Lab News

Research Activities & Projects

Updates on our research activities, ongoing projects, and lab achievements.

πŸ“„ PaperJanuary 2026

New paper in Nature Mental Health

Our paper "Hierarchical Neurocognitive Model of Externalizing and Internalizing Comorbidity" is now published in Nature Mental Health (IF = 8.8).

🎀 TalkSeptember 2025

Invited Talk at University of Cambridge

Presented research on the neuropsychopathological N factor at the Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge.

πŸ“„ PaperNovember 2023

Paper published in NeuroImage

"Fractionation of Neural Reward Processing into Independent Components by Novel Decoding Principle" published in NeuroImage (IF = 5.8).

πŸ“„ PaperJune 2023

First-author paper in Nature Medicine

"Shared Neural Basis Underlying Comorbid Psychopathology" published in Nature Medicine (IF = 87.3). Featured as a highlighted paper.

🎀 TalkNovember 2022

Poster at Society for Neuroscience (SfN) 2022

Presented work on neuropsychopathological comorbidity at the annual SfN meeting in San Diego.

πŸ“„ PaperFebruary 2021

Co-first author paper in Science Advances

"Neural Network Involving Medial Orbitofrontal Cortex and Dorsal Periaqueductal Gray Regulation in Human Alcohol Abuse" published in Science Advances (IF = 14.1).

Field News

AI + Brain + Cognition + Mental Health

Cutting-edge developments at the intersection of AI, brain science, cognition, and mental health.

πŸ€– AIJanuary 2026

Large Language Models for Brain Imaging Analysis

Recent advances in LLMs show promise in analyzing neuroimaging data and generating clinical reports. This could revolutionize diagnostic workflows in psychiatry.

🧠 BrainDecember 2025

Neural Mechanisms of Decision Making

New fMRI studies reveal how the prefrontal cortex and striatum interact during value-based decision making, with implications for addiction research.

🌱 Mental HealthNovember 2025

Digital Phenotyping in Depression

Smartphone-based digital phenotyping shows potential for early detection of depressive episodes through passive monitoring of behavior patterns.

πŸ’‘ CognitionOctober 2025

Working Memory Training Effects

Meta-analysis suggests that working memory training has limited transfer effects, challenging the promise of brain training apps.