Conference Agenda

Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).

 
 
Session Overview
Session
Poster Session 2
Time:
Tuesday, 03/June/2025:
4:00pm - 5:30pm

Location: Saal 2a - Veranstaltungszentrum, RUB

Saal 2a is in the conference center (Veranstaltungszentrum) at the Ruhr University Bochum (RUB). It is directly beneath the Mensa.

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Presentations

Are eye movements during sleep linked to memory consolidation? – The first attempt

Judith Wenzel1,2,3, Nicolas Schuck2, Marit Petzka2,3

1Institute of Physics, TU Chemnitz, Germany; 2Institute of Psychology, University of Hamburg, Germany; 3Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Science, Leipzig, Germany



Effects of repeated retrieval on memory reconstruction for naturalistic images

Mervenur Ayyildiz1,2, Maria Wimber1

1School of Psychology & Neuroscience, University of Glasgow, UK; 2Department of Brain and Behavioral Sciences, University of Pavia, Italy



Hippocampal beta rhythms in Alzheimer's disease

Ana Lorena Flores Camacho1,2,3, Eva Maria Robles Hernandez2, Silvia Viana da Silva1,2

1Charité Universitätsmedizin Berlin; 2Deutsches Zentrum für Neurodegenerative Erkrankungen e.V. (DZNE); 3International Graduate Program Medical Neurosciences (MedNeuro)



Neuronal network navigation on designed patterned substrates

Anushka Sarkar, Vanshita Ramsinghani, KS Narayan

Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research (JNCASR), India



The benefit of being very wrong: Large prediction errors promote distinctive encoding

Marius Boeltzig, Nina Liedtke, Ricarda I. Schubotz

University of Münster, Germany



Reimagining Experience: Episodic Memory and the Creativity of Dreams

Ayush Srivastava

Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, India



The Role of Sleep in the Consolidation and Contextual Generalization of Fear Extinction Memories

Louisa Warzog

University of Technology Nuremberg, Germany



Movies of our minds: Patterns of hippocampal subfields during object, scene, and scenario construction

Pitshaporn Leelaarporn1,2, Julia Taube1,2, Yilmaz Sagik2, Maren Bilzer1,2, Cornelia McCormick1,2

1Department for Cognitive Disorders and Geriatric Psychiatry, University of Bonn Medical Center, Bonn, Germany; 2German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases, Bonn, Germany



From single scenes to extended scenarios: the role of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex in the construction of imagery-rich events

Julia Taube1,2, Pitshaporn Leelaarporn1,2, Maren Bilzer1,2,3, Cornelia McCormick1,2

1University Hospital Bonn, Germany; 2German Center for Neurodegenerative Disorders, Germany; 3University Bonn, Germany



Neural Correlates of Scene Construction in the Blind

Marie Malinowski1,2, Nadja Abdel Kafi1,2, Julia Taube1,2, Sven Lange1,2, Katharina Wall3, Bettina Wabbels3, Cornelia McCormick1,2

1Department of Old Age Psychiatry and Cognitive Disorders, University Hospital Bonn, Bonn; 2Deutsches Zentrum für neurodegenerative Erkrankungen, Bonn, Deutschland; 3Abteilung für Augenheilkunde, Universitätsklinikum Bonn, Bonn, Deutschland



Accessibility and availability of actions and spatial displacements in memory for real-world events

Bastien Durocher, Nathan Leroy, William Warnier, Arnaud D'Argembeau

Université de Liège, Belgium



Investigating the relationship between schema-based prediction and memory: preliminary findings from a basketball match prediction task

Dingrong Guo, Yee Lee Shing

Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany



Information transmission during collaborative remembering: Majority vote or fine-tuned affair?

Magdalena Abel, Johannes Bartl

University of Technology Nuremberg, Germany



Exploring recognition memory for non-semantic visual stimuli

Lotta Pesonen1, Máté Lengyel1,2, Jozsef Fiser1

1Central European University; 2University of Cambridge



Evaluating the alignment of computational memory models with human brain activity

Aude Maier, Lucas Gruaz, Johanni Brea

EPFL, Switzerland



Affective touch and face recognition: effects on memory and meta-cognitive performance

Madeleine Bregulla1,2, Julian Packheiser1,2, Christian J. Merz3, Gerald Echterhoff4, Dirk Scheele1,2

1Department of Social Neuroscience, Faculty of Medicine, Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany; 2Research Center One Health Ruhr of the University Alliance Ruhr, Ruhr University, Bochum, Germany; 3Cognitive Psychology, Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, Faculty of Psychology, Ruhr University Bochum, Bochum, Germany; 4Department of Psychology, Social Psychology Group, University of Münster, Münster, Germany



Audience attitude effects on communicators' memory: The role of the communicator's own initial judgment

Ullrich Wagner, Gerald Echterhoff

University of Münster, Germany



Modelling the effect of audience tuning on generative episodic memory

Aya Altamimi

Ruhr University Bochum, Germany



A matter of perspective: the focusing illusion in memory processes, future thinking and empathy

Benedikt Schilling1, Roland Neumann2

1University of Technology Nuremberg, Germany; 2University of Trier, Germany



Neural dynamics of facial expression processing: implications for memory formation

Géza Gergely Ambrus, Madeline Molly Ely

Department of Psychology, Bournemouth University, United Kingdom



Exploring the Neural and Phenomenological Landscapes of Self-Incongruent Autobiographical Memories

Alicja Wicher, Thomas Lukaschewski, Nikolai Axmacher

Ruhr University Bochum, Germany



The effect of dopamine on replay events in a hippocampal spiking network model

Lane von Bassewitz1, Robert Schmidt2

1Institute of Cognitive Science, Osnabrueck University, Osnabrueck, Germany; 2Institute for Neural Computation, Faculty of Computer Science, Ruhr-University Bochum



Selective impairment of episodic autobiographical memory in Alzheimer's Disease

Chantal Reinecke1, Hannah Fischer1,2, Julia Taube1,2, Cornelia McCormick1,2

1Universitätsklinikum Bonn, Germany; 2DZNE, Bonn, Germany



The Impact of Temporal Lobe Epilepsy on Autobiographical memory: reduced specificity and altered spatio-temporal processing

Maren Bilzer1,2,3, Theresa Jolie2,3, Julia Taube1,3, Nadja Abdelkafi1,3, Tobias Baumgartner4, Christoph Helmstaedter4, Cornelia McCormick1,3

1Department of Cognitive Disorders and Geriatric Psychiatry, University Hospital Bonn, Germany; 2University Bonn; 3German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases, Bonn, Germany; 4Department of Epileptology, Bonn, Germany



Differences in long-term explicit and implicit memory for tone pattern sequences

Aashritaa Gopalakrishnan, Maria Chait

University College London, United Kingdom



Episodic memories guide behavior

Volker Tresp, Hang Li

LMU Munich, Germany



Modeling the primacy effect: Contextual control and response order in free recall

Sven Wientjes1, Clay Brian Holroyd1, Sean Matthew Polyn2

1Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium; 2Vanderbilt University, Nashville, USA



Memory as origami: Constructing episodic recall beyond storage models

Matthew Watts

University of Miami, United States of America



Iconic Representations and the Function of Episodic Memory

Ivan Cotumaccio

Washington University in St. Louis, USA



Can a simulationist be a causalist about the metasemantics of episodic remembering?

Jakub Rudnicki

Centre for Philosophy of Memory, University of Grenoble, France



 
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