I have a background both in biology and psychology.

I did my PhD studying the role of serotoninergic neurons in the interplay between pain and cardio-vascular regulations in rodents.

I then moved on to the field of cognitive neuroimaging to study multisensory integration in humans.

I am passionate about open science that I see as:

  • a way to build a more inclusive research community based on sharing and cooperation rather than hoarding and competition,
  • a way to address some of the replicability and reproducibility issues that are affecting many areas of science by making the sharing of code and data more common,
  • a set of tools and practices that can reduce inefficiencies in the research process and can benefit the overall community as well as the individual scientists.

I am also one of the maintainers of:

and actively involved in 2 projects aimed at standardizing the reporting of methods and resulting in neuroimaging: