RESEARCH AND SCHOLARSHIP
Faculty members in Psychological and Brain Sciences maintain strong, active research programs that produce world-class science across a wide scope of subfields. Undergraduate and graduate student researchers are centrally involved in all phases of this research.
RESEARCH
LABORATORIES
Grant Berry, PhD
The employs laboratory, computational, and community-based research methods to investigate how individuals interact with language variation, how community-wide patterns of language use emerge from conversational interactions, and how patterns in language use can lead to language change over time. The lab takes an interdisciplinary approach grounded in cognitive science, linguistics, psychology, machine learning, and sociology. Ongoing research projects include: (1) the influence of cognitive control and language experience on perceptual retuning and phonetic drift; (2) description of minority speech patterns in Philadelphia English; and (3) simulating phonetic drift using artificial intelligence.
Michael Brown, PhD
The Comparative Cognition Laboratory is concerned with the study of basic cognitive processes using animal subjects and behavioral experiments. Current and recent projects include spatial memory and spatial pattern learning in rats, social memories in rats, and spatial working memory in honeybees.
Diego Fernandez-Duque, PhD
We do research in Cognition broadly defined. Current and recent topics include lay theories (such as people’s beliefs about the relation between mind and brain), false consensus (such as the belief that others will agree with your ethics), and academic stereotypes (such as believing that neuroscientists are more competent but less warm than psychologists), We also do work on judgment and decision making, most recently in the area of charitable donations.
Communication, Attention, Reasoning across Ecologies (CARE) Laboratory
Suzanne Gray, PhD
We explore the depths of attention, reasoning, and communication in human and nonhuman animals (especially birds) using noninvasive behavioral methods. This research advances theories regarding the biological underpinnings of cognition and behavior by integrating ecological and evolutionary differences across many species, and supports animal welfare and conservation efforts.
Memory, INference, & Dynamics (MIND) Laboratory
Nathaniel Greene, PhD
Why do we remember some things better than others? What factors shape how vivid or detailed our memories are? How does the quality or richness of our memories change with age or experience? Research in the MIND Lab seeks to address these and inter-related questions through a mixture of experimental and computational methods to studying the underlying dynamics of memory encoding and retrieval.
Irene Kan, PhD
Research in our lab focuses on human memory functions. By combining behavioral, neuropsychological (i.e., studying patients with brain damage), and electrophysiological methods (i.e., EEG & ERP), we hope to gain a better understanding of how different memory systems complement each other.
Matthew Matell, PhD
The primary focus of the lab is to elucidate the psychological and neuronal bases of time perception. The flow of time underlies all processes in nature, and the perception of time in the seconds to minutes range, referred to as interval timing, provides animals with a framework to efficiently meet the demands and constraints of a dynamic environment. Interval timing has been proposed to serve as a substrate for optimal foraging1 and associative learning2 and may provide a context for conscious awareness. Furthermore, alterations in the perception of time might contribute to the use and abuse of addictive drugs. Although the basic psychophysical properties have been well characterized, the neural structures and neural computational processes underlying interval timing remain unclear.
Comparative Cognition Lab
M. Ali Qadri, PhD
Our research explores how animals think. Our goal is to understand the limits of human, non-human, and artificial cognition. For the immediate future, we will focus on avian models. Current projects explores how pigeons: organize their own behavior over time, recognize the behaviors of other agents, and represent information in working memory.
Benjamin Sachs, PhD
Research in the lab utilizes a combination of cellular, molecular and behavioral approaches in genetically modified mice to investigate the neurobiological underpinnings of animal behavior. We are particularly interested in understanding how genetic (i.e., serotonin deficiency) and environmental factors (e.g., stress) can lead to behavioral alterations relevant to neuropsychiatric disorders.
Joe Toscano, PhD
Our group studies speech recognition and language comprehension. We use a combination of behavioral, cognitive neuroscience, and computational techniques to study these processes as they unfold over time, both in the moment and over longer time-scales. Our research also addresses questions about how we can improve assessment of hearing loss and how we can use computer games to study speech communication.
Deena Weisberg, PhD
The Scientific Thinking and Representation (STAR) Lab studies imaginative cognition in children and adults, especially the roles that the imagination plays in learning and scientific thinking.
Rebecca Brand, PhD
At the Cognitive Development Project, we are investigating how children learn language and make sense of the people and things in the world around them. In our playroom on the campus of ÎÞÂë×¨Çø, we create situations that are safe and fun for children, and then we watch carefully to see how they react.
Memory, INference, & Dynamics (MIND) Laboratory
Nathaniel Greene, PhD
Why do we remember some things better than others? What factors shape how vivid or detailed our memories are? How does the quality or richness of our memories change with age or experience? Research in the MIND Lab seeks to address these and inter-related questions through a mixture of experimental and computational methods to studying the underlying dynamics of memory encoding and retrieval.Â
Janette Herbers, PhD
In the ARD Lab, we consider child development in contexts of risk and adversity, such as poverty, homelessness, and psychosocial trauma. In particular, we seek to understand how protective factors like positive parent-child relationships and self-regulation skills enable children to grow and function well in relationships, behavior, and academics despite considerable challenges.
Irene Kan, PhD
Research in our lab focuses on human memory functions. By combining behavioral, neuropsychological (i.e., studying patients with brain damage), and electrophysiological methods (i.e., EEG & ERP), we hope to gain a better understanding of how different memory systems complement each other.
Deena Weisberg, PhD
The Scientific Thinking and Representation (STAR) Lab studies imaginative cognition in children and adults, especially the roles that the imagination plays in learning and scientific thinking.
Hierarchies, Impressions, Inequality, and Personality (HIIP) Laboratory
Bradley Hughes, PhD
In the HIIP Lab, we study how people form impressions of other's personality traits, the factors that bias them, and how this impacts interpersonal decisions, such as who to befriend or hire. We use both social interaction studies and controlled lab experiments to better understand how social hierarchies, groups, and identities influence the way people are seen and treated by others in key social contexts.
John Kurtz, PhD
My research team explores questions about human individual differences using a wide array of psychological assessment methods. Recent studies have investigated the identification of concealed psychopathology, the incremental validity of informant personality assessment, and the stability of traits in the transition to adulthood.
Patrick Markey, PhD
The Interpersonal Research Lab’s (IRL) research focuses on how behavioral tendencies develop and are expressed within social relationships.
Elizabeth Pantesco, PhD
The Sleep and Heart Health (SHH) Lab focuses on the relationships among sleep, psychosocial factors, and health, with a special interest in cardiometabolic disease risk.
Erica Slotter, PhD
In the Social Self Lab we investigate individuals’ perceptions of themselves and how these perceptions influence patterns of cognition, affect, and behavior. We place particular emphasis on how individuals’ self-views are influenced by the social situation in general and by important relationships in their lives.
Caitlyn Yantis, PhD
In the RIDE lab, we study how people think and talk about race, racism and diversity, with the goal of informing efforts to mitigate racial inequity and interracial tension. Current research examines what makes White Americans’ and racial minority group members feel supported and respected when talking with one another about racial issues.
TOPICS
Suzanne Gray, PhD
M. Ali Qadri, PhD
Suzanne Gray, PhD
Nathaniel Greene, PhD
M. Ali Qadri, PhD
Nathaniel Greene, PhD
M. Ali Qadri, PhD
Nathaniel Greene, PhD
Bradley Hughes, PhD
Bradley Hughes, PhD