Combining Spatial Wavelets and Sparse Bayesian Learning for Extended Brain Sources Reconstruction

In the context of M/EEG source reconstruction, most distributed source models tend to strongly overestimate the spatial extent of brain activity and underestimate its depth and amplitude (Black contour line: boundary of the “aud-rh” region given by MNE-Python).
The top row shows the results of the MNE and eLORETA algorithms (implemented in MNE-Python with the default parameters), which suffer significantly from these limitations (although eLORETA manages to estimate depth). Sparse Bayesian Learning (SBL, bottom left) underestimates the spatial extent while accurately locating the activity. Combining SBL with spectral graph wavelets, as shown in the bottom right panel, correctly locates the activity (red and green lines are level curves corresponding respectively to 1% and 10% source amplitude levels), estimates its spatial extent and depth, and yields a quantitatively relevant amplitude estimate.
Combining Spatial Wavelets and Sparse Bayesian Learning for Extended Brain Sources Reconstruction
2025. IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 1–12. — @HAL
Cognitive Engineering course

As part of the Cognitive Engineering course (UE Ingénierie Cognitive), MaSCo students—divided into five groups—designed and developed innovative projects based on the measurement of physiological or behavioral signals. These projects required skills in data analysis, experimental design, and the development of technological tools (sensors, virtual reality, etc.).
The final presentations took place on January 30, 2026. The event began with a guest lecture by Ana Zappa, former ILCB member now affiliated at Universitat de Barcelona. Ana presented her work on virtual reality, providing insights into the potential applications of immersive technologies in cognitive engineering.
Christelle, Ambre, Deirdre, & Thierry
Une syntaxe domaine-général utile à la motricité et au langage
Raphaël Py, Marie-Hélène Grosbras, & Marie Montant (CRPN)
Treize Minutes Marseille 2026
Valentin Emiya (LIS) et al.
Lexical Competition Does Not Age: A Spoken Word Recognition Study
Guillaume Hureaux, Serge Pinto, and Sophie Dufour.
2025. Language, Cognition and Neuroscience, December 10, 1–5. — @HAL
Offering and Showing Gestures in 12- to 15-Month-Old Infants in Natural Contexts: A Corpus-Based Study
Shreejata Gupta, Sofiya Karnovska, Marianne Jover, and Markus Paulus.
2025. European Journal of Developmental Psychology 22 (3): 395–417. — @HAL
Evidence for a Role of Memory in Novel Word-Learning after Perinatal Stroke
Clément François, Laura Ferreri, Pablo Ripollés, Alfredo Garcia-Alix, Antoni Rodriguez-Fornells, and Laura Bosch.
2026. Brain and Language 274 (March): 105707. — @HAL
Association: One Term, Five Concepts
Thomas F. Chartier, Joël Fagot, and Arnaud Rey.
2026. Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews 181 (February): 106525. — @HAL
A few shades of supervision for discourse segmentation: Experiments on a French conversational corpus

We compared three machine-learning approaches for segmenting discourse units. The performance of each method (“f_score”) is plotted against the number of training tokens (“size”, in log-scale). “weaksup” means data-programming weak supervision, in which the training set is annotated by an automatic noisy labeller based on a manually written set of labeling rules; “finetune” means fine-tuning an LLM (RoBERTa) with varying amounts of hand-labelled data; “kshot” means prompting GPT-2 with different numbers of examples. Standard fine-tuning of an LLM emerges as the most effective method. It reaches the same performance as the “weaksup” approach while relying on a more straightforward training procedure. The prompting “kshot” approach was lagging behind. Although the models used with the prompting approach are improving rapidly, their intrinsic opacity makes systematic error analysis almost impossible.
Laurent Prévot and Philippe Muller. 2025.
Dialogue & Discourse 16 (2): 35–73. — @HAL
Directory board
Some members of ILCB’s directory board planning 2026 projects and activities over lunch at the recent New Year board meeting.