David Beltrán, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia (UNED)
08:45
Mon—HZ_7—Talks1—202
Negation, Pragmatics, and Prediction: Evidence from Eye-Tracking
Isabel Orenes, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia
09:00
Mon—HZ_7—Talks1—203
Ironic Effects of Negation in More Naturalistic Tasks
Parker Smith, University of Tuebingen
09:15
Mon—HZ_7—Talks1—204
Redundant Gestures: Integrating Head Nods, Shakes, Thumbs Gestures and Speech
Samuel Sonntag, Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen
09:30
Mon—HZ_7—Talks1—205
Activation of plausible alternatives in negation processing
Daria Tack, Goethe University Frankfurt
08:30 - 10:00
Action control: Stimulus-response binding
Monday, 10 March | HZ_8
Chair/s: Lars-Michael Schöpper
08:30
Mon—HZ_8—Talks1—301
The Simon Effect in Embodied Cognition: Enhanced Spatial Processing or Increased Stimulus-Response Binding in Near-Hand Space?
Aldo Sommer, Department of Psychology, University of Greifswald, Germany
08:45
Mon—HZ_8—Talks1—302
Left or right and top or down: Multiple Simon effect in two-dimensional stimuli
Pamela Baess, University of Hildesheim
09:00
Mon—HZ_8—Talks1—303
That retrieves a lot for me: Meaningfulness increases retrieval of stimulus-response bindings
Lars-Michael Schöpper, Trier University, Department of Cognitive Psychology | Trier University, Institute for Cognitive & Affective Neuroscience (ICAN)
09:15
Mon—HZ_8—Talks1—304
Binding and Retrieval of Event Files: Insights from error types in an S1R1-S2R2 task
Malte Möller, University of Passau
09:30
Mon—HZ_8—Talks1—305
Motivational Moderation of Stimulus-Response Binding
Andreas Eder, University of Würzburg (JMU)
08:30 - 10:00
Understanding the power of voice: Insights from emotion, neural mechanisms and individual differences
Monday, 10 March | HZ_9
Chair/s: Silke Paulmann, Maren Schmidt-Kassow
08:30
Mon—HZ_9—Talks1—401
Perceiving voices through predictions and errors: from neural mechanisms to clinical implications
Ana Pinheiro, Faculdade de Psicologia, Universidade de Lisboa
08:45
Mon—HZ_9—Talks1—402
Forming first impressions from voices
Nadine Lavan, Queen Mary University of London
09:00
Mon—HZ_9—Talks1—403
Influence of acute and long-lasting stress on voice perception
Maren Schmidt-Kassow, Clinic of Psychiatry, Frankfurt
09:15
Mon—HZ_9—Talks1—404
The Impact of Voice: Shaping Listener Reactions and Emotions
Silke Paulmann, University of Essex, Department of Psychology and Centre for Brain Sciences
09:30
Mon—HZ_9—Talks1—405
Recognizing social communicative intentions in the voice: A cross-cultural comparison
Daniela Sammler, Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, Research Group Neurocognition of Music and Language, Frankfurt am Main, Germany | Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Department of Neuropsychology, Leipzig, Germany
08:30 - 10:00
Cognitive processes in decisions from experience
Monday, 10 March | HZ_10
Chair/s: Thorsten Pachur
08:30
Mon—HZ_10—Talks1—501
Being Risk Averse and Risk Seeking at the Same Time: An Apparent Preference Reversal in Valuations and Decisions from Experience
Sebastian Olschewski, University of Basel | Warwick Business School
08:45
Mon—HZ_10—Talks1—502
Is there a description-experience gap in loss aversion? A meta-analysis with cumulative prospect theory.
Nuno Busch, School of Management, Technische Universität München
09:00
Mon—HZ_10—Talks1—503
Feedback-induced attitudinal changes in risk preferences
Stefano Palminteri, Ecole normale supérieure, Paris | Institut national de la santé médicale
09:15
Mon—HZ_10—Talks1—504
Negative Recency in Experience-Based Risky Choice and the Description-Experience Gap
René Schlegelmilch, University of Bremen
09:30
Mon—HZ_10—Talks1—505
Predecisional information search adaptively reduces three types of uncertainty
Mikhail Spektor, VinUniversity | University of Warwick
08:30 - 10:00
Metacognition and metamemory I
Monday, 10 March | HZ_11
Chair/s: Sofia Navarro-Baez, Franziska Ingendahl
08:30
Mon—HZ_11—Talks1—601
Metacognitive, but not cognitive feedback remedies illusions in judgments of learning
Sofia Navarro-Báez, Technical University of Darmstadt
08:45
Mon—HZ_11—Talks1—602
Metacognition of variable retrieval
Katarzyna Zawadzka, Adam Mickiewicz University
09:00
Mon—HZ_11—Talks1—603
Metamemory Control in Schema-Based Source Monitoring: Improving Memory for Expected Sources
Marie Luisa Schaper, Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf
09:15
Mon—HZ_11—Talks1—604
How Accurate are People at Predicting their Memory for Context?
Désirée N. Schönung, University of Mannheim
09:30
Mon—HZ_11—Talks1—605
Modeling the relationship between metamemory judgments and latent memory processes using Bayesian hierarchical MPT models
Franziska M. Leipold, University of Mannheim
08:30 - 10:00
Mind meets machine: Cognitive insights into human-agent interaction
Monday, 10 March | HZ_12
Chair/s: Jairo Perez-Osorio, Basil Wahn, Eva Wiese
08:30
Mon—HZ_12—Talks1—701
When do humans offload an attentionally demanding task to an algorithm?
Basil Wahn, Technische Universität Berlin
08:45
Mon—HZ_12—Talks1—702
The role of sensory motor information on agency attribution in human-robot interaction
Francesca Ciardo, University of Milan-Bicocca
09:00
Mon—HZ_12—Talks1—703
Exploring Trust Dynamics in Human-Agent Teams
Amroté Getu, Technische Universität Berlin | George Mason University
09:15
Mon—HZ_12—Talks1—704
Error monitoring and performance in human-AI teams
Jairo Perez-Osorio, TU Berlin
09:30
Mon—HZ_12—Talks1—705
Try to see it my way: When do humans take the visual perspective of robots?
Leda Berio, Ruhr University Bochum
08:30 - 10:00
Consumer and traffic psychology
Monday, 10 March | HZ_13
Chair/s: Vasiliki Kondyli
08:30
Mon—HZ_13—Talks1—801
Situational Triggers of Road Rage: Enhancing the Operationalization of Aggressive Driving
Monique Dittrich, CARIAD SE - Volkswagen Group
08:45
Mon—HZ_13—Talks1—802
Change Blindness and Anticipation in Naturalistic Driving: The Role of Visuospatial and Temporal Complexity
Vasiliki Kondyli, Department of Psychology, Lund University, Sweden
09:00
Mon—HZ_13—Talks1—803
Systematic Review of the Perception and the Aesthetics of Sustainable Fashion Design
Lotta Straube, Otto-Friedrich University Bamberg | Coburg University of Applied Sciences
09:15
Mon—HZ_13—Talks1—804
A shopping tour down memory lane: How personal associations affect nostalgic consumption
Isabella Huber, Department of General Psychology and Methodology, University of Bamberg, Germany
10:00 - 11:00
Coffee break
Monday, 10 March | Casino_Foyer
11:00 - 12:30
From berries to brains: Insights into search behavior from visual foraging - Part II: Strategy & decision making
Monday, 10 March | HZ_2
Chair/s: Iris Wiegand, Jan Tünnermann
11:00
Mon—HZ_2—Talks2—901
The marginal value theorem (usually) tells you when it is time to move to the next patch.
Jeremy Wolfe, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA USA | Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA USA
11:15
Mon—HZ_2—Talks2—902
Angles, circles, and quitting rules in visual foraging
Marcos Bella-Fernández, UNIE Universidad | Universidad Pontificia de Comillas | Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
11:30
Mon—HZ_2—Talks2—903
Modelling foraging as an evolving sequence of decisions
Joe MacInnes, Swansea University, department of Computer Science
11:45
Mon—HZ_2—Talks2—904
Past, present and future in the study of experimental foraging in children
Beatriz Gil-Gómez de Liaño, Autonomous University of Madrid
12:00
Mon—HZ_2—Talks2—905
Adult age differences in visual foraging
Marianna Pope, Donders Centre for Cognition, Donders Institute | Department of Neuropsychology and Rehabilitation Psychology, Radboud University
11:00 - 12:30
Good scientific practices, novel tools, and methods
Monday, 10 March | HZ_7
Chair/s: Alexandra Bendixen, Roland Pfister
11:00
Mon—HZ_7—Talks2—1001
Over-Specification Tests: An Overlooked but Essential Tool to Psychological Theory Development
Johannes Ziegler, LMU München
11:15
Mon—HZ_7—Talks2—1002
Ethiktool - Eine Softwarelösung zur Unterstützung der ethischen Begutachtung von Forschungsvorhaben
Alexandra Bendixen, Technische Universität Chemnitz
11:30
Mon—HZ_7—Talks2—1003
Assessing an Accessible Mobile Eye-Tracker: Evaluation of the Pupil Neon
Valentin Foucher, General Psychology, Ulm University
11:45
Mon—HZ_7—Talks2—1004
Response Durations: A flexible, no-cost tool for psychological science
Roland Pfister, General Psychology, Trier University | Institute for Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, Trier University
12:00
Mon—HZ_7—Talks2—1005
Poisson signal detection theory
Christian Kaernbach, Institut für Psychologie,
Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel
12:15
Mon—HZ_7—Talks2—1006
Confidence intervals for within-subjects designs
Alexander C. Schütz, AG Sensomotorisches Lernen, Philipps-Universität Marburg | Center for Mind, Brain and Behavior, Marburg, Gießen & Darmstadt
11:00 - 12:30
Auditory cognition in interactive virtual environments
Monday, 10 March | HZ_8
Chair/s: Sabine J. Schlittmeier, Stephan Getzmann
11:00
Mon—HZ_8—Talks2—1101
How affective sound influences the perception of distance in Virtual Reality
Leon Kroczek, Department of Psychology, Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, Regensburg University
11:15
Mon—HZ_8—Talks2—1102
Auditory and audiovisual time-to-collision estimation and road-crossing judgments
Daniel Oberfeld-Twistel, Allgemeine Experimentelle Psychologie, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz
11:30
Mon—HZ_8—Talks2—1103
Neural processing of auditory position changes in azimuth and distance: Comparing findings from a real and a virtual room across age groups
Benjamin Stodt, Leibniz Research Centre for Working Environment and Human Factors (IfADo), Dortmund, Germany
11:45
Mon—HZ_8—Talks2—1104
EEG-based cortical speech tracking of unscripted, natural speech
Stefan Debener, Department of Psychology, University of Oldenburg
12:00
Mon—HZ_8—Talks2—1105
Memory and listening effort in conversations: The role of spatial position, visual cues, and cognitive functions
Chinthusa Mohanathasan, Work and Engineering Psychology, RWTH Aachen University, Jägerstraße 17 - 19, 52066 Aachen, Germany
11:00 - 12:30
From babies to semantics: Leveraging language models as tools for psycholinguistic research
Monday, 10 March | HZ_9
Chair/s: Benjamin Gagl
11:00
Mon—HZ_9—Talks2—1201
Meaning Modulations and Stability in Large Language Models: An Analysis of BERT Embeddings for Psycholinguistic Research
Fritz Günther, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Berlin, Germany
11:15
Mon—HZ_9—Talks2—1202
Decoding Early Vocabulary Acquisition: Naturalistic evidence from EEG encoding models across the First Five Years
Katharina Menn, Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany | Tilburg University, the Netherlands
11:30
Mon—HZ_9—Talks2—1203
Can Large Language Models (LLMs) describe pictures like children? A comparative corpus study.
Hanna Woloszyn, University of Cologne | Self Learning Systems Lab
11:45
Mon—HZ_9—Talks2—1204
A Systematic Evaluation of Dutch Large Language Models’ Surprisal Estimates
Sam Boeve, Ghent University
12:00
Mon—HZ_9—Talks2—1205
The emergence of semantic and syntactic units in massive multi-language models
marco marelli, University of Milano-Bicocca
11:00 - 12:30
Cognitive modeling and conflict tasks
Monday, 10 March | HZ_10
Chair/s: Markus Janczyk, Valentin Koob
11:00
Mon—HZ_10—Talks2—1301
Unravelling the effect of physical effort on cognitive control parameters
Leslie Held, Department of Experimental Psychology, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium
11:15
Mon—HZ_10—Talks2—1302
Employing the Diffusion Model for Conflict Tasks (DMC) to clarify the influence of target eccentricity on information processing in the visual Simon task
Ruben Ellinghaus, FernUniversität in Hagen
11:30
Mon—HZ_10—Talks2—1303
Comparing sequential effects in interference tasks to sequential effects in other domains using cognitive modeling
Anne Voormann, University of Freiburg
11:45
Mon—HZ_10—Talks2—1304
Accelerated parameter identification and maximum likelihood estimation for diffusion models
Thomas Richter, Otto-von-Guericke Universität Magdeburg
12:00
Mon—HZ_10—Talks2—1305
Fitting conflict diffusion models with the R-Package dRiftDM
Valentin Koob, University of Bremen
11:00 - 12:30
Metacognition and metamemory II
Monday, 10 March | HZ_11
Chair/s: Sofia Navarro-Baez, Franziska Ingendahl
11:00
Mon—HZ_11—Talks2—1401
Selected Findings From a Meta-Analysis on Reactivity to Immediate Judgments of Learning
Franziska Ingendahl, Technical University of Darmstadt, Germany
11:15
Mon—HZ_11—Talks2—1402
Judgments of Learning Modify Memory Regardless of the Response Format or Response Scale
Monika Undorf, Technical University of Darmstadt
11:30
Mon—HZ_11—Talks2—1403
Using metacognition to examine age-related changes in memory retrieval
Maciej Hanczakowski, Adam Mickiewicz University
11:45
Mon—HZ_11—Talks2—1404
Dynamic Cue Integration in Judgments of Learning
Luisa Schulz, University of Mannheim
12:00
Mon—HZ_11—Talks2—1405
Metacognitive aspects of insight problem solving
Amory Danek, Heidelberg University
11:00 - 12:30
Human-machine-interactions
Monday, 10 March | HZ_12
Chair/s: Jakob Kaiser
11:00
Mon—HZ_12—Talks2—1501
Influence of believed AI involvement on the perception of digital medical advice
Moritz Reis, Department of Psychology, University of Würzburg
11:15
Mon—HZ_12—Talks2—1502
Improving Doctor-Patient Communication Using Large Language Models - Results from an Experimental Online Study
Christian Böffel, RWTH Aachen University, Institute of Psychology, Work and Engineering Psychology
11:30
Mon—HZ_12—Talks2—1503
AI-augmented decision-making in one-to-one face matching: Alternatives to concurrent advice presentation to reduce overreliance
Eesha Kokje, Department of Psychology, LMU Munich, Munich, Germany
11:45
Mon—HZ_12—Talks2—1504
Agency and Adaptation: How Human Engagement Shapes Goal-Directed Learning in AI Collaborations
Jakob Kaiser, Nuremberg Institute for Market Decisions
12:00
Mon—HZ_12—Talks2—1505
In the Face of Uncertainty: How Robots’ Appearance Shape Mind Perception.
Yasmina Giebeler, Technische Universität Berlin, Germany
11:00 - 12:30
Tactile and time perception
Monday, 10 March | HZ_13
Chair/s: Matthias Grabenhorst
11:00
Mon—HZ_13—Talks2—1601
The tactile distance aftereffect transfers to curvature perception
Michaela Jeschke, Experimental Psychology, Justus-Liebig University Giessen
11:15
Mon—HZ_13—Talks2—1602
The Role of Skin Mechanics for Softness Exploration and Perception
Causal Inference in Visuotactile Temporal Judgements
Bora Celebi, Justus-Liebig University, Gießen, HapLab
11:45
Mon—HZ_13—Talks2—1604
Breathing helps timing
Yuze Song, Zhejiang University
12:00
Mon—HZ_13—Talks2—1605
Time perception and endogenous spatial attention: Differential effects of shifts towards vs. away from stimuli
Alina Krug, General Psychology, Ulm University
12:15
Mon—HZ_13—Talks2—1606
The anticipation of events in time
Matthias Grabenhorst, Ernst Strüngmann Institute for Neuroscience in Cooperation with Max Planck Society, 60528 Frankfurt, Germany | Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, 60322 Frankfurt, Germany
12:30 - 14:00
Lunch break
Monday, 10 March | {session_room}
12:30 - 14:00
Meeting of Young Scientists
Monday, 10 March | Sturm & Drang
14:00 - 15:30
Welcome Address and Keynote 1 — Jeremy Wolfe: How did I miss that? How we ‘look but fail to see’ in the lab, the clinic, and the world
Monday, 10 March | HZ_2
How did I miss that? How we ‘look but fail to see’ in the lab, the clinic, and the world
Jeremy M. Wolfe, Department of Ophthalmology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA
15:30 - 17:00
Cognitive control
Monday, 10 March | Casino_1.801
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1701
A new precueing paradigm: Impact of task preparation on multimodal precueing
Ludivine Schils, Institute of Psychology, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1702
Plasticity of interference effects on n-2 repetition costs in task switching
Alexander Berger, Ulm University, Department of Psychology, 89075 Ulm
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1703
Beyond Dual Tasks: Investigating Task-order Coordination in Triple-Task Situations
Sebastian Kübler, Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1704
Assessing time-on-task changes in cognitive control and vigilance components in a dual task
Amelie C. Jung, University of Greifswald, Germany
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1705
Temporal preparation modulates speeded spatial selection in a flanker compatibility task
Robert Langner, Institute of Systems Neuroscience, Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf, Germany | Brain and Behaviour, Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine (INM-7), Research Centre Jülich, Germany
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1706
A Meta-Analysis On Affective Modulation of the Congruency Sequence Effect
Felix Cramer, University of Tuebingen
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1707
Enhanced Effects in the Affective Spatial Compatibility Task Despite Low Stimulus Valence
Kristin Prehn, Department of Psychology, Medical School Hamburg | ICAN Institute for Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, Medical School Hamburg
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1708
Reinterpreting Self- and We-Prioritization: How Polarity Correspondence can account for Prioritization Effects
Marcel Pauly, Saarland University
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1709
Attack of the clones: A preregistered study about ignoring one’s own voice
Stefanie Christina Richthofer, Witten/Herdecke University, Witten, Germany
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1710
Visual search is robust against auditory distraction unless we are actively listening
Jan Philipp Röer, Witten/Herdecke University
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1711
Metacognition in the Face of Distraction
Sandra Nowak, Adam Mickiewicz University
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1712
Interruptions during visual search: Examining the effects of perceptual and cognitive load
Mental health and exposure to psychosocial stress among Afghan refugees in Germany
Luca Clauss-Beggerow, Neurodidactics & NeuroLab, Institute of Psychology, University of Hildesheim, Germany
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1802
The Mediating Role of Psychological Flexibility in the Relationship between Interparental Conflict and Romantic Relationship Attitudes
Leyla Budak, Ankara Social Sciences University | Bursa Technical University
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1803
Exploring attachment styles and their association with attentional network efficiency
Lara Fetzer, University of Ulm, Department of General Psychology
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1804
Do Emotions Come in a Package? Exploring Emotional Response Coherence using a Psychometric Network Approach
Ji-Young Min, LMU Munich
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1805
The Role of Sound, Color, and Translation Method in Emotion Elicitation Using Film Clips: Insights from fNIRS and Self-Report Measures
Osman İyilikci, Manisa Celal Bayar University, Department of Experimental Psychology
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1806
Reduced perception of sensory information drives boredom in health and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
Johannes P.-H. Seiler, Institute of Physiology
Focus Program Translational Neurosciences
University Medical Center of the
Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz
Duesbergweg 6
55128 Mainz | Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy
University Medical Center of the
Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz
Untere Zahlbacher Straße 8
55131 Mainz
15:30 - 17:00
Memory and learning
Monday, 10 March | Casino_1.801
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1901
Memory sensitivity and response bias for adaptive memory in the context of survival and mate searching for raising offspring.
Yıldız Özkılıç, faculty member
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1902
Musical features predict episodic memory advantage of song vs. speech
Caroline Kellner, Department of Cognitive Neuropsychology, MPI for Empirical Aesthetics
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1903
Qualitative and Quantitative Changes in Autobiographical Memories’ Emotionality – The Role of Cognitive Reappraisal and Expressive Suppression
Sophie Hoehne, Department of Developmental Psychology, Institute
of Psychology and Education, Ulm University,
Albert-Einstein-Allee, 47, 89081 Ulm
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1904
Category Learning is Relational: An evidence accumulation model in self-regulated category learning
Ann-Katrin Hosch, University of Bremen
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1905
ManyBeds: An international collaboration evaluating the replicability of auditory targeted memory reactivation
Julia Beitner, Clinical Psychology, Central Institute of Mental Health, Medical Faculty Mannheim, University of Heidelberg, Mannheim, Germany | Addiction Behavior and Addiction Medicine, Central Institute of Mental Health, Medical Faculty Mannheim, University of Heidelberg, Mannheim, Germany | Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Central Institute of Mental Health, Medical Faculty Mannheim, University of Heidelberg, Mannheim, Germany
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1906
Do costs of prospective-memory tasks follow an ex-Gaussian distribution?
Fabian E. Gümüsdagli, Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1907
Learning semantic and low-level cues in contextual cueing with real-life scenes
Felice Tavera, University of Cologne
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1908
Learning attentional control policies through self-organized scheduling.
David Dignath, University Tübingen
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1909
Sequence learning without consciousness
Darinka Trübutschek, 1. Research Group Neural Circuits, Consciousness, and Cognition, Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Nursima Ünver-Aydingül, Ernst Strüngmann Institute for Neuroscience, Frankfurt, Germany | Max Planck-University of Toronto Centre (MPUTC) for Neural Science and Technology, Toronto, Canada | University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—1911
The Role of Working Memory on Aesthetic Judgments
Bettina Rolke, University of Tübingen
15:30 - 17:00
Perception
Monday, 10 March | Casino_1.801
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—2001
From slow motion to time lapse: exploring judgment biases in video speed perception
Laura Sperl, FernUniversität Hagen, Allgemeine Psychologie: Urteilen, Entscheiden, Handeln
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—2002
Contribution of acoustic and perceptual features in predicting a “music” category
Talip Ata Aydin, Music Department, Max-Planck-Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, Frankfurt-am-Main, Germany
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—2003
The effect of set size on individual object and ensemble perception in naturalistic scenes
Yanina Elise Tena Garcia, Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—2004
Choose your own PAS? Modifying the Perceptual Awareness Scale impacts unconcious processing inferences
Alicia Ferrer-Mendieta, Departamento de psicología básica, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—2005
The perception of time during locomotion
Nathan Han, Department of Psychology and Behavioural Science, Zhejiang University
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—2006
Early visual cortex is recruited to act as a comparison circuit between mental representations and visual inputs
Maria Servetnik, Ernst Strüngmann Institute for Neuroscience in cooperation with the Max Planck Society, Frankfurt, Germany | Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—2007
Modeling aesthetic experiences across dynamic natural inputs.
Mustafa Alperen Ekinci, Neural Computation Group, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, Physics, Geography, Justus Liebig University Gießen, Gießen Germany
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—2008
Relational memory for object changes in scenes: Eye movements reveal effects of scene repetitions
Josefine Albert, Neuro-Cognitive Psychology, Bielefeld University | Center for Cognitive Interaction Technology, Bielefeld University
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—2009
An analysis of the unconscious processing of hierarchical patterns through Bayesian and General Recognition Theory models
Christian Andrade, Complutense University of Madrid
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—2010
Violations of spatiotemporal visual regularities lead to pupil dilation responses
Hamit Basgol, Department of Computer Science, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany | The Graduate Training Centre of Neuroscience, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—2011
Representations of Scene Beauty in Space and Time: An EEG-fMRI Fusion Study
Philipp Flieger, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, Physics, Geography, Justus Liebig University Gießen, Germany
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—2012
How Grades Shape Students’ Feedback Processing and Emotions: Insights From an Eye Tracking Study
David F. Sachs, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Germany
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—2013
Development of eyemovements in reading from first to fifth grade
Josefine Horbach, Department of Psychological Assessment and Intervention; Institute of Psychology;
RWTH Aachen University, Germany
Mon—Casino_1.801—Poster1—2014
ACAM — a novel Adaptive CAMpimetry technique for a fast, precise, and reliable measurement of visual field defect borders
Doris Schmid, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
15:30 - 17:00
Attention, decisions, and executive functions
Monday, 10 March | Casino_1.811
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2101
Is Optional Stopping Really No Problem for Bayesians?
Frieder Göppert, Department of Computer Science, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2102
Learning to Solve the Tower of Hanoi: Explicit and Systematic or Procedural?
Christine Blech, FernUniversitaet in Hagen, Hagen, Germany
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2103
Studying the Role of Visuospatial Attention in the Multi-Attribute Task Battery II
Daniel Gugerell, Faculty of Psychology, University of Vienna, 1010 Vienna, Austria
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2104
Investigating neuronal correlates of attention to different feature dimensions using intracranial EEG
Tobias Schoeberl, German Primate Center, Leibniz Institute of Primate Research, Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory, Goettingen Germany
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2105
Can visual decisions be manipulated by explainable artificial intelligence?
Romy Müller, Technische Universität Dresden,
Chair of Engineering Psychology and Applied Cognitive Research
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2106
Is a distrust instruction helpful when interacting with a fallible AI?
Tobias Peters, Paderborn University
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2107
Validating the Decision Diffusion Model for Olfactory Decisions
Luisa Bogenschütz, Universität Hildesheim
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2108
Applying the Diffusion Model to Visual Processing for Understanding Dementia Risk: Insights from the EPIC-Norfolk Cohort
Tugba Hato, Heidelberg University
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2109
Exploring the Effect of Threat-Related Distractors and their Location Predictability on a Masked Vernier Acuity Task
Diána Pakai-Stecina, Universität Hildesheim
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2110
Activating the social processing mode during visual search: the additional singleton paradigm
Siddhima Gupta, Universität des Saarlandes
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2111
How does the fridge’s bzzz influence your search for milk? The effect of anchor object sound on visual search
Yuri Markov, Goethe University Frankfurt, Department of Psychology, Scene Grammar Lab, Germany
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2112
How to be seen in the forest - visual search for people wearing different levels of protective clothing
Wolfgang Einhäuser, Chemnitz University of Technology
15:30 - 17:00
Language, communication and social interaction
Monday, 10 March | Casino_1.811
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2201
The effects of eye gaze on conversation initiation with a robot
Chifumi Sakata, Central European University | Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2202
Social feedback processing of metaperceptions among Chinese immigrants in Germany
Guanghou Zhou, Heidelberger Center for Transcultural Studies, University of Heidelberg
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2203
Experimentally Manipulating Mediating Processes in Group Decision-Making Research
Andreas Mojzisch, University of Hildesheim
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2204
Do Listeners Adjust Their Gaze Based on Context? Insights from a Dual Mobile Eye-Tracking Study
Eva Landmann, Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2205
Using the visual world paradigm to examine the gender representations evoked by the generic masculine versus the glottal stop form
Joanna Kullik, University of Kassel, Institute of Psychology, General Psychology
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2206
Do negation-based pragmatic inferences affect attitude formation towards individuals?
Emanuel Schütt, University of Tübingen
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2207
Emotional and social features shape the representation of dynamic facial expressions
Hilal Nizamoglu, Justus Liebig University in Giessen | Center for Mind, Brain and Behavior
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2208
Gaze direction and pupil size in schematic face perception
Frol Sapronov, Faculty of Engineering, Computer Science, and Psychology,
Ulm University
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2209
Exploring Individual Differences in Face Recognition: The Impact of Holistic Processing and Eye Movement Strategies
Sonia Amado, Ege University, Department of Psychology
15:30 - 17:00
Space, motion and causality
Monday, 10 March | Casino_1.811
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2301
Complex causal diagrams of faults: Strategies and challenges in reading, understanding, and applying cause-effect relations
Judith Schmidt, Dresden University of Technology, Chair of Engineering Psychology and Applied Cognitive Research
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2302
Predictive eye movements when interacting with bouncing balls – age-related changes in the game 'Pong'
Anna Schroeger, Department for General Psychology, Justus Liebig University Giessen, Germany | Center for Mind, Brain and Behavior, University of Marburg, Justus Liebig University Giessen and University Darmstadt, Germany
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2303
Feature-dependent perception of auditory apparent motion in normally sighted and visually impaired people
Meike Kriegeskorte, University of Tübingen
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2304
Amodal completion in transsaccadic object correspondence
Fabian Parth, AG Sensomotorisches Lernen, Fachbereich Psychologie, Philipps-Universität Marburg, Germany
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2305
Guiding drivers towards safer driving speed: Exploiting visual dominance in speed adaptation
Stefan Ladwig, RWTH Aachen University, Institute for Automotive Engineering (ika)
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2306
Real vs. simulated - Cyclists' perception while being overtaken
Frederike Hanna Strelow, TU Braunschweig
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2307
Time-to-collision estimation in the Oppel-Kundt illusion
Christoph von Castell, Johannes Gutenberg Universität Mainz
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2308
Influence of negative and positive ambient scent on wayfinding performance
Mira Schwarz, Allgemeine Psychologie und Kognitionsforschung; Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2309
Development of visual-predictive abilities and motor skills in full-term and preterm infants
Anna Thereza Grab, Department of Developmental Psychology, Justus Liebig University Giessen, Germany
15:30 - 17:00
Action and motor control
Monday, 10 March | Casino_1.811
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2401
Haptic neglect during actions with spatially incompatible effects
The influence of scripts on predictive action planning in 6 years old children
Anjuscha Lüthgen, Justus Liebig Universität Gießen, Department of Entwicklungspsychologie, FB06
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2403
Signaling as a context-dependent strategy in action control
Lorena Hell, Department of Cognitive Psychology, Trier University, Germany | Institute for Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience (ICAN), Trier University, Germany
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2404
Positionsspezifische Persönlichkeitsmerkmale im Eishockey: Zur Passung von Persönlichkeit und Verhalten
Dirk Koester, BSP Business & Law School
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2405
Age Simulation Effects on Full-Body Motor Sequence Learning
Anna Heggenberger, Saarland University
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2406
Action without visual awareness: an experimental examination into the role of visual awareness and visual attention for the control of visually guided action
Didem Taskiran, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2407
Can we try harder to become more accurate? Evidence from dart performance
Lynn Huestegge, University of Wuerzburg
15:30 - 17:00
Human factors and control
Monday, 10 March | Casino_1.811
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2501
Cognitive Processes Underlying the Repetition-Based Truth Effect: A Diffusion Model Study
Annika Stump, University of Freiburg
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2502
Multimodal Machine Learning for Diagnosis and Severity Prediction in Bulimic-Type Eating Disorders
Lena Rommerskirchen, Department of General Internal Medicine and Psychosomatics, University Hospital Heidelberg, Germany
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2503
Memory for Sharing True vs. Fake News on Social Media
Luise Metzger, University of Mannheim
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2504
A psychometrics of individual differences in the truth effect
Selina Zajdler, University of Mannheim
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2505
Perceived control in voting situations
Katharina Schwarz, Trier University | University of Würzburg
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2506
Electrophysiological Analysis of Outcome Evaluation Following Free-Choice and Forced-Choice Tasks
Victor Mittelstädt, University of Tübingen
Mon—Casino_1.811—Poster1—2507
When Control Slips Away: EEG Correlates of Agency and Motivation in Feedback Processing
Luisa Alessia Grote, Leibniz-Institut für Arbeitsforschung
17:00 - 18:30
Visual processing
Monday, 10 March | HZ_2
Chair/s: Alexander Goettker
17:00
Mon—HZ_2—Talks3—2601
How does brightness induction work at night?
Pablo A. Barrionuevo, Allgemeine und Biologische Psychologie, Philipps-Universität Marburg, Marburg, Hessen, 35032, Germany | Instituto de Investigación en Luz, Ambiente y Visión, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas – Universidad Nacional de Tucumán, San Miguel de Tucumán, Tucumán, T4002BLR, Argentina
17:15
Mon—HZ_2—Talks3—2602
All about that base(line) - The importance of baseline measurements in spatial perception
Paula Soballa, Trier University | Institute for Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience @ Trier University
17:30
Mon—HZ_2—Talks3—2603
Spatial Context Outweighs Temporal Context in Resolving Bistable Perception
Lisa Beckmann, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
17:45
Mon—HZ_2—Talks3—2604
Accurately acting on moving stimuli requires a higher fidelity motion representation than perceptual discrimination
Alexander Goettker, Justus Liebig University Giessen | Center for Mind, Brain and Behavior, Universities of Marburg, Giessen, and Darmstadt
18:00
Mon—HZ_2—Talks3—2605
Motivational value biases behavior – not perception
Christian Wolf, Allgemeine Psychologie,
Universität Münster, Münster, Germany
18:15
Mon—HZ_2—Talks3—2606
Exploring the neural basis of individual gaze in complex scenes
Diana Kollenda, Experimental Psychology, Justus Liebig University, Giessen, Germany | Center for Mind, Brain and Behavior (CMBB), Marburg and Giessen, Germany
17:00 - 18:30
Decoding hand gestures: Insights into meaning and communication
Monday, 10 March | HZ_7
Chair/s: Laura Birka Hensel
17:00
Mon—HZ_7—Talks3—2701
From “affiliated” to “co-expressive” meaning in hand gestures
Schuyler Laparle, Tilburg University
17:15
Mon—HZ_7—Talks3—2702
Kin cognition and communication: insights into the way people think and communicate about complex family structures
Simon Devylder, CNRS, Université Lumière Lyon 2
17:30
Mon—HZ_7—Talks3—2703
Engineering Human Gestures
Stacy Marsella, Northeastern University | University of Glasgow
17:45
Mon—HZ_7—Talks3—2704
Using a new dataset of naturalistic hand gestures to investigate ideational units
Laura Hensel, University of Glasgow
17:00 - 18:30
Working memory
Monday, 10 March | HZ_8
Chair/s: Daniel Schneider
17:00
Mon—HZ_8—Talks3—2801
Individual strength of autobiographical memories enhances object retention in visual working memory
Markus Conci, Department of Psychology, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
17:15
Mon—HZ_8—Talks3—2802
The influence of retrieval context similarity and storage duration on retroactive interference between working memory and episodic memory
Daniel Schneider, Leibniz Research Centre for Working Environment and Human Factors
17:30
Mon—HZ_8—Talks3—2803
The role of working memory in task-order coordination: Insights from dual-task training
Daniel Darnstaedt, Martin-Luther University Halle-Wittenberg
17:45
Mon—HZ_8—Talks3—2804
Do Prospective Memory and Working Memory Share Common Processes? Evidence From a Color Matching Task
Tobias Kühlwein, UniDistance Suisse
18:00
Mon—HZ_8—Talks3—2805
The Role of Working Memory on Intelligence and Creativity
Zhino Ebrahimi, Center for Cognitive Science, University of Kaiserslautern-Landau (RPTU), Kaiserslautern, Germany
17:00 - 18:30
Statistical learning and its role in language and reading acquisition
Monday, 10 March | HZ_9
Chair/s: Tanja C. Roembke, Xenia Schmalz
17:00
Mon—HZ_9—Talks3—2901
Speech segmentation in German-learning infants: the weight of statistical and prosodic cues
Mireia Marimon, Center for Brain and Cognition, Pompeu Fabra University, Spain
17:15
Mon—HZ_9—Talks3—2902
No Evidence for Bilingual Advantage in Statistical Word Learning
Matilde Ellen Simonetti, RWTH Aachen University
17:30
Mon—HZ_9—Talks3—2903
Orthographic knowledge in bilingual children
Lukas Hauser, Department of Psychology, University of Graz, Austria
17:45
Mon—HZ_9—Talks3—2904
Busting the myth again: No positive correlations between individuals’ sensitivity to bigram frequency and their reading ability
Haoyu Zhou, Department of Experimental Psychology, Ghent University
18:00
Mon—HZ_9—Talks3—2905
How is statistical learning related to reading ability? Examining potential mechanisms
Xenia Schmalz, Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Psychosomatics and Psychotherapy, LMU University Hospital, LMU Munich
17:00 - 18:30
Modelling decision making
Monday, 10 March | HZ_10
Chair/s: Mischa von Krause
17:00
Mon—HZ_10—Talks3—3001
Modeling the Cognitive Processes Underlying Intuitive and Deliberate Decisions
Sarah Forst, Chair of Experimental Psychology, School of Social Sciences, University of Mannheim
17:15
Mon—HZ_10—Talks3—3002
Beyond Noise: Exploring Guessing Through the α-Parameter in the Lévy-Flight Model
Julia V. Liss, University of Mannheim
17:30
Mon—HZ_10—Talks3—3003
Temporal-Difference Learning in Uncertain Choice: A Reinforcement Learning-Diffusion Decision Model of Two-Stage Decision-Making
Nicola Schneider, Heidelberg University
17:45
Mon—HZ_10—Talks3—3004
Exploring the Associations of Evidence Accumulation Model Parameters with Socioeconomic Outcomes
Mischa von Krause, Heidelberg University
18:00
Mon—HZ_10—Talks3—3005
How do people invest effort to manage risk?
Thorsten Pachur, Technical University of Munich
17:00 - 18:30
Temporal action-effect binding: Causes and implications
Monday, 10 March | HZ_11
Chair/s: Annika L. Klaffehn
17:00
Mon—HZ_11—Talks3—3101
Temporal Expectations Shape Binding: Contextual Modulation of Perceived Action-Effect Timing
Julian Gutzeit, University of Würzburg
17:15
Mon—HZ_11—Talks3—3102
Dynamic adjustment of temporal action estimates
Annika L. Klaffehn, University of Würzburg
17:30
Mon—HZ_11—Talks3—3103
Individual differences in the Temporal Binding effect
Pernille Hemmer, Rutgers University
17:45
Mon—HZ_11—Talks3—3104
The role of visuospatial attention in temporal binding
Liyu Cao, Department of Psychology and Behavioural Sciences, Zhejiang University | The State Key Lab of Brain-Machine Intelligence, Zhejiang University
18:00
Mon—HZ_11—Talks3—3105
The Role of Causal Inference in Temporal Binding: A Verbal Task Approach
Carmelo P. Cubillas, Autonomous University of Madrid
17:00 - 18:30
From metal to mind: The pursuit of human-likeness in human-robot interaction
Monday, 10 March | HZ_12
Chair/s: Katharina Kühne
17:00
Mon—HZ_12—Talks3—3201
Talking Robots: (De-)Synchronization of Verbal and Visual Attributes through the Lens of Humans
Bing Li, CNRS, UMR 9193, F-59000 Lille, France | FR 2052 SCV, Tourcoing, France
17:15
Mon—HZ_12—Talks3—3202
Bridging the gap. Replication of the spatial distance compression effect with social robots
Katharina Kühne, Division of Cognitive Sciences, University of Potsdam, Potsdam, Germany
17:30
Mon—HZ_12—Talks3—3203
Negotiating the Uncanny Valley
Roger Moore, University of Sheffield
17:45
Mon—HZ_12—Talks3—3204
Belief in Human Nature Uniqueness as a Framework for Emerging Technologies
Jakub Możaryn, Institute of Automatic Control and Robotics, Warsaw University of Technology, Poland
The influence of age and age simulation on sorting and counting depends on cognitive load
Sabine Schaefer, Sport Science Institute, Saarland University
11:45
Tue—HZ_7—Talks5—4304
Neural networks for volitional movement generation - evidence from neuroimaging meta-analysis
Felix Hoffstaedter, Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine (INM-7), Forschungszentrum Jülich | Institute of Systems Neuroscience, Heinrich-Heine University Düsseldorf
11:00 - 12:30
Mental imagery and consciousness
Tuesday, 11 March | HZ_8
Chair/s: Yuranny Cabral-Calderin, Alex Francois Lepauvre
11:00
Tue—HZ_8—Talks5—4401
The role of mental imagery in perception and working memory reconsidered
Elena Azañón, Medical Faculty, Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg, Germany | Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology, Germany
11:15
Tue—HZ_8—Talks5—4402
Let Me See How I Feel: Imagery Perspective Impacts Reliance on Internal States
Zachary Niese, Psychology Department, Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen
11:30
Tue—HZ_8—Talks5—4403
Decoding residual visual processing during blindsight
Yuranny Cabral-Calderin, Neural Circuits, Consciousness and Cognition Research Group, Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, 60322, Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
11:45
Tue—HZ_8—Talks5—4404
Dissociating Seeing and Knowing in Time.
Zefan Zheng, Research Group Neural Circuits, Consciousness and Cognition, Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, Frankfurt am Main, Germany | Institute of Psychology, Goethe University of Frankfurt, Germany
12:00
Tue—HZ_8—Talks5—4405
How Does the Brain Sustain Visual Experiences? Insights from Neural and Behavioral Studies
Alex Lepauvre, Neural Circuits, Consciousness and Cognition Research Group, Max Planck Institute of Empirical Aesthetics, Frankfurt am Main, Germany | Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University Nijmegen, Nijmegen, 6500 HB, the Netherlands
"Memorize the source!" — Do instructions that guide learners' attention to sources improve source memory without impairing learning?
Oktay Ülker, University of Duisburg-Essen
11:15
Tue—HZ_9—Talks5—4502
Who is the nice guy? Can we genuinely remember relevant interaction partners better, or has previous research only demonstrated improved visual memory?
Meike Kroneisen, Rheinland-Pfälzische Technische Universität Kaiserlsautern-Landau
11:30
Tue—HZ_9—Talks5—4503
Is Truth Important by Default? Enhanced Joint Retrieval Memory for “True” and “Important” Feedback
Daria Ford, University of Mannheim
11:45
Tue—HZ_9—Talks5—4504
The timing of fact-checking feedback and its consequences for underlying memory processes
Lena Nadarevic, Charlotte Fresenius Hochschule | Universität Mannheim
12:00
Tue—HZ_9—Talks5—4505
Sleep Benefits to Source Memory in Older Adults
Beatrice G. Kuhlmann, University of Mannheim
11:00 - 12:30
Speech and language
Tuesday, 11 March | HZ_10
Chair/s: Hanna Ringer, Seung-Cheol Baek
11:00
Tue—HZ_10—Talks5—4601
Shared and distinct representational dynamics of phonemes and prosody along dorsal and ventral speech streams
Seung-Cheol Baek, Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics
11:15
Tue—HZ_10—Talks5—4602
Neural and computational mechanisms of auditory statistical learning in individuals with and without dyslexia
Hanna Ringer, Next Generation Artificial Intelligence Research Center, Graduate School of Information Science and Technology, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan | Research Group Neurocognition of Music and Language, Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
11:30
Tue—HZ_10—Talks5—4603
Neural Correlates of linguistic hierarchical representations
Alessandro Tavano, Institute of Psychology, Goethe University Frankfurt | Department of Cognitive Psychology, Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics
11:45
Tue—HZ_10—Talks5—4604
Mechanisms of Proactive Language Control: Evidence from Cognate Facilitation
Tanja C Roembke, RWTH Aachen University
12:00
Tue—HZ_10—Talks5—4605
Language Production in Bilingual Dyads: The Effect of Speaker Switches and Language Switches
Anna Paschmanns, Institute of Psychology, RWTH Aachen University
11:00 - 12:30
The future of TVA Part 2: Modeling
Tuesday, 11 March | HZ_11
Chair/s: Kathrin Finke, Ingrid Scharlau, Jan Tünnermann
11:00
Tue—HZ_11—Talks5—4701
Is The Future of TVA Bayesian?
Maximilian Rabe, Department of Psychology, University of Copenhagen | Department of Psychology, University of Potsdam
11:15
Tue—HZ_11—Talks5—4702
Computational Modeling of Multitasking Performance Using a TVA Framework
Yannik Hilla, University of Zurich | University of the Bundeswehr Munich
11:30
Tue—HZ_11—Talks5—4703
One Step Forward - Do TVA Estimates Generalize Across Experimental Paradigms
Kai Biermeier, Paderborn University
11:45
Tue—HZ_11—Talks5—4704
Disentangling Phasic and Tonic Alerting: Independent Effects on Visual Attention
Dawa Dupont, Center for Visual Cognition, Department of Psychology, University of Copenhagen
11:00 - 12:30
Do you remember? Current topics in experimental memory research
Tuesday, 11 March | HZ_12
Chair/s: Magdalena Abel, Ryan Patrick Hackländer
11:00
Tue—HZ_12—Talks5—4801
Effects of testing on memory for central and contextual information
Simone Malejka, University of Cologne
11:15
Tue—HZ_12—Talks5—4802
Repeated guesses during learning can improve memory – even if they are wrong
Oliver Kliegl, Regensburg University
11:30
Tue—HZ_12—Talks5—4803
The many meanings of memory updating – How prediction errors influence memory representations
Marius Boeltzig, University of Münster | Lund University
11:45
Tue—HZ_12—Talks5—4804
Voluntary forgetting supports memory updating – But maybe not with prolonged retention intervals after initial encoding
Magdalena Abel, University of Technology Nuremberg
12:00
Tue—HZ_12—Talks5—4805
Forget me not: Once to-be-remembered items are not forgotten if later instructed to be
Ryan Hackländer, Universität Hildesheim
11:00 - 12:30
Face and person perception
Tuesday, 11 March | HZ_13
Chair/s: Karin Ludwig
11:00
Tue—HZ_13—Talks5—4901
Face processing in congenital prosopagnosia measured by binocular rivalry
Karin Ludwig, Klinische Neuropsychologie, Department Psychologie, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
11:15
Tue—HZ_13—Talks5—4902
Investigating Age Effects on Face Recognition: Using the Face Adaptation Paradigm for Contrast Information
Nils Kloeckner, Department of Psychology, Medical School Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany | Bamberg Graduate School of Affective and Cognitive Sciences (BaGrACS), University of Bamberg, Bamberg, Germany | ICAN Institute for Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, MSH Medical School Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany
11:30
Tue—HZ_13—Talks5—4903
Prior Scene Information Shapes Neural Dynamics of Face Detection in Natural Contexts
Sule Tasliyurt-Celebi, Department of Psychology, Justus Liebig University Giessen
11:45
Tue—HZ_13—Talks5—4904
Assessing Accuracy and Cue Utilization in AI Judgments: Methods and Applications
Aaron Petrasch, LMU Munich
12:00
Tue—HZ_13—Talks5—4905
The Influence of Emotion and Group Features in the Evaluative Priming Task
Emre Gurbuz, Saarland University
12:30 - 14:00
Lunch break
Tuesday, 11 March | {session_room}
12:30 - 14:00
Panel discussion — Wie sehen Forschungsalltag und Kompetenzerwerb in der Allgemeinen Psychologie in Zukunft aus?
Tuesday, 11 March | HZ_10
14:00 - 15:00
Keynote 2 — Jörg Gross: From dyadic exchange to intergroup cooperation. How (in)direct reciprocity can help us understand when and why people help each other
Tuesday, 11 March | HZ_2
From dyadic exchange to intergroup cooperation. How (in)direct reciprocity can help us understand when and why people help each other
Jörg Gross, Department of Psychology, University of Zurich, Switzerland
15:00 - 16:30
Cognitive control
Tuesday, 11 March | Casino_1.801
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5001
No Evidence for a Link between Self-Prioritization and Cognitive Control in Matching Judgments
Felix Götz, University of Regensburg
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5002
Investigating boundary conditions for the alerting-congruency interaction: The role of alerting signal modality and task stimulus modality
Verena Carola Seibold, University of Tübingen
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5003
Spoiler alert: Outflanking distractors in the Flanker task
Daniel Maurer, Department of Cognitive Psychology, Trier University, Trier, Germany | Institute for Cognitive & Affective Neuroscience (ICAN), Trier University, Trier, Germany
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5004
Reactive and proactive control when switching between first-person and third-person perspectives
Julia Reichensperger, Department of Psychology, Medical School Hamburg | ICAN Institute for Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, Medical School Hamburg
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5005
Asymmetric control adaptation: Testing a within-subject asymmetric list-shift effect with a confound-minimized face-name Stroop task
Shu Yang, University of Greifswald
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5006
Increasing response alternatives reduces the adverse impact of urgency on cognitive control
Anika Krause, Differential Psychology, Personality Psychology and Psychological Assessment, Department of Psychology, Bielefeld University, Germany | Neuro-Cognitive Psychology, Department of Psychology, Bielefeld University, Germany
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5007
Aging on the Move - "Stop Walking when Talking" as an Extreme Compensatory Strategy against Cognitive-Motor Interference
Tian Zhou, University of Freiburg
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5008
Spatial Representation of the Calorie Magnitude
Ahu Gokce, Department of Psychology, Kadir Has University
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5009
Does engagement to a target or disengagement from a distractor drive the reduction of attention switch cost with preparation?
Action resets the oscillatory pattern of auditory attention
Jianliang Luo, Department of Psychology and Behavioural Sciences, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5012
Does the training of working memory capacity reduce the disruptive effects of auditory deviants on short-term memory?
Samuel Conrad, Health and Medical University Potsdam
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5013
The Effect of Auditory Distraction versus Actual Interruption on Listening Comprehension in a Virtual Reality Café
Mitra Hassanzadeh, Health and Medical University, Potsdam, Germany
15:00 - 16:30
Emotion and cognition
Tuesday, 11 March | Casino_1.801
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5101
Modality-dependent age differences in emotion categorization of dynamic, bimodal expressions
Nikol Tsenkova, Department of Developmental Psychology, Justus-Liebig-University Gießen, Germany
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5102
How Emotions Differentiated by the Source of Threat Affect Decision-Making in the Balloon Analog Risk Task: Differential Effects of Angry versus Fearful Expressions
Elvan Arikan Iyilikci, Ege University, Department of Psychology, Experimental Psychology
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5103
Art for Attendees’ Sake: The Beneficial Effects of Arts Attendance on Subjective Well-Being in People High in Neuroticism
Maria Manolika, Experimental Psychology Unit, Helmut Schmidt University/ University of the Federal Armed Forces Hamburg
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5104
The Role of Emotional Facial Expressions and Evolutionarily Relevant Source Information in Recognition and Source Memory
Sezer Rengiiyiler, Department of Psychology, Sinop University, Sinop, Turkey | Department of Psychology, Ege University, Izmir, Turkey
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5105
Tremble-Hide-Run: an Ecological Anxiety Test (THREAT)
Olivier de Vries, Hertz Chair for Artificial Intelligence and Neuroscience, TRA Life and Health, University of Bonn
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5106
Achievement Emotions in Visual Working Memory Paradigms: Findings from the Change Detection Task
Sara Laybourn, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munich
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5107
Attention towards task-irrelevant emotional stimuli during a short mental time-traveling intervention
Olaf Morgenroth, Medical School Hamburg
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5108
Perceived emotional intensity influences hindsight bias in emotion recognition
Nadine Koller, Goethe-University Frankfurt
15:00 - 16:30
Memory and learning
Tuesday, 11 March | Casino_1.801
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5201
A matter of confidence? A closer look at how social interactions enhance and distort subsequent individual recognition judgments
Johannes Bartl, Department Arts and Science, Cognitive Psychology Lab
University of Technology Nuremberg
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5202
Targeted Memory Reactivation (TMR) through Odor Presentation in a School Context: Enhancing Math Performance and Memory Recall in Elementary Students
Dominik Fetterroll, Department of Psychology, Goethe University Frankfurt
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5203
Improving improvement
Luke Gelagin, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5204
Poisson or Gaussian? Evaluating Signal Detection Models with Empirical Memory Data
Adrian Klabunde, Former Master's Student at Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel
From 1st December 2024: Member of Europa-Universität Flensburg (Institute for Digital Education) in cooperation with the Leibniz Institute for Science and Mathematics Education (IPN), K
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5205
An in-depth look into lateralization in slime molds
Rowena Gehrke, Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5206
Sequential and Simultaneous Contingency Learning: Same or Different? Integrating the Serial Response Time Task, Artificial Grammar Learning, Evaluative Conditioning, and the Flanker Task into a Single Paradigm
Sarah Wilts, University of Cologne
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5207
The influence of circadian rhythm on operant conditioning in planaria
Nele Berner, Kiel University
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5208
Early visual areas store information about feature bindings in working memory
Anna Zier, Goethe University, Institute of Medical Psychology,
Heinrich-Hoffmann-Str. 9, Haus 88, 60528 Frankfurt am Main, Germany | Cooperative Brain Imaging Center (CoBIC),
Heinrich-Hoffmann-Str. 9, Haus 88, 60528 Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5209
Visual working memory-related saccades biases depend on task demands
Patrik Polgári, Sensorimotor Learning unit
Department of Psychology
University of Marburg
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5210
MEG signals predict capacity limitations in working memory
Philipp Deutsch, Institute of Medical Psychology, Medical Faculty, Goethe University | Cooperative Brain Imaging Center, Goethe University
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5211
Predicting memory usage in continuous naturalistic behaviour
Levi Kumle, Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom | Oxford Centre for Human Brain Activity, Wellcome Centre for Integrative Neuroimaging, Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom
15:00 - 16:30
Perception
Tuesday, 11 March | Casino_1.801
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5301
How vergence perception changes with distance
Linda Linke, Bielefeld University
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5302
Small, non-stationary, and hidden objects are often underrepresented in large-scale scene databases
Feron Y. Basoeki, Goethe University Frankfurt, Department of Psychology, Scene Grammar Lab, Germany
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5303
Can our hands discriminate object sizes better than our eyes?
Kriti Bhatia, Universität Tübingen
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5304
Auditory and visual hysteresis: common and modality-specific neural mechanisms
Tim Redepenning, Bielefeld University, Faculty of Psychology and Sports Science
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5305
Representational relevance: A new view on mental representations and prototypicality
Selma Akarsu, Justus Liebig University Giessen
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5306
Eyes wide open: Object-scene congruency and the pupillary response
Antje Nuthmann, Kiel University
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5307
Investigating the Attentional hypothesis of illusory size perception using the Dynamic Ebbinghaus illusion and SSVEPs
Athanasios Kokkinakis, Zhejiang University
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5308
Controlling a game via steady-state visually evoked potentials
Alexander Blöck, Department of Computer Science, University of Tübingen, Tübingen Germany
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5309
The eye movements of color deficient observers
Doris I. Braun, Giessen University Psychology
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5310
In deep – An experimental study on the influence of ambient and character sounds in a simulator game
Luise Haehn, Work and Engineering Psychology, RWTH Aachen University
Tue—Casino_1.801—Poster2—5311
How perceptual ability shapes memory
Chhavi Sachdeva, Faculty of Psychology, UniDistance Suisse, Brig, Switzerland
15:00 - 16:30
Attention, decisions, executive functions
Tuesday, 11 March | Casino_1.811
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5401
Intra-individual variability in TVA’s visual attention capacity and weight distribution
Ngoc Chi Banh, Paderborn University
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5402
Do we feel worse after solving problems with cognitive tools rather than on our own?
Patrick Weis, Julius-Maximilians University Würzburg
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5403
Common grounds and the combination of induced insight and reward-based learning – beneficial or harmful?
Samuel Mertens, Neurodidactics & NeuroLab, Institute of Psychology, University of Hildesheim, 31141 Hildesheim, Germany
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5404
Exploring Performance and Trust in Teleoperation: The Role of Visuo-Haptic Guidance in Autonomous Systems
Frank Papenmeier, University of Tübingen, Germany
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5405
How does Task Type Influence the Perception of AI-based versus Human Decisions?
Mascha E. Gross, Catholic University of Eichstätt-Ingolstadt
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5406
Adaptive information sampling in complex decisions from experience
Linus Hof, Technical University of Munich
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5407
The influence of non-invasive prefrontal brain stimulation on intertemporal decision-making
Marcus Rothkirch, Department of Psychology, Medical School Berlin
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5408
Feature Matters: Decoding the Shared-Feature Effect in Visual Attention
Christina Saalwirth, Universität der Bundeswehr München
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5409
Flashlight visual search impairs speed but not accuracy or memory in the real world
Sarah Jasmin Nachtnebel, University of Graz
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5410
Temporal Uncertainty in Visual Search
Alisa Höflinger, Faculty of Psychology, University of Vienna, Austria
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5411
The impact of movement: a hybrid foraging study
Alicia Ferrer-Mendieta, Departamento de psicología básica, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. | Departamento de psicología social y metodoloía,Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
15:00 - 16:30
Language, communication and social interaction
Tuesday, 11 March | Casino_1.811
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5501
Neural Correlates of Social and Emotional Conflict Monitoring.
The Removal of Retroactive Cuing Effects when Jointly Acting with a Competent or Collaborative Partner
Miles Tufft, Department of Experimental Psychology, University College London
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5503
Torn Between Self and Others: Investigating the Relationship Between Decision Conflict and Ambivalence in Prosocial Behavior With Mouse-Tracking
Celine Frank, University of Cologne | TU Dresden
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5504
Exploring Self-Reported Helping, Punishment, and Moral Courage Within and Across Group Boundaries: Implications for the Inclusion of Others in Self Scale
Lucie Binder, Goethe University Frankfurt
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5505
Effects of Moral Orientation on Fusion with the Group and Member Valuation
Rico Alokuzay, Cognitive Psychology II, Goethe University Frankfurt
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5506
Prediction in action binding
Xin Wang, Department of Psychology and Behavioural Sciences, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5507
Interpreting pointing gestures: The role of direct and indirect speech
Linear and Non-Linear Measures of Neural Tracking in Natural Listening Conditions
Felix Körber, Institute of Psychology, Goethe University Frankfurt
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5509
The effects of perceptual and conceptual evaluations on face recognition performance in terms of holistic processing
Büşra Batır, Ege University
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5510
Distinct Holistic Processing Mechanisms for Faces and Line Patterns in DNNs
Elaheh Akbari, Department of Psychology, Justus Liebig University Giessen, Giessen, Germany | Center for Mind, Brain and Behavior, Universities of Marburg, Giessen, and Darmstadt, Marburg, Germany
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5511
Looking Beyond the Face: How Inner and Outer Features Shape Face Matching Strategies
Belkıs Durmuş, Ege University, Department of Psychology
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5512
Impaired and Biased Emotional Judgement of Faces with Masks: a Re-Analysis
Martina Wernicke, Neurodidactics & NeuroLab, Institute of Psychology, University of Hildesheim, Germany
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5513
How the Sausage is Made: LLM-embedding-based Heuristic Hierarchical Clustering For Organizing TeaP2025 Talk & Poster Sessions
Seung-Goo Kim, Research Group Neurocognition of Music and Language, Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
15:00 - 16:30
Space, motion and causality
Tuesday, 11 March | Casino_1.811
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5601
A Systematic Investigation of Integrated Speed-Accuracy Measures in Within-Subject Designs.
Thomas Narraway, University of Bremen
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5602
The Spatial Specificity and Recovery of Visual Adaptation in Causal Perception
Laura van Zantwijk, Department of Psychology, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5603
Maintaining object files at saccadic speeds
Melis Ince, Department of Psychology, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany | Berlin School of Mind and Brain, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5604
Eye-hand coordination in multiple object interception
Jolande Fooken, TU Darmstadt, Germany | Queen's University, Kingston, Canada
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5605
Modeling Human Spatiotemporal Prediction Ability with Feedforward and Recurrent Neural Networks.
Nisa Alo, Interdisciplinary Center for Neuroscience Frankfurt, Goethe University
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5606
Estimating camera position in camera-monitor systems: Effects of horizontal displacement and reference visibility
Elisabeth Wögerbauer, Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5607
Balancing Effectiveness and User Experience in Light Cue Design: Enhancing Situation Awareness in Conditional Automated Driving.
Kerstin Kuhlmann, Technische Universität Braunschweig
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5608
Motor Skills Contribute to the Development of Mental Rotation from Infancy to Preschool Age
Tharanirakshita Asokan, Department of Developmental Psychology, Justus Liebig University Giessen, Germany | Center for Mind, Brain and Behavior (CMBB), University of Marburg, Giessen and Darmstadt, Germany
15:00 - 16:30
Action and motor control
Tuesday, 11 March | Casino_1.811
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5701
Guess What? Only Correct Choices Forge Immediate Stimulus-Response Bindings in Guessing Scenarios
Anna Foerster, Trier University
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5702
Goals vs. transitions: Do desired states or desired changes drive action effect bindings?
Moritz Schaaf, Trier University
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5703
What primes instructed prevention actions? The presence or absence of the prevented event?
Solveig Tonn, Trier University
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5704
Does motor skill training improve cognitive function in elderly? An ongoing study.
Sina Janine Gerten, Neurocognition and Action – Biomechanics Research Group, Department of Sports Sciences, Faculty of Psychology and Sport Science, Bielefeld University, Bielefeld, Germany | Center of Excellence “Cognitive Interaction Technology”, Bielefeld University, Bielefeld, Germany
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5705
Perception of self-generated tactile stimuli is enhanced independent of spatial alignment between action and sensation
Belkis Ezgi Arikan, University Hospital Essen, Clinical Neurosciences | Justus Liebig University Giessen, Department of Psychology | Center for Mind, Brain and Behavior
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5706
The fundamental frequencies of our own voice
Hakam Neamaalkassis, Department of Cognitive Psychology, Max Planck
Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, Grüneburgweg
14, 63122 Frankfurt a. M., Germany | Département d’Études Cognitives, École Normale
Supérieure, PSL Research University, CNRS, 29
rue d’Ulm, 75005 Paris, France | Department of Psychology, Goethe University
Frankfurt, Theodor-W.-Adorno-Platz 1, 60323
Frankfurt a. M., Germany
15:00 - 16:30
Human factors and control
Tuesday, 11 March | Casino_1.811
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5801
Physiological synchrony during a mindfulness-based intervention in patient dyads with Major Depression
Simon Sanwald, Section of electrophysiology
Ulm University, Ulm, Germany
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5802
Decoding Moral and Non-moral Mental States: A Brain-Computer Interface (BCI) Approach
Jaime A Riascos-Salas, Potsdam University
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5803
Error processing mechanisms in evaluative concerns perfectionists: Effects of feedback presentation
André Mattes, University of Cologne
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5804
The influence of free choice on memory: Generalization from recognition to cued recall in a vocabulary-like learning task
Kerstin Fröber, University of Cologne | University of Regensburg
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5805
Exploring the motivational basis of the illusion of control with a control heuristic questionnaire
Karoline Karsten, PFH Private University of Applied Sciences
Tue—Casino_1.811—Poster2—5806
Introspection about Forced and Free Choice Processing Times
Daniel Bratzke, University of Bremen
16:30 - 18:00
Memory
Tuesday, 11 March | HZ_2
Chair/s: Siri-Maria Kamp
16:30
Tue—HZ_2—Talks6—5901
Levels of Processing Effects on Visual Associative Memory for Basic Perceptual Features
Nicolas Rothen, UniDistance Suisse, Brig, Switzerland
16:45
Tue—HZ_2—Talks6—5902
Examining the mechanisms behind the animacy effect using event-related potentials
Siri-Maria Kamp, Universität Trier
17:00
Tue—HZ_2—Talks6—5903
Visual memory capacity is susceptible to multiple influences during more naturalistic encoding
Sharon Gilaie-Dotan, Faculty of Life Science School of Optometry and Vision Science and The Gonda Multidisciplinary Brain Research Center, Bar Ilan University, Ramat Gan, Israel
17:15
Tue—HZ_2—Talks6—5904
Incidental Disgust vs. Fear: How Emotions Shape Recognition Accuracy and Underlying Retrieval Dynamics
Aycan Kapucu, Department of Psychology, Ege University, Izmir/Turkey
17:30
Tue—HZ_2—Talks6—5905
Disgust Retrospectively Enhances Memory for Categorically Related Neutral Stimuli
Sinem Söylemez, Manisa Celal Bayar University
17:45
Tue—HZ_2—Talks6—5906
Most False Recognition Memory Responses Are Due to Reasoning, Not Genuine Memories
Tehilla Ostrovsky, 1. LMU, Munich
16:30 - 18:00
Challenges and new avenues in the research on imitative behavior
Tuesday, 11 March | HZ_7
Chair/s: Danna Oomen, Oliver Genschow, Carina Giesen
16:30
Tue—HZ_7—Talks6—6001
Cultural differences in automatic imitation
Oliver Genschow, 1 Leuphana University Lüneburg
16:45
Tue—HZ_7—Talks6—6002
Does being tech-savvy modulate differences in automatic imitation of robots versus humans?
Carina Giesen, HMU Health and Medical University Erfurt
17:00
Tue—HZ_7—Talks6—6003
The role of expectations for observationally acquired stimulus-response binding and retrieval effects in human-AI interactions
Kira Franke, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena
17:15
Tue—HZ_7—Talks6—6004
Mimickees are perceived as more competent and receive higher donations than mimickers
Pawel Muniak, SWPS University, Faculty of Psychology in Warsaw, Poland
17:30
Tue—HZ_7—Talks6—6005
A cognitive spin on the headwind-tailwind hypothesis: Unawareness of facilitation effects on the imitation-inhibition task
Danna Oomen, Leuphana University, Germany
16:30 - 18:00
Neuromodulation and cognitive functioning: Insights from experimental psychopharmacology
Tuesday, 11 March | HZ_8
Chair/s: Kaja Faßbender
16:30
Tue—HZ_8—Talks6—6101
GABAergic Involvement in Selective Attention
Kaja Faßbender, University of Bonn, Department of Psychology, Cognitive and Experimental Clinical Psychology
16:45
Tue—HZ_8—Talks6—6102
Effects of Lorazepam on Saccadic Eye Movements – Evidence from Prosaccade and Free Viewing Tasks
Philine Baumert, University of Bonn, Department of Psychology, Cognitive and Experimental Clinical Psychology
17:00
Tue—HZ_8—Talks6—6103
Methylphenidate as a Probe for Catecholaminergic Modulation of Response Inhibition, Event File Binding and Event Segmentation
Astrid Prochnow, Cognitive Neurophysiology, Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, TU Dresden
17:15
Tue—HZ_8—Talks6—6104
Insights to Receptor-Receptor Interactions through Caffeine Effects: A Pharmacological PET-fMRI Study
Yu-Shiuan Lin, Athinoula A. Martinos Center, Mass General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, USA | Centre for Chronobiology, University Psychiatric Clinics Basel, Switzerland
16:30 - 18:00
Emotion regulation: Neural underpinnings and associations with executive functions
Tuesday, 11 March | HZ_9
Chair/s: Ulrike Basten, Julia Karbach
16:30
Tue—HZ_9—Talks6—6201
From Strategies to Flexibility: Rethinking the Role of Executive Functions in Emotion Regulation
Luise Pruessner, Department of Psychology, Heidelberg University (Germany)
16:45
Tue—HZ_9—Talks6—6202
Emotion Regulation Capacity: Associations with Executive Functions and Regulation Tendency
Hannah Plueckebaum, Department of Psychology, RPTU Kaiserslautern-Landau, Landau, Germany | Center for Cognitive Science, RPTU Kaiserslautern-Landau, Kaiserslautern, Germany
17:00
Tue—HZ_9—Talks6—6203
Association of cognitive flexibility and attentional control with emotion regulation?
Christine Stelzel, International Psychoanalytic University Berlin, Berlin, Germany
17:15
Tue—HZ_9—Talks6—6204
Temporal Dynamics of Emotion Elicitation and Regulation in Euthymic Bipolar Patients and Healthy Controls
Kornelia Gentsch, Department of Clinical Psychology and Neuropsychology, Johannes-Gutenberg University, Mainz, Germany
16:30 - 18:00
Poster award session
Tuesday, 11 March | HZ_10
16:30 - 18:00
Visual search
Tuesday, 11 March | HZ_11
Chair/s: Iris Wiegand
16:30
Tue—HZ_11—Talks6—6401
No evidence for learning of invariant responses in contextual cuing
Feifei Zhao, Department of Psychology, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München | Graduate School of Systemic Neurosciences, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Timea Folyi, Department of Psychology, Saarland University
17:00
Tue—HZ_11—Talks6—6403
Distractors in visual search tasks require more suppression when associated with a high reward
Tobias Feldmann-Wüstefeld, TU Berlin | Alexander-von-Humboldt-Stiftung
17:15
Tue—HZ_11—Talks6—6404
A very large-scale eye tracking dataset of visual search
Alex J. Hoogerbrugge, Helmholtz Institute, Experimental Psychology, Utrecht University
17:30
Tue—HZ_11—Talks6—6405
The fast and the curious: Individual differences in search speed and incidental learning across the lifespan
Iris Wiegand, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University, Nijmegen, Netherlands
16:30 - 18:00
Field experiments with micro-randomized trials: Applications from research on physical activity, self-regulated learning, and environmental psychology
Tuesday, 11 March | HZ_12
Chair/s: Florian Schmiedek
16:30
Tue—HZ_12—Talks6—6501
Causal effects of sedentary breaks on affective and cognitive parameters in daily life: A within-person encouragement study
Marco Giurgiu, Institute of Sports and Sports Science, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Engler-Bunte-Ring 15, 76131 Karlsruhe, Germany
16:45
Tue—HZ_12—Talks6—6502
Boosting Mind and Mood? A Micro-Randomized Trial Testing Short-Term Effects of Physical Activity and Breathing Exercises
Lena M. Wieland, Education and Human Development, DIPF | Leibniz Institute for Research and Information in Education, Frankfurt am Main, Germany | Center for Research on Individual Development and Adaptive Education of Children at Risk (IDeA), Frankfurt am Main, Germany
17:00
Tue—HZ_12—Talks6—6503
Planning promotes regular studying – the higher the plan quality the better: a micro-randomized trial
Mirijam Schaaf, Education and Human Development, DIPF | Leibniz Institute for Research and Information in Education, Frankfurt am Main, Germany | IDeA-Center for Research on Individual Development and Adaptive Education of Children at Risk, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
17:15
Tue—HZ_12—Talks6—6504
Pro-Environmental Behavior and Social Connectedness in Daily Life: A Within-Person Encouragement Design Intervention for Italian Young Adults
Silvia Caldaroni, Department of Psychology, Sapienza, University of Rome, Rome, Italy
16:30 - 18:00
Exploration and confidence, self-regulation and motivation
Tuesday, 11 March | HZ_13
Chair/s: Chris Donkin
16:30
Tue—HZ_13—Talks6—6601
Exploration in Domains with Gains or Losses
Ludwig Danwitz, Universität Bremen
16:45
Tue—HZ_13—Talks6—6602
From perception to confidence: Leveraging natural scene statistics
Rebecca K West, University of Queensland
17:00
Tue—HZ_13—Talks6—6603
Searching for lab-based evidence that mental effort can be inherently rewarding
Chris Donkin, LMU Munich
17:15
Tue—HZ_13—Talks6—6604
Analysis of the Influence of Biodfeedback on Self-Regulation during Phases of High Workload
Sophie Glaab, Technische Hochschule Aschaffenburg
17:30
Tue—HZ_13—Talks6—6605
The effect of context and individual differences in human‐generated randomness
Mikołaj Biesaga, The Robert Zajonc Institute for Social Studies
19:00 - 23:00
Conference dinner
Tuesday, 11 March | Festsaal and Mensa Casino
Wednesday, 12 March
08:30 - 10:00
Current developments in evaluative conditioning I – From the lab to the real world
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_2
Chair/s: Moritz Ingendahl
08:30
Wed—HZ_2—Talks7—6701
Effects of evaluative conditioning on peripheral visual attention
Alexandra E. Clausen, Technical University of Darmstadt
08:45
Wed—HZ_2—Talks7—6702
Evaluative Conditioning in a lecture hall
Anne Gast, University of Cologne
09:00
Wed—HZ_2—Talks7—6703
Evaluative conditioning off the track: Conditioning attitudes in an (almost) open world
Tobias Vogel, Darmstadt University of Applied Sciences
09:15
Wed—HZ_2—Talks7—6704
Recent evidence dismissing the role of demand characteristics in evaluative conditioning effects remains unimpressive - at best
Olivier Corneille, UCLouvain
08:30 - 10:00
Scene perception
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_7
Chair/s: Bianca R. Baltaretu, Ben de Haas
08:30
Wed—HZ_7—Talks7—6801
Anchor-level scene semantic effects on spatial coding in naturalistic (virtual) environments
Predicting Perception of Scene Consistencies Using Graph Representations of Scene Grammar.
Aylin Kallmayer, Goethe University Frankfurt, Department of Psychology, Germany
09:00
Wed—HZ_7—Talks7—6803
Understanding Scene Grammar in Children: Development of Object Representations in Scene Hierarchy
Dilara Deniz Türk, Goethe University Frankfurt, Department of Psychology, Scene Grammar Lab, Germany
09:15
Wed—HZ_7—Talks7—6804
Scene viewing from kindergarten to retirement - learning canonical gaze
Ben de Haas, Experimental Psychology, Justus-Liebig Universität Gießen
09:30
Wed—HZ_7—Talks7—6805
Do shared internal models drive shared scene perception and exploration across participants?
Micha Engeser, Mathematical Institute, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, Physics, Geography, Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen, Germany | Neural Circuits, Consciousness and Cognition Research Group, Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
09:45
Wed—HZ_7—Talks7—6806
Actions in Context: The Interrelation Between Scene Functions, Actions and Object Phrases
Lea Müller Karoza, Goethe University Frankfurt, Department of Psychology, Scene Grammar Lab, Germany
08:30 - 10:00
Multitasking and task switching
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_8
Chair/s: Jovita Brüning
08:30
Wed—HZ_8—Talks7—6901
Unlocking Parallel Task Processing: The Role of Predictability and Context Stability
Jovita Brüning, Otto-von-Guericke Universität Magdeburg
08:45
Wed—HZ_8—Talks7—6902
Unlocking Multitasking Potential: How Task Switching Training Shapes Individual Differences in Processing Modes
Don’t Stop Believin’ in Multitasking: Perceived Effort in Serial and Parallel Dual-Task Strategies
Aleks Pieczykolan, Rheinische Hochschule Köln
09:15
Wed—HZ_8—Talks7—6904
Try Harder! The Influence of Effort Instructions on Cognitive Flexibility
Jonathan Mendl, University of Regensburg
09:30
Wed—HZ_8—Talks7—6905
How Cognitive Control Navigates Emotion: Insights from a Drift Diffusion Model
Maryam Sadeghi Talarposhti, Institute for Psychology, Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg
08:30 - 10:00
Action control and interpersonal coordination
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_9
Chair/s: Robert Wirth
08:30
Wed—HZ_9—Talks7—7001
Hedonic foraging
Olivier Penacchio, Computer Vision Center
Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
08:45
Wed—HZ_9—Talks7—7002
Multi negations in information processing
Robert Wirth, University of Würzburg
09:00
Wed—HZ_9—Talks7—7003
Hard Tasks Create Strong Bindings: Prefrontal Correlates of Task Difficulty and Response-Response Binding Effects
Christoph Geißler, Trier University, Institute for Cognitive & Affective Neuroscience (ICAN)
09:15
Wed—HZ_9—Talks7—7004
Coordination coefficiency in social interaction: A pilot study for the object-transport task in a real-life context
Matthias Weigelt, Paderborn University, Germany
09:30
Wed—HZ_9—Talks7—7005
The Influence of Task Demands on Joint Action Planning
Kassandra Friebe, Central European University
09:45
Wed—HZ_9—Talks7—7006
Singing as social interaction: interpersonal coupling and singing quality
Elke Lange, Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics
08:30 - 10:00
Goal-oriented information processing: Adaptive working memory
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_10
Chair/s: Sahcan Özdemir
08:30
Wed—HZ_10—Talks7—7101
Saccadic selection in vision and memory
Sven Ohl, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany
08:45
Wed—HZ_10—Talks7—7102
Task status of previous items determines serial dependence in working memory
Saskia Fohs, Institute of Medical Psychology, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany | Visual Cognition & Computational Neuroscience Lab, Justus Liebig University
Giessen, Germany
09:00
Wed—HZ_10—Talks7—7103
Working Memory benefits with meaningful stimuli: scaffolding or proactive interference?
Wouter Kruijne, University of Groningen
09:15
Wed—HZ_10—Talks7—7104
Recall requirements can drastically modulate working memory representations in human visual cortex
Giuliana M. Giorjiani, Ernst Strüngmann Institute (ESI) for Neuroscience in Cooperation with the Max
Planck Society, Frankfurt, Germany | Department of Cognitive Neuroscience, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands
09:30
Wed—HZ_10—Talks7—7105
The role of motor representations for working memory when dealing with interference
Sahcan Özdemir, Leibniz Research Centre for Working Environment and Human Factors, Dortmund, Germany
08:30 - 10:00
Experimental aesthetics I: Different fields
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_11
Chair/s: Thomas Jacobsen
08:30
Wed—HZ_11—Talks7—7201
Investigating the Role of AI-Generated Art in Shaping Moral and Aesthetic Judgments
Ionela Bara, Social Brain Sciences Group, Department of Humanities, Social and Political Sciences, ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
08:45
Wed—HZ_11—Talks7—7202
Multisensory aesthetic perception: A quantitative-qualitative study on visuo-tactile interactions with material textures
Marella Campagna, Department of General Psychology and Methodology, University of Bamberg, Bamberg, Bavaria, Germany | Research Group EPÆG (Ergonomics, Psychological Æsthetics, Gestalt), Bamberg, Bavaria, Germany | Bamberg Graduate School of Affective and Cognitive Sciences (BaGrACS), Bamberg, Bavaria, Germany
09:00
Wed—HZ_11—Talks7—7203
Dimensions of stylistic preferences: Likes and dislikes of different musical styles
Emily Gernandt, Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, Frankfurt am Main, Germany | Institute of Music, University of Kassel, Kassel, Germany
09:15
Wed—HZ_11—Talks7—7204
Art for art’s sake? The influence of art framing and context on the acceptance of immoral behaviour
Itay Goetz, Department of General Psychology and Methodology, University of Bamberg, Bamberg, Bavaria, Germany. | Research Group EPÆG (Ergonomics, Psychological Æsthetics, Gestalt), Bamberg, Bavaria, Germany. | Bamberg Graduate School of Affective and Cognitive Sciences (BaGrACS), Bamberg, Bavaria, Germany
09:30
Wed—HZ_11—Talks7—7205
Waist-to-hip ratio and body attractiveness: Comparison of 2D and 3D body measurements
Emily Ufken, University of Konstanz
08:30 - 10:00
Shaping cognition: The interplay of language, space, and thought
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_12
Chair/s: Karin M. Bausenhart, Barbara Kaup
08:30
Wed—HZ_12—Talks7—7301
Relational Language and Relational Thought
Dedre Gentner, Department of Psychology, Northwestern University
08:45
Wed—HZ_12—Talks7—7302
Language as a categorical overlay on thought and perception
Gary Lupyan, University of Wisconsin-Madison
09:00
Wed—HZ_12—Talks7—7303
The role of spatial distance in abstract thinking and object recognition
Karin M. Bausenhart, University of Tübingen
09:15
Wed—HZ_12—Talks7—7304
The role of contextual alignment in artificial grammar learning
Michael Ramscar, University of Tübingen
09:30
Wed—HZ_12—Talks7—7305
The role of language in the diffusion of cognitive practices
Juergen Bohnemeyer, University at Buffalo - SUNY
08:30 - 10:00
Social decisions, norms, and morality
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_13
Chair/s: Markus Germar
08:30
Wed—HZ_13—Talks7—7401
Spotting the Difference from Lab to Screen. Male Cheating Behavior Increases in Online versus In-Person Environments
Kai Leisge, Institute of Sport Sciences, Saarland University, Saarbrücken, Germany
08:45
Wed—HZ_13—Talks7—7402
Of facts and faces: Social saliency and visual identifiability shape third-party interventions
Compromising on Moral Issues: Individual versus Collective Moral Judgement
Markus Germar, University of Hildesheim
09:15
Wed—HZ_13—Talks7—7404
Cooperation in motion: How action dynamics inform cooperative decision-making
Luke McEllin, Central European University
09:30
Wed—HZ_13—Talks7—7405
Reality Monitoring in Advice Taking: Whose Guess Was the Best Guess?
Johanna M. Höhs, University of Tübingen
10:00 - 11:00
Coffee break
Wednesday, 12 March | Casino_Foyer
11:00 - 12:30
Current developments in evaluative conditioning II – Control and memory
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_2
Chair/s: Moritz Ingendahl
11:00
Wed—HZ_2—Talks8—7501
How Stimulus Modality Influences the Automaticity of Valence Transfer: Controlled and Uncontrolled Effects of Verbal versus Visual Affective Stimuli on Brand Attitudes
Kathrin Reichmann, Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen
11:15
Wed—HZ_2—Talks8—7502
Children's susceptibility to advertising: The (un)controllability of evaluative conditioning effects
Serena D'Hooge, EDHEC Business School
11:30
Wed—HZ_2—Talks8—7503
Evaluative conditioning for 'remember', 'intuition', and 'guess' pairing memory judgments
Christoph Stahl, Department of Psychology, University of Cologne
11:45
Wed—HZ_2—Talks8—7504
Is the C parameter sensitive to an encoding time manipulation? A replication of Heycke and Gawronski’s (2020) Experiment 2b with a longer response window in the speeded choice task
Marius Barth, University of Cologne
12:00
Wed—HZ_2—Talks8—7505
Memory specificity in evaluative conditioning: a multinomial processing tree approach
Karoline Bading, University of Tübingen
11:00 - 12:30
Attention
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_7
Chair/s: Malte Wöstmann
11:00
Wed—HZ_7—Talks8—7601
Saccade selection is driven by physiologically measurable costs
Christoph Strauch, Utrecht University, Experimental Psychology, Helmholtz Institute
11:15
Wed—HZ_7—Talks8—7602
Perception knows no inhibition of return (IOR)
Nina Hanning, Department Psychologie, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin | Department of Psychology & Center for Neural Science, New York University
11:30
Wed—HZ_7—Talks8—7603
Is auditory scene analysis affected by a central processing bottleneck?
Florian Kattner, Health and Medical University Potsdam
11:45
Wed—HZ_7—Talks8—7604
Spatial cueing of distractor location and top-down inhibition in auditory selective attention
Luigi Falanga, RWTH Aachen University, Institute for Cognitive and Experimental Psychology
12:00
Wed—HZ_7—Talks8—7605
The interplay of neural and behavioural filters of attention
Malte Wöstmann, Department of Psychology, University of Lübeck, Lübeck, Germany | Center of Brain, Behavior and Metabolism, University of Lübeck, Lübeck, Germany
11:00 - 12:30
Levels of orthographic representation: From retina to word form
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_8
Chair/s: Jack E. Taylor, Janos Pauli
11:00
Wed—HZ_8—Talks8—7701
Distilling the neural code of invariant visual word recognition
Aakash Agrawal, Neurospin, CEA Gif-sur-Yvette, Paris, France
11:15
Wed—HZ_8—Talks8—7702
Variability in Letters, Clarity in Words: Flux in Models
Maria Fernández-López, University of València
11:30
Wed—HZ_8—Talks8—7703
Optimal Transport as a Computational Framework for Low-Level Orthography
Jack E. Taylor, Department for Psychology, Goethe University Frankfurt, Frankfurt am Main, Germany | School of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom
11:45
Wed—HZ_8—Talks8—7704
Does letter perception follow principles of predictive coding?
Janos Pauli, University of Cologne
Department of Special Education and Rehabilitation
Self Learning Systems Lab
12:00
Wed—HZ_8—Talks8—7705
Non-Human Recognition of Orthography: How is it implemented and how does it differ from Human orthographic processing
Benjamin Gagl, University of Cologne
11:00 - 12:30
Memory and learning
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_9
Chair/s: Bernhard Pastötter
11:00
Wed—HZ_9—Talks8—7801
Canonical phenomena in naturalistic avoidance learning – second-order conditioning, overshadowing, and partial reinforcement
Huaiyu Liu, UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, Department of Imaging Neuroscience, University College London, United Kingdom
11:15
Wed—HZ_9—Talks8—7802
Forward Testing Effect under Stress – Part III: Insights from Acute Retrieval Stress with Related Word Lists
Bernhard Pastötter, Department of Cognitive Psychology, Trier University, Germany | Institute for Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience (ICAN), Trier University, Germany
11:30
Wed—HZ_9—Talks8—7803
How Cognitive Load and Emotional Arousal Shape Visual Working Memory: A Study of Top-Down and Bottom-Up Influences
Beril Sercem Şengül, Ege University | Uskudar University
11:45
Wed—HZ_9—Talks8—7804
Neurocognitive Psychometrics of interindividual Differences in Working Memory
Jan Göttmann, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz
12:00
Wed—HZ_9—Talks8—7805
Single-neuron representations of “What” and “Where” in the human medial temporal lobe
Qian Chu, Max Planck - University of Toronto Centre for Neural Science and Technology | Krembil Brain Institute & KITE Research Institute & CRANIA, University Health Network | University of Toronto | Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics
11:00 - 12:30
Modulators of decision making
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_10
Chair/s: Linda McCaughey
11:00
Wed—HZ_10—Talks8—7901
Attentional guidance during multi-attribute decisions from memory
Eva-Marie Heißler, Leibniz University Hannover
11:15
Wed—HZ_10—Talks8—7902
Analyzing the Impact of Choice Complexity on Risky Choices
Maohua Nie, University of Basel
11:30
Wed—HZ_10—Talks8—7903
Pre-decisional information search adaptation through planning and finetuning
Linda McCaughey, Ludwig-Maximilans-Universität München
11:45
Wed—HZ_10—Talks8—7904
Cognitive Biases in Decision-Making for Recycled Building Materials: Insights from a Vignette Experiment
Sophie Würger, Work and Engineering Psychology, RWTH Aachen University
11:00 - 12:30
Experimental aesthetics II: Past and future
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_11
Chair/s: Thomas Jacobsen
11:00
Wed—HZ_11—Talks8—8001
Intentions make artworks – at least for laypeople
Gregor Hayn-Leichsenring, University Hospital Jena
11:15
Wed—HZ_11—Talks8—8002
The perceptual, emotional and evaluative responses to traditional Chinese music
Elvira Brattico, Center for Music in the Brain, Department of Clinical Medicine, Aarhus University, Denmark | Department of Education, Psychology, Communication, University of Bari, Italy
11:30
Wed—HZ_11—Talks8—8003
Gustav Theodor Fechner, the Holbein Controversy, and the Birth of Empirical Aesthetics
Ronald Hübner, University of Konstanz
11:45
Wed—HZ_11—Talks8—8004
Aesthetic experience and artificial intelligence: Reflecting an example
Aniko Illes, Moholy-Nagy University of Art and Design, Budapest, Hungary
12:00
Wed—HZ_11—Talks8—8005
Ten years of experimental studies on visual preference for curvature.
Enric Munar, University of the Balearic Islands
11:00 - 12:30
Abstract representations in neural architectures: From human cognition to artificial intelligence
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_12
Chair/s: Yee Lee Shing
11:00
Wed—HZ_12—Talks8—8101
Computational Modeling of the Development of Abstract Object Representations
Jochen Triesch, Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies | Goethe University Frankfurt
11:15
Wed—HZ_12—Talks8—8102
Eye gaze patterns and reinstatement in children, adults and artificial intelligence models during naturalistic viewing
Iryna Schommartz, Department of Psychology, Goethe University Frankfurt | IDeA – Center for Individual Development and Adaptive Education
11:30
Wed—HZ_12—Talks8—8103
Representations of hierarchical scene information in the brain
Victoria Nicholls, Goethe University Frankfurt, Department of Psychology, Scene Grammar Lab
11:45
Wed—HZ_12—Talks8—8104
Large language models as artificial semantic annotators
Emin Çelik, Max Planck Institute for Software Systems
Saarbrücken, Germany
11:00 - 12:30
Stereotypes and misinformation
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_13
Chair/s: Veronika Lerche
11:00
Wed—HZ_13—Talks8—8201
Understanding sharing behavior on social media platforms: How the ability to discern between manipulative and non-manipulative content influences sharing manipulative and false information
Laura Burkhardt, Department of Psychology, University of Tübingen; Schleichstr. 4, 72076 Tübingen, Germany
11:15
Wed—HZ_13—Talks8—8202
Does content matter? – Comparing the continued influence effect for different materials
Nadia Said, Department of Psychology, University of Tübingen, Schleichstraße 4, 72076 Tübingen, Germany
11:30
Wed—HZ_13—Talks8—8203
Can community notes serve as retraction on social media platforms? Studying the continued influence effect on social media
Nicole Antes, Leibniz-Institut für Wissensmedien, Tübingen
11:45
Wed—HZ_13—Talks8—8204
Unmasking Bias: Brightness Priming in the Weapon Identification Task
Veronika Lerche, Kiel University
12:30 - 14:00
Lunch Break
Wednesday, 12 March | {session_room}
14:00 - 15:00
Keynote 3 — Merle Fairhurst: Coordinating with others in time and through touch
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_2
Chair/s: Daniela Sammler
14:00
Wed—HZ_2—Keynote3—8301
Coordinating with others in time and through touch
Merle Fairhurst, Center for the Tactile Internet, TU Dresden, Germany
15:00 - 16:30
Cognitive control
Wednesday, 12 March | Casino_1.801
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8401
Task-order Coordination in Triple-Task Situations: An EEG study
Reversed SOA effects on distractor-target interference depend on central/peripheral task-relevance
Ulrike Zimmer, ICAN, Department of Psychologie, MSH (Medical School Hamburg), Hamburg, Germany
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8403
Proactive interference from a previous task context increases the cost of switching between non-competitive tasks
Mike Wendt, Medical School Hamburg
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8404
Cognitive Mechanisms Underlying the Reduction of Task-Pair Set Activation in Dual-Task Contexts: The Role of Passive Decay Over Time
Alice Camisa, Cognitive and Experimental Psychology, Institute of Psychology, RWTH Aachen University, Jägerstr. 17-19, D-52066 Aachen, Germany
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8405
Simon, Stand Up: The influence of sitting and standing on the vertical Simon effect
Pia Fenske, Universität Hildesheim
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8406
Modeling Flanker Task Performance Using Deep Neural Networks
Simon Schaefer, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8407
On the neural dynamics of cognitive control: asymmetric neural correlates when switching between affective expression and gender calssification of perceived faces
Leif Erik Langsdorf, Martin-Luther University Halle-Wittenberg
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8408
Costs of cue-task mapping relearning are not smaller in task repetitions than in task switches
Stefanie Kellner, Department of Psychology, Medical School Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany | ICAN Institute for Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, Medical School Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8409
The interplay between proactive and reactive control within and between tasks
Eldad Keha, Hebrew University of Jerusalem | Achva Academic College
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8410
Investigating constant task performance under varying mental load through changes in task difficulty and distraction due to a noisy soundscape: An ERP perspective
Marion Freyer, Federal Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Unit 3.1 Prevention of Work-related Diseases
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8411
The effect of task interruptions on the performance in a typing task
Patricia Hirsch, RWTH Aachen
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8412
Distractor-Induced Deafness for Short and Long Tones
Lars Michael, Medical School Berlin
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8413
Abnormal frontal theta phase dynamics in the EEG as a marker for impaired cognitive control in mental disorders
Ingo Klaiber, University of Ulm,
Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy III,
89075 Ulm
15:00 - 16:30
Emotion and cognition
Wednesday, 12 March | Casino_1.801
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8501
Learning to feel vibrations: Associatively learned boredom but not stress modulates time perception
Müge Cavdan, Justus Liebig University Giessen
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8502
How Do Incidental Emotions Shape Our Moral Judgments?
Şevval Düzgün, Ege Üniversitesi
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8503
ClEYEmate Change – How Climate Anxiety Affects Attentional Control in Anti-Saccades away from Climate Change Consequences
Melina Wappes, Catholic University of Eichstätt-Ingolstadt
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8504
Deep pressure stimulation (DPS) increases positive feelings and reduces stress: Evidence from wearing T-shirts with integrated weights
Patrick Khader, Charlotte-Fresenius University of Psychology
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8505
Coping with Failures: The Role of Emotions, Individual Traits, and Expectation Characteristics
Comparing Self-Descriptiveness and Autobiographical Memory Tasks in the Self-Reference Effect Across Age Groups
Lisa Wenzel, Ulm University
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8604
Lost Connections: How Depression Alters Memory Performance and Strategy Use
Luisa Knopf, Trier University
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8605
Individual Differences in Prospective Memory: Investigating Effects of Reasoning and Attentional Control on Cue Focality
Wiebke Hemming, Heidelberg University
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8606
Introducing a combinatorial set of 3,125 cartoon characters based on five features for research on categorization, (meta-)memory, judgment, and decision-making
Arndt Bröder, University of Mannheim
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8607
Evaluative Conditioning with Multiple Unconditioned Stimuli – Integration at Learning or at Judgment?
Florian Weber, Department of Psychology, Ruhr University Bochum
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8608
No action based Evaluative Conditioning with foot responses
Tarini Singh, Trier University
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8609
Constant Auditory Noise as a Burden on Working Memory?
Philip Schmalbrock, University of Trier
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8610
Decoding Voice Identity in Auditory Working Memory: an MEG Study
Melek Öyküm Yalçın, Institute of Medical Psychology, Medical Faculty, Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main 60528, Germany | Cooperative Brain Imaging Center, Medical Faculty, Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main, 60528, Germany
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8611
Reading out latent visual working memory representations from MEG using stochastic resonance
Noa Krause, Ernst Struengmann Institute for Neuroscience in Cooperation with Max Planck Society, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
15:00 - 16:30
Perception
Wednesday, 12 March | Casino_1.801
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8701
Event Completion: Causality Reduces Accuracy Without Affecting Metacognitive Efficiency
Simge Hamaloglu, Department of Psychology, University of Tübingen; Schleichstr. 4, 72076 Tübingen, Germany
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8702
Temporal Dynamics of Scene Grammar Representations
Ronja Schnellen, Goethe University Frankfurt, Department of Psychology, Scene Grammar Lab, Germany
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8703
Investigating the role of vision in the size-weight illusion
Franz-Peter Schwarzacher, Klinische Neuropsychologie, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8704
People are sensitive to their uniquely patterned retinal input
Amit Rawal, Ernst Strüngmann Institute (ESI) for Neuroscience in Cooperation with Max Planck Society, Frankfurt, Germany | Faculty of Behavioural and Human Movement Sciences, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8705
The similarity of similarity - a systematic comparison of eight tasks.
Malin Styrnal, Justus Liebig University Giessen | Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8706
Colour Constancy in Virtual Reality Under Dual Illumination: Comparing Selection, Matching, and Adjustment Methods
Raquel Gil Rodriguez, Justus-Liebig Universität Giessen
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8707
Larger Pupils Enhance Visual Detection Performance Under Varying Degrees of Physical Effort
Lisa Eberhardt, General Psychology, Ulm University, Germany
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8708
The effect of stimulus frequency and range on category differentiation
Barbara Mühlbauer, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8709
Evidence against central timing mechanism in temporal-order perception
Paul Kelber, University of Tübingen
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8710
Exploring the effect of 3D vs. 2D lineups on eyewitness identification accuracy using Virtual Reality
Turning heads: A field experiment on dynamic versus static eye-catchers in shop window decoration
Stefan Ortlieb, University of Bamberg | Research Group for Ergonomics, Psychological Æsthetics and Gestalt (EPÆG), Bamberg, Germany
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8712
Can Anticipatory Saccades in Learning Quizzes Predict Exam Success?
Eva Förner, Catholic University of Eichstätt-Ingolstadt
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8713
Gaze-Pointer Distance as a Predictor of Quiz Performance in Video-Based E-Learning
Raphaella Gonzalez, General Psychology, Ulm University
Wed—Casino_1.801—Poster3—8714
Assessing Participants' Knowledge about the Distribution of Real-World Quantities
David Izydorczyk, University of Mannheim
15:00 - 16:30
Attention, decisions, executive functions
Wednesday, 12 March | Casino_1.811
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—8801
An Updated Short Form of the Everyday Problems Test: Validity, Reliability, and Relations to Cognitive Performance
Alice Reinhartz, Department of Psychology, Medical School Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany | Experimental Psychology Unit, Helmut Schmidt University/University of the Federal Armed Forces Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—8802
Divided we stand: A tutorial on using variability in theory and data analysis
Christoph Naefgen, FernUniversität in Hagen
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—8803
Effectiveness of executive functions training on cognitive regulation of emotion, working memory, and mental vitality in students
Faezeh Sadipour, Milano-Bicocca University
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—8804
Are YOU going to change the world? Predicting scientific creativity in young scientists
Vera Eymann, Rheinland-Pfälzische Technische Universität Kaiserslautern - Landau (RPTU)
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—8805
Visualizing Object Detection Algorithms in Highly Automated Vehicles to Improve Remote Assistant’s Understanding of the Automated Driving System
Thorben Brandt, German Aerospace Center, Institute of Transportation Systems, Braunschweig
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—8806
The Influence of Procedural and Distributive Fairness in AI-Supported Decision-Making on Trust, Acceptance, and Adoption
Deborah Werner, Catholic University of Eichstätt-Ingolstadt
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—8807
Balancing Autonomy and Automation: Meaningful User Experience in Smart Charging Agent Interactions
Christiane Attig, University of Lübeck
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—8808
Physical Effort, Decision Conflict and Cognitive Offloading
Rouven Aust, Julius-Maximilians-University of Wuerzburg
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—8809
Assessing underlying processes of implicit weight bias: A diffusion model analysis
Katja Pollak, University of Freiburg
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—8810
Measuring Inhibition Using Evidence Accumulation Models
Jiashun Wang, Department of Psychology, LMU Munich
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—8811
Differential Processing of Familiar and Unfamiliar Faces and Objects in Hybrid Foraging Tasks
Carmen Peiro-Lanchares, Department of Social Psychology and Methodology, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—8812
Systematic Search: A new paradigm to measure the speed at which visual stimuli are processed
Heinrich Liesefeld, University of Bremen
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—8813
How Does Statistical Learning Shape Attentional Tuning to Depth in 3D Visual Search?
Maximilian Stefani, Universität der Bundeswehr München
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—8814
Priming of Potential Road Hazards: Effects on Reaction Time in a Visual Search Task
Karsten Klaffer, Technische Universität Braunschweig, Institute of Psychology, Department of Traffic and Engineering Psychology
15:00 - 16:30
Language, communication and social interaction
Wednesday, 12 March | Casino_1.811
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—8901
Word-Driven Cerebro-Acoustic Coherence in a Natural Language Comprehension Task
Jannika Hollmann, Institute of Psychology, Goethe University Frankfurt
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—8902
The special role of verbal labels in concept formation: Comparing the facilitating effects of verbal and nonverbal labels
Juliane Werner, University of Tübingen
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—8903
Concreteness is inherent to human and language model word meaning
Emily Wiebers, Department for Psychology, Goethe University Frankfurt, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—8904
EGEFACE: A Novel Approach Using Dynamic Stimuli for Measuring Individual Differences in Face Memory
Murat Karataş, Bursa Technical University, Department of Psychology, Bursa, Türkiye
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—8905
Comparing automatic processing of age, gender and facial expression in face stimuli
Robert Gaschler, FernUniversität in Hagen
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—8906
The role of visual imagery in face recognition: Drift diffusion modeling reveals differences in individuals with and without imagery abilities - implications for the use of online studies in aphantasia
Varg Thore Königsmark, Otto von Guericke University, Medical Faculty, Magdeburg, Germany | Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology, Magdeburg, Germany
15:00 - 16:30
Space, motion and causality
Wednesday, 12 March | Casino_1.811
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—9001
No error on the side of safety: looming stimuli do not elicit representational momentum
Simon Merz, Department of General Psychology, Trier University | Institute for Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, Trier University
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—9002
Context events bypass the influence of visual adaptation on the perception of causality
Ben Sommer, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—9003
The influence of sound for the interpretation of visual correspondence
Elisabeth Hein, University of Tübingen
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—9004
Do older adults show differences in the initial processing of coherent vs. non-coherent motion stimuli compared with younger adults? An event-related potential (ERP) study
Stefan Berti, Institute for Psychology, Johannes Gutenberg-University of Mainz, Mainz, Germany
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—9005
(Absence of an) Effect of the availability of environment distance cues on biases in visual time-to-contact estimation for approaching vehicles
Thirsa Huisman, Johannes Gutenberg Universität Mainz
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—9006
The meaning of acoustic landmarks for human wayfinding: A comparison of physical and mentally imagined acoustic landmarks
Sabrina Vormittag, Experimental Psychology and Cognitive Science, Deparment of Psychology, Justus Liebig University
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—9007
Does Working Memory Moderate the Relationship of Stereotypes and Girls' Mental Rotation?
Miro Ebert, Universität Regensburg
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—9008
Cognitive Factors and Instructional Interventions in Map-Based Route Learning
Hatice Dedetas Satir, University of Mannheim
15:00 - 16:30
Action and motor control
Wednesday, 12 March | Casino_1.811
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—9101
The role of eye movements in the temporal binding effect
Ran Zhuang, Department of Psychology and Behavioral Sciences, Zhejiang University
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—9102
From tusk till horn: Modulating feature boundaries in action control
Nicolas Münster, University of Trier
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—9103
Event Segmentation Distorts Subjective Time Perception Across Hierarchical Levels
Qiyuan Zeng, Research Group Neural Circuits, Consciousness, and Cognition, Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—9104
Crossing Boundaries: Event Boundaries disrupt Binding of Response Representations in First Person Perspective
Maria Nemeth, Trier University
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—9105
Spectator effects on the performance of soccer-specific tasks
Christian Kaczmarek, Saarland University, Institute of Sport Sciences
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—9106
Stimulus-driven and response-driven cross-modal action co-activation
Jens Kürten, University of Würzburg
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—9107
Effects of different movement amplitudes on sequence learning in the motor domain
Zixin Shen, Bielefeld University, Faculty of Psychology and Sports Science
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—9108
Issues in Grounded Cognition and How to Solve Them – The Minimalist Account
Jannis Friedrich, German Sport University Cologne
15:00 - 16:30
Human factors and control
Wednesday, 12 March | Casino_1.811
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—9201
Impact of activity breaks on physical health and cognitive performance at work: experimental design with a psychophysiological perspective.
Kim-Aljoscha Bressem, Federal Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Unit 3.1 Prevention of Work-related Diseases
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—9202
Tracking flow in real time: A novel approach for continuous subjective measurement
Sura Genc, University of Konstanz
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—9203
Behind the Scenes of Lying – A Behavioral Insight into Cognitive and Emotional Processes
Tabea Wächtershäuser, Philipps-University of Marburg
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—9204
The Cognitive Processes Underlying Stereotype Threat In Gender-Stereotyped Domains: A Diffusion Model Analysis Of Information Uptake And Response Tendencies
Kim Keller, Heidelberg University
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—9205
Am I in control? The dynamics of sensory information, performance feedback, and personality in shaping control experience
Maren Giersiepen, General and Experimental Psychology, Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—9206
Motor Control Benefits Short-Term Recall of Item-Outcome Associations
Elif Gezen, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—9207
Illusions of Control: Instructed Goal Focus Matters
Dorit Wenke, PFH Private University of Applied Sciences
Wed—Casino_1.811—Poster3—9208
Effects of variability of emotional facial expressions during virtual attentional training in socially anxious individuals
Teresa Schmidt, Departement for Psychology, Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, University of Regensburg, Regensburg,Germany
16:30 - 18:00
Learning and forgetting
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_2
Chair/s: Vaibhav A Diwadkar
16:30
Wed—HZ_2—Talks9—9301
Operant conditioning of planaria in the water-droplet paradigm
Sarah Sophie Anton, Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel
16:45
Wed—HZ_2—Talks9—9302
What drives the associative memory deficit in healthy aging?
Carolin Streitberger, University of Mannheim
17:00
Wed—HZ_2—Talks9—9303
Associative learning and coordination dynamics in the brain: Experiments with fMRI data
Vaibhav Diwadkar, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit Michigan USA 48201
17:15
Wed—HZ_2—Talks9—9304
Interaction of attentional and learning processes during fear acquisition and reversal
Ebru Ecem Tavacioglu, University of Würzburg, Germany
17:30
Wed—HZ_2—Talks9—9305
Does training inhibitory control improve extinction learning?
Kaneez Fatima Dar, Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee , India
17:45
Wed—HZ_2—Talks9—9306
The Influence of Directed Forgetting on Emotional Associative Memory
Dipti Singh, Department of Humanities & Social Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee, India
16:30 - 18:00
Dissociating effects of episodic retrieval of recent stimulus-response episodes versus contingency awareness as a source of learning
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_7
Chair/s: Matthäus Rudolph, Carina Giesen
16:30
Wed—HZ_7—Talks9—9401
Sources of long-term color-word contingency learning: Evidence from the alternating blocks paradigm
Klaus Rothermund, FSU Jena
16:45
Wed—HZ_7—Talks9—9402
Stimulus-response binding and retrieval processes operate independently of contingency awareness
Matthäus Rudolph, Friedrich-Schiller University Jena
17:00
Wed—HZ_7—Talks9—9403
Stimulus-response binding and retrieval is independent of affective consequences
Anna Martini, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena
17:15
Wed—HZ_7—Talks9—9404
Manipulating instructions to dissociate episodic retrieval and propositional knowledge in valence contingency learning
Carina Giesen, HMU Health and Medical University Erfurt
17:30
Wed—HZ_7—Talks9—9405
The Role of Episodic Retrieval in Evaluative Conditioning: Evaluative Conditioning Effects Differ Depending on the Temporal Distance to the Last Stimulus Pairing
Jasmin Richter, University of Oslo
17:45
Wed—HZ_7—Talks9—9406
Summarizing discussion on the relation of stimulus-response bindings and learning
Birte Moeller, University of Trier
16:30 - 18:00
Cognitive-motor interference: How cognitive processing demands can affect postural control processes
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_8
Chair/s: Anton Koger
16:30
Wed—HZ_8—Talks9—9501
Interference between cognitive conflict resolution and control of standing balance
Leif Johannsen, Cognitive and Experimental Psychology, Institute of Psychology, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany
16:45
Wed—HZ_8—Talks9—9502
Forceplate: An R package for processing raw force-plate data
Raphael Hartmann, University of Freiburg
17:00
Wed—HZ_8—Talks9—9503
Assessing the influence of cognitive dual-task demands on postural control: An event‑related approach using cluster-based permutation analysis
Anton Koger, RWTH Aachen University
17:15
Wed—HZ_8—Talks9—9504
Event-related analysis of postural control and cognitive conflict in the Flanker Task
Elisa Straub, Department of Psychology, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
17:30
Wed—HZ_8—Talks9—9505
Exploring the Dynamics of Postural Stability During Egocentric Mental Rotation Tasks with Multi-Axial Figure Rotations
Philipp Hofmann, University of Regensburg, Faculty of Human Sciences
16:30 - 18:00
From behavioral eye-tracking analysis to cognitive imaging: Mechanisms of attention and learning in search tasks
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_9
Chair/s: Artyom Zinchenko
16:30
Wed—HZ_9—Talks9—9601
Context-based guidance vs. context suppression in contextual learning: role of un-/certainty in the target-context relations in visual search
Neural and behavioral evidence of within- and cross-dimension visual distractor suppression
Fredrik Allenmark, General and Experimental Psychology, Department of Psychology,
Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
17:00
Wed—HZ_9—Talks9—9603
Contextual cueing in the auditory modality
Ananya Mandal, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
17:15
Wed—HZ_9—Talks9—9604
Statistical learning of target-distractor co-occurrences in human participants‘ visual-search scanning patterns
Thomas Geyer, Department of Psychology, University of Munich
17:30
Wed—HZ_9—Talks9—9605
Statistical learning in visual search inside and outside the initial field of view
Artyom Zinchenko, LMU, Munich
16:30 - 18:00
Auditory processing: Sensation, prediction, and representation
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_10
Chair/s: Seung-Goo Kim
16:30
Wed—HZ_10—Talks9—9701
Confidence in auditory perceptual completion
Cemre Baykan, General and Biological Psychology, Department of Psychology Philipps University of Marburg, Germany
16:45
Wed—HZ_10—Talks9—9702
Tonic locus coeruleus upregulation as a mechanism of increased precision weighting in autism
Nico Bast, (1) Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Psychosomatics and Psychotherapy, Autism Research and Intervention Center of Excellence, University Hospital Frankfurt, Goethe-University, Deutschordenstraße 50, 60528 Frankfurt am Main, Germany
17:00
Wed—HZ_10—Talks9—9703
Variable action-effect couplings reveal dynamic adjustment of top-down predictions
Tjerk Dercksen, Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology Magdeburg, Germany | Center for Behavioral Brain Sciences Magdeburg, Germany
17:15
Wed—HZ_10—Talks9—9704
Perceptual and semantic maps in individual humans share structural features that predict creative abilities
Jonas Elpelt, Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies and Institute for Computer Science, Goethe University Frankfurt,
Ruth-Moufang-Straße 1, 60438 Frankfurt, Germany
17:30
Wed—HZ_10—Talks9—9705
Representational Gradients of Emotion-relevant Musical Information in the Human Cerebral Cortex
Seung-Goo Kim, Research Group Neurocognition of Music and Language, Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics
16:30 - 18:00
Real fears in virtual worlds: Behavior, physiology, and neural mechanisms
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_11
Chair/s: Olivier Thijs de Vries
16:30
Wed—HZ_11—Talks9—9801
Predictors of subjective fear and anxiety in naturalistic VR tasks
Lukas Kornemann, University of Bonn, Transdisciplinary Research Area Life and Health, Hertz Chair for Artificial Intelligence and Neuroscience
16:45
Wed—HZ_11—Talks9—9802
A Multimodal Social Conditioning Study in Virtual Reality Showing Fast Adaptation to Affective Social Learning Experiences
Navigating the Approach-Avoidance Matrix: A Novel Task in a Foraging Environment Using Virtual Reality.
Alexandros Kastrinogiannis, Institute for Systems Neuroscience, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany | Department of Neurology, Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany
17:15
Wed—HZ_11—Talks9—9804
Virtual Paradigms, Real fear, and Avoidance?
Pauline Dibbets, Maastricht University, Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience, dept Clinical Psychological Science
The Netherlands
16:30 - 18:00
Cognitive control
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_12
Chair/s: Tara Radovic, Leif Erik Langsdorf
16:30
Wed—HZ_12—Talks9—9901
A Task Conflict Gradient in The Gestalt-Color-Digit Stroop Task
Ronen Hershman, University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck, Austria
16:45
Wed—HZ_12—Talks9—9902
The Asymmetric List Shift Effect: Selective Practice or Asymmetric Control Adaptation?
Kathrin Treittinger, University of Regensburg
17:00
Wed—HZ_12—Talks9—9903
Cognitive control in older adults: dealing with frequent task interruptions
Tara Radovic, Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg
17:15
Wed—HZ_12—Talks9—9904
Uncertainty in cognitive control demands leads to information-seeking: The role of Alpha Band Activity
Seema Prasad, Cognitive Neurophysiology,
Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry,
Faculty of Medicine, TU Dresden
16:30 - 18:00
Perception, decision making, and action in sport
Wednesday, 12 March | HZ_13
Chair/s: Iris Güldenpenning
16:30
Wed—HZ_13—Talks9—10001
A home advantage in offside decisions in German professional football (soccer)
Peter Wühr, TU Dortmund
16:45
Wed—HZ_13—Talks9—10002
Response inhibition performance in hand- and foot-dominated team sports
Marie-Therese Fleddermann, Goethe University Frankfurt
17:00
Wed—HZ_13—Talks9—10003
Response inhibition for the basketball pump fake with responses of different complexity
Carolin Wickemeyer, Paderborn University
17:15
Wed—HZ_13—Talks9—10004
Differences of producing head fakes with and without a social partner
Nils Tobias Böer, Paderborn University
17:30
Wed—HZ_13—Talks9—10005
Gender differences in the interference between frequency-tapping and speed-strooping in a cognitive-motor dual task