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June 25, 2026
HSE Researchers Make Aldehydes Perform Dual Function
Chemists from HSE University have discovered a way to carry out a reductive addition reaction without using an external reducing agent. Instead, the required 'resource' is supplied by the aldehyde itself, one of the reaction participants. This approach helps prevent unwanted side reactions, reduces toxicity, and simplifies the production and synthesis of organic molecules, including those used in the manufacture of medicines. The study has been published in Journal of Catalysis.
June 25, 2026
HSE Scientists Explain Why Findings in Autism Research Differ
Researchers from the Cognitive Health and Intelligence Centre at HSE University conducted the first-ever systematic review of studies on the specifics of emotion-from-motion perception in autism. The review showed that differences found between autistic and non-autistic individuals are largely associated with the experimental design and the types of tasks given to study participants. The review findings have been published in Research in Autism.
June 22, 2026
‘In Science, You Are Your Own Boss
Polina Nasledskova is interested in identifying gaps in linguistics and topics that have been overlooked by other researchers. In an interview for the  Young Scientists of HSE University project, she spoke about rare ordinal numerals in Nakh-Daghestanian languages, the benefits of knitting for concentration, and the beauty of the Patriarshy Bridge.

 

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Predictive models of the EEG activity based on eye movements during reading

Science Progress. 2025. Vol. 108. No. 4. Article 00368504241307482.
Kosonogov V., Nikita Rudenkiy, Polina Shirokova

Objective. This study aimed to explore the interrelationship between eye movements and EEG activity and determine which measure has better quality to predict reading efficiency. Methods. The study involved measuring eye movements and EEG from a limited number of leads while 40 healthy adults were reading a novel fragment. Machine learning models (CatBoost, KNN, linear regression) were then applied to predict EEG from eye movements, eye movements from EEG, and reading efficiency from both biological sources. Results. Throughout the study, CatBoost showed the best predictive quality. Of the EEG activity, the alpha-activity was the most accurately predicted from eye movements. Theta- and alpha-power were best predicted in posterior leads, while beta-power and engagement indices were best predicted in frontal leads. Then we predicted eye movements based on the EEG activity, the fixation number being the best predicted feature. Finally, the EEG activity predicted reading efficiency much better than the eye movements data. Discussion. We describe our data in the light of previous EEG experiments highlighting the role of posterior alpha and frontal beta bands in attention and reading processes. Conclusions. EEG activity and eye movements have been revealed to be interrelated, that is future studies can reduce the number of measurements in field settings, where limited technical equipment is available.

Research target: Biology Medical Biotechnologies
Language: English
DOI
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Keywords: eye-trackingEEGmachine learning
Publication based on the results of:
Multidisciplinary study of behavior and decision-making in health population and patients using behavioral, economic, neurocognitive, neuroeconomic, neurocomputational and neural network approaches (2025)
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