Postdoc at Uni Fribourg with Petra Vetter
Research interests revolve around special/extraordinary brains, and what they can teach us about how our brains work
Our paper "Persistent prosopagnosia following COVID-19" in which we report on a young woman losing her ability to recognize faces is now available under this link:
https://t.co/JQZSq3mMsY
#COVID19#LongCovid#Faceblindness#prosopagnosia
Excited to share that our paper on mirror use in octopuses is published today in
@CurrentBiology! This is the first time mirror-mediated spatial navigation has been demonstrated in an invertebrate.
https://t.co/aDXebQJ5UN
Excited to see our work on prosopometamorphopsia (face distortions) highlighted in this new piece! It's been a thrilling journey, and there's more to come! @sciam@DartmouthPBS
Interested in face processing? Excited about developing a research program involving psychophysics, neuropsychology, perceptual development, and individual differences?
The Social Perception Lab @DartmouthPBS (PI: Brad Duchaine) is searching for a postdoctoral fellow!
@Louise243 Thanks for reaching out! There can be an overlap of symptoms with other problems people might be experiencing, e.g. a person with dementia not recognizing people; doesn't necessarily mean they have prosopagnosia because a different explanantion can be given. #moreResearchNeeded
Our paper "Persistent prosopagnosia following COVID-19" in which we report on a young woman losing her ability to recognize faces is now available under this link:
https://t.co/JQZSq3mMsY
#COVID19#LongCovid#Faceblindness#prosopagnosia
Facial recognition and navigation difficulties are some of the persistent issues that can result from #LongCovid , findings published in Cortex by #guarini PhD student Marie-Luise Kieseler in Brad Duchaine's lab in @DartmouthPBS
Imagine looking at a face and one half starts melting and drooping down like a Dali painting!
This is what happens to people with Hemi-PMO.
In collaboration with Jorge, my lab mate Sarah Herald and PI Brad Duchaine published a paper on it in Current Biology.
@neuroMDL Peach Liquor! There is also this gorgeous entremet recipe that asks for peaches. Just use less sugar in the panna cotta. https://t.co/WhQo8leHkJ
@sara_bee @gender_is_fake Hi Sara, severe difficulty recognizing people's faces is assumed to occur in 0.5% to 2% of the population without them ever having experienced any brain trauma or injury or infection. We call it developmental prosopagnosia. Feel free to send me a message if you have any questions