Archiv für Dezember 2024
65th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society in New York
From 21 to 24 November 2024, a group of ten colleagues from the Departments of Cognitive and Experimental Psychology as well as Biological and Social Psychology took part in the renowned 65th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society in New York City. The meeting is the world’s most important gathering for cognitive psychologists and brings together researchers from over 40 countries – from experienced experts to young scientists who are already making remarkable contributions to science.
The varied programme offered keynotes, symposia, workshops, poster presentations and numerous opportunities for exchange. With over 1,650 contributions and a total of 2,700 participants, a broad spectrum of current research was presented.
Our colleagues used the conference not only to discuss the latest trends and challenges in cognitive psychology and to intensify international collaborations, but also to present their own research findings.
Talks:
Luca Moretti: Can’t Wait to Relax: Prospective Relaxation of Control as Revealed by a Future-Based Congruency Sequence Effect.
Anna K. Kuhlen: Cumulative Semantic Interference Within Social Groups: Naming One Group Member Slows Down Naming Others.
Rachel M. Brown: Speaking to a Partner in a Shared-Memory Task Reduces the Production Effect.
Poster:
Sandra Hensen: Process Interference Between Memory Encoding and Response Selection in a PRP-Like Dual-Task Paradigm.
Elena Benini: Episodic Retrieval in Task Switching: Repeating the Response Induces Retrieval of the Task.
Denise N. Stephan: Crossmodal Response Precuing.
Luigi Falanga: Age-Related Changes in Selective Listening: Investigating Cognitive and Sensory Factors in Auditory Attention.
Ludivine Schils: Influence of Aging and Task Preparation on the Stimulus-Response Modality Compatibility Effect.
Matilde E. Simonetti: The Influence of Bilingualism on Statistical Word Learning.
Anton Koger: Assessing the Influence of Cognitive Dual-Task Demands on Postural Control: An Event-Related Approach Using Continuous Force-Plate Data.
Herzlich Willkommen Alice Camisa
Seit August 2024 unterstützt Alice Camisa das Team des Lehrstuhls für Kognitions- und Experimentalpsychologie als wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiterin im DFG-geförderten Projekt “Examining the cognitive processes underlying the control of dual-task representations“ (geleitet von Dr. Patricia Hirsch).
Alice Camisa absolvierte 2020 ihr Bachelorstudium in Psychologie an der University of Modena and Reggio Emilia und 2023 ihr Masterstudium in Psychobiologie und kognitiven Neurowissenschaften an der University of Parma.