d1d2dopamine

Who am I?

Self-taught, interested in neuroscience, psychology, and reproducible research.

Evidence matters more than expectations, and reproducibility matters more than a compelling story.

About

I am especially interested in neuroscience and psychology. People whose work and way of explaining science I admire include Vladimir Alipov and Robert Sapolsky.

I use GitHub and social platforms as a public notebook and a growing portfolio. My long-term goal is to study at a strong university, gain formal training, and turn independent curiosity into work I can do with other people.

I would also like to contribute to a team. I am used to learning independently, but I want experience discussing methods, reviewing each other’s work, and building something that would be difficult to do alone.

I’m open to methodological feedback, research conversations, and opportunities to contribute to a team. Get in touch.

Now

Developing reusable validation tools and preparing the next stage of the Allostatic Sprint project.

Updated

What I’m working on

The Allostatic Sprint Hypothesis

An exploratory reanalysis of public ADHD-related datasets. Current evidence does not support permanent, task-general Sprint/Crash subtypes. The biological mechanism remains untested.

The project is ongoing and serves as the core of my public research portfolio, including reusable validators and transparent reporting of null results.

Recent GitHub activity

Updated automatically from public GitHub data.