Early Career Hallucinations Research Group
@echrgroup
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The ECHR group is part of the International Consortium on Hallucination Research. Connecting ECRs with an interest in hallucinations across the world 🌐 Join ⬇️
Lisbon, Portugal
Joined May 2018
Want to join @echrgroup? Simply complete this form if you’re an #ECR or junior researcher with an interest in #hallucinations #HearingVoices or other #unusualexperiences
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Want fairer academic publishing? Support not-for-profit & Diamond Open Access journals — our latest blog post from @davidesmailes explores why it matters. read it here 👉 https://t.co/W0BzgoK8nF
#OpenAccess #AcademicPublishing #ResearchForAll
echr.group
Traditional scientific publishing is a very lucrative business. For example, it has been reported that for-profit publishers (such as Elsevier, Springer-Nature, Wiley, Taylor & Francis) have pr…
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Thinking about using pre-prints but not sure if it’s worth it? In our latest post, @davidesmailes explores how sharing your research early boosts visibility, accelerates impact, and keeps you in control. Read it here 👉 https://t.co/gi0olttDGo
#OpenScience #Preprints
echr.group
Traditional scientific publishing is slow and is often pay-walled. That is, there is normally a long delay between submitting your manuscript for publication and that manuscript being published (an…
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Why share your data? It strengthens transparency, reduces research waste, and boosts accountability—while respecting ethics and privacy. Read more 👉 https://t.co/7zoLjduytD
#OpenScience #DataSharing #ResearchTips
echr.group
Open data refers to free, unrestricted, sharing of data collected for a study with everyone/anyone. For example, a researcher might post the study collected in their study on something like Figshar…
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Ever feel like your study’s results don’t really “hit home”? That might be a measurement problem. Our new blog dives into why good measurement is critical (and how to get there). Read it 👉 https://t.co/DJ53kNjHKg
#ResearchTips #ScienceTwitter #OpenScience
echr.group
In other posts, I have argued (based on what other, smarter people have said) that it is important for us to recruit larger samples, to pre-register hypothesis-driven work, and to openly share stud…
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In this week’s Open Science Series, @davidesmailes explores why open-source software makes research more robust, collaborative, and impactful. Read more 👉 https://t.co/QdVys8djTs
#OpenScience #OpenSource #Research #researchreproducibility
echr.group
As mentioned in another post, sharing the materials you have used to conduct a study can help others to replicate your work. Replication is important because it allows the research community test h…
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Our new blog dives into 40 years of research linking childhood adversity and psychosis - showing increased risk, emotional abuse as a key factor, and implications for care and prevention. Read it here: https://t.co/wtGsTDi5yO
#Psychosis #MentalHealth #Research #EarlyIntervention
echr.group
Lan Zhou & Marieke Begemann Why do some people go on to develop psychosis, while others do not? Psychosis can involve hearing voices, seeing things others do not, or have strong convictions tha…
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Why share your research materials? 🧪 @DaveSmailes explains the benefits for transparency, reproducibility & scientific progress in his latest Open Science blog post. https://t.co/Cxlt5KyEUo
#OpenScience #ECR #ResearchTransparency
echr.group
Most researchers would likely agree that a core part of the scientific process is attempting to replicate others’ findings, to see how robust/trustworthy those findings are. While conceptual replic…
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And that’s a wrap for #echr2024 Thank you to all our amazing members for presenting their research and helping to build our community. https://t.co/ocgzAlHS2W
echr.group
Visit the post for more.
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@davidesmailes @HaydnJFarrelly A final presentation from our co-chair @CatherineBorto1 about the link between shame, voice hearing in dissociative identity disorder in a phenomenological exploration.
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@davidesmailes And our last presenter of the conference is @HaydnJFarrelly presenting his novel multisensory method for examining hallucinations and perceptual aberrations in the lab.
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@echrgroup Slides here - https://t.co/4Cu1yW8Oym - if anyone wants to download them and have a look 👍
osf.io
Hosted on the Open Science Framework
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And now a very enthusiastic @davidesmailes talks about using peer verification to improve the quality and reduce errors in hallucinations research
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Now we have Camille Jaquet who asks ‘does noise frequency matter on signal detection indices and metacognition?’
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After the break we have Huw Green talking about Anosognosia as a spectrum phenomenon ‘I think I can I know I can’t’
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The wonderful Sohee Park kicked off our second day of #echr2024 with a talk on the psychopathology of self disorders ‘Schizophrenia in the flesh’
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Finally we have Elisabeth Sterner on investigating predictive language processing and task-induced auditory verbal hallucinations in individuals with psychotic-like experiences!
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Helen Olawole-Scott talks about expected precision, speech perception and unusual experiences
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Stephanie Hare joins us online to explain her network analysis on Trauma, symptoms and aberrant salience with non-clinical psychics and controls
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Hannah Ziesenies tells us about linking altered voice perception and speech comprehension in hallucination-prone individuals
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And now Daphne Bernués on Bridging inner speech and memory theories of auditory verbal hallucinations
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