ireland 2004 present
Expert Review Panel for Marie Sklodowska Curie Actions Postdoctoral Fellowship Panel June 2023 present
Board of Reviewing Editors, eLife 2016 present
Haarlem, C.S. and Mitchell, K.J. and Jackson, A.L. and O'Connell, R.G., Individual peak alpha frequency correlates with visual temporal resolution, but only under specific task conditions, European Journal of Neuroscience, 2024, Notes: [cited By 0], Journal Article, PUBLISHED  DOI
Elaine A Corbett, L Alexandra Martinez-Rodriguez, Cian Judd, Redmond G O'Connell, Simon P Kelly , Multiphasic value biases in fast-paced decisions, e:oiflfi, 2023, Journal Article, PUBLISHED  TARA - Full Text  DOI
Grogan JP, Rys W, Kelly SP, O'Connell RG, Confidence is predicted by pre- and post-choice decision signal dynamics, Imaging Neuroscience, 2023, Journal Article, PUBLISHED  TARA - Full Text  DOI
Walsh, K. and McGovern, D.P. and Dully, J. and Kelly, S.P. and O'connell, R.G., Prior probability cues bias sensory encoding with increasing task exposure, eLife, 12, (RP91135), 2023, Notes: [cited By 0], Journal Article, PUBLISHED  TARA - Full Text  DOI
Brosnan MB, Dockree PM, Harty S, Pearce DJ, Levenstein JM, Gillebert CR, Bellgrove MA, O'Connell RG, Robertson IH, Demeyere N., Lost in Time: Temporal Monitoring Elicits Clinical Decrements in Sustained Attention Post-Stroke., Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society : JINS, 2022, p249-257 , Journal Article, PUBLISHED  TARA - Full Text  DOI
Pinggal E, Dockree PM, O'Connell RG, Bellgrove MA, Andrillon T., Pharmacological Manipulations of Physiological Arousal and Sleep-Like Slow Waves Modulate Sustained Attention., The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience, 42, (43), 2022, p8113-8124 , Journal Article, PUBLISHED  DOI
Kelly SP, Corbett EA, O'Connell RG, Neurocomputational mechanisms of prior-informed perceptual decision-making in humans, Nature Human Behaviour, 2021, Journal Article, PUBLISHED  TARA - Full Text  DOI
Stefanac, N.R. and Zhou, S.-H. and Spencer-Smith, M.M. and O'Connell, R. and Bellgrove, M.A., A neural index of inefficient evidence accumulation in dyslexia underlying slow perceptual decision making, Cortex, 142, 2021, p122-137 , Notes: [cited By 0], Journal Article, PUBLISHED  DOI
O'Connell, R.G. and Kelly, S.P., Neurophysiology of Human Perceptual Decision-Making, Annual Review of Neuroscience, 44, 2021, p495-516 , Notes: [cited By 3], Journal Article, PUBLISHED  TARA - Full Text  DOI
Francesca R. Farina, Gabija Pragulbickait", Marc Bennett, Cian Judd, Kevin Walsh, Samantha Mitchell, Redmond G. O'Connell, Robert Whelan, Contralateral delay activity is not a robust marker of cognitive function in older adults at risk of mild cognitive impairment, European Journal of Neuroscience, 2020, Journal Article, PUBLISHED
  

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Geuzebroek AC, Craddock H, O'Connell RG, Kelly SP, Balancing true and false detection of intermittent sensory targets by adjusting the inputs to the evidence accumulation process, eLIFE, 2023, Journal Article, PUBLISHED

  


Award Date
Elected Fellow at Trinity College Dublin 2016
Enterprise Ireland Innovation Award 2015
NARSAD Young Investigator Award 2014
Trinity Excellence in Teaching Award (Nomination) 2023
Trinity Excellence in Research Supervision (nomination) 2023
Neuroscience Ireland Distinguished Investigator Award (Nomination) 2023
Irish Research Council Researcher of the Year Award (nomination) 2023