Research Interests
- Memory-processes in judgment and decision-making
- Hypotheses testing during sequential diagnostic reasoning
- The role of previous experiences on the decision process
- Eye movements, memory and attention
- Top-down modulated eye movement behavior
- Eye movements during verbal memory retrieval
- Eye-tracking methodology
- Process tracing to study thinking and reasoning
- Comparison of eye-tracking methodologies
Academic Positions
since 09/2020 | Research Associate, Cognitive Psychology, University of Zurich (Switzerland) |
03/2016-08/2020 |
Post-doctoral Researcher, Cognitive Decision Science Lab, University of Zurich (Switzerland) |
06/2015-02/2016 |
Head Research Scientist “Abductive and Diagnostic Reasoning“, Cognitive and Engineering Psychology, Technische Universität Chemnitz (Germany) |
05/2015 |
Dissertation in Psychology (Dr. rer. nat.), Technische Universität Chemnitz (Germany) |
03/2013-06/2013 |
Visiting Researcher, Economic Psychology, University of Basel (Switzerland) |
09/2009-05/2015 |
Research Assistant, Cognitive and Engineering Psychology, Technische Universität Chemnitz (Germany) |
Selection of the latest Publications from ZORA
ZORA Publication List
Download Options
Publications
-
Are eye movements and covert shifts of attention functional for memory retrieval?. In: ETRA '24: The 2024 Symposium on Eye Tracking Research and Applications, Glasgow, United Kingdom, 4 June 2024 - 7 June 2024. ACM Digital library, 1-7.
-
More Than Storage of Information: What Working Memory Contributes to Visual Abductive Reasoning. Advances in Cognitive Psychology, 18(3):203-214.
-
When the eyes have it and when not: How multiple sources of activation combine to guide eye movements during multiattribute decision making. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 151(6):1394-1418.
-
Ambivalence in decision making: An eye tracking study. Cognitive Psychology, 134:101464.
-
Information stored in memory affects abductive reasoning. Psychological Research, 85(8):3119-3133.
-
Tracing Current Explanations in Memory: A Process Analysis Based on Eye-Tracking. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 73(10):1703-1717.
-
A new way to guide consumer's choice: Retro-cueing alters the availability of product information in memory. Journal of Business Research, 111:135-147.
-
Eye Movements in Vehicle Control. In: Klein, Christoph; Ettinger, Ulrich. Eye Movement Research : An Introduction to its Scientific Foundations and Applications. Cham: Springer, 929-969.
-
Comparing eye trackers by correlating their eye-metric data. Behavior Research Methods, 50(5):1853-1863.
-
Covert shifts of attention can account for the functional role of "eye movements to nothing". Memory & Cognition, 46(2):230-243.
-
Watching diagnoses develop: Eye movements reveal symptom processing during diagnostic reasoning. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 24(5):1398-1412.
-
Differentiating between encoding and processing during sequential diagnostic reasoning: An eye-tracking study. In: 38th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, Philadelphia, 11 August 2016 - 13 August 2016, 129-134.
-
Listen up, eye movements play a role in verbal memory retrieval. Psychological Research, 80:149-158.
-
Shifting covert attention to spatially indexed locations increases retrieval performance of verbal information. In: 37th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, California, 23 July 2015 - 25 July 2015. Cognitive Science Society, 1907-1912.
-
Tracking memory processes during ambiguous symptom processing in sequential diagnostic reasoning. In: 13th International Conference on Cognitive Modeling, Groningen, 9 April 2015 - 12 April 2015. University of Groningen, 71-72.
-
Eye movements reveal memory processes during similarity- and rule-based decision making. Cognition, 136:228-246.
-
Eye movements, memory, and thinking. Tracking eye movements to reveal memory processes during reasoning and decision-making. Chemnitz: Universitätsverlag Chemnitz.
-
Biased processing of ambiguous symptoms favors the initially leading hypothesis in sequential diagnostic reasoning. Experimental Psychology, 62:287-305.