Jefferson Ortega
@jortega.bsky.social
150 followers 420 following 14 posts
PhD Student in Cognitive Neuroscience at the Whitney Lab @UCBerkeley, researching social perception, cognition, and vision science 👁🎭 | Born in 🇩🇴, raised in Wash. Heights | NIH D-SPAN F99 Fellow
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Big thanks to my advisor David Whitney for his necessary guidance and support on this project, and to
@BerkeleyPsych for being an amazing place to do research!
These findings demonstrate robust individual differences in affect overestimation, indicating that some observers may recall affective events more vividly than others. Such differences may reflect a predisposition toward underlying psychopathology. (7/7)
Moreover, the magnitude of overestimation was consistent within individuals, remaining stable across different days and generalizing across different stimuli. (6/7)
In our study, we examined whether overestimation in observers’ recollections of affective events is unique to each individual. We found that affect overestimation occurred when observers made summary judgments about the emotions of people in recently viewed videos. (5/7)
Prior research has shown that ensemble judgments of emotions are prone to overestimation biases, suggesting that people tend to amplify emotional content in memory. (4/7)
a group of cartoon characters are standing next to each other
ALT: a group of cartoon characters are standing next to each other
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This summarization, known as ensemble perception, refers to the visual system’s ability to extract summary statistics from large sets of visual input. (3/7)
Humans rely on recalling past events to make effective future decisions, but this process often requires summarizing large amounts of information. (2/7)
a man taking a picture with a camera with #schitts creek on the bottom
ALT: a man taking a picture with a camera with #schitts creek on the bottom
media.tenor.com
Excited to share that our paper "Continuous affect tracking reveals that overestimation during the recollection of affect is idiosyncratic and stable" is out now in @ARVOJOV !

doi.org/10.1167/jov....

A short thread on the findings below 👇🏽📷(1/7)
Continuous affect tracking reveals that overestimation during the recollection of affect is idiosyncratic and stable | JOV | ARVO Journals
doi.org
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Hi BlueSky!

The Research Experience Pathways (REP) in Psychology program is participating in Berkeley's DEIBJ fundraising campaign for the month of November!

crowdfund.berkeley.edu/project/39859

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Hi BlueSky!

The Research Experience Pathways (REP) in Psychology program is participating in Berkeley's DEIBJ fundraising campaign for the month of November!

crowdfund.berkeley.edu/project/39859

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