Katharina Limbach
Phone: +49 (0)3641 9 45117
Fax: +49 (0)3641 9 45182
Email: katharina.limbach [at] uni-jena.de
Room: Am Steiger 3, Haus 1, Room 115
Consultation times: by appointment
Curriculum Vitae
Education
12/2015 PhD in Psychology
The University of Auckland, New Zealand
Title: “The Good, the Bad, the Complex: Investigating the Behavioural Consequences of EEG Alpha Oscillations in Visual Detection and Selective Attention”. Supervisors: Associate Professor Paul M. Corballis and Professor Ian Kirk
3/2010 Master of Science in Psychology (Diplom)
Justus-Liebig University Gießen, Final grade: Excellent (1.0 passed with distinction) Minor: Computer Science
Master thesis: „Orientation-selective fMRI-adaptation in early visual areas“
Master Thesis was conducted at the Max-Planck Institute for Brain Research in Frankfurt, Germany
Scholarships and Awards
- 7/2011 – 4/2015 Doctoral Scholarship of the German National Academic Foundation
- 7/2011 – 12/2014 The University of Auckland Doctoral Scholarship
- 9/2014 Student Travel Award of the Society for Psychophysiological Research
- 11/2013 Student Travel Award of the Australasian Cognitive Neuroscience Society (ACNS)
- 7/2010 – 6/2011 Excellent Student Scholarship for a research stay abroad after graduation (Hölderlin Stipendium)
- 4/2008 – 3/2010 Excellent Student Scholarship of the German National Academic Foundation
Professional Societies and Activities
Memberships in scientific societies:
- Society for Psychophysiological Research (SPR) and Organization of Human Brain Mapping (OHBM)
Academic Services:
- 6/2013 – 3/2015: Student representative on the Emerging Researcher Committee at the Centre for Brain Research, The University of Auckland
- 10/2011- 3/2015: Member of the Brain Waves Students Committee at the Centre for Brain Research, The University of Auckland
Reviewing for scientific journals:
- Brain Topography
- Consciousness and Cognition
- Journal of Neurophysiology
- Neuropsychologia
Positions
- 5/2015- current: Post-doctoral researcher, Department of Psychology, Friedrich Schiller University of Jena, Germany
- 7/2011 – 2/2015: Doctoral candidate, School of Psychology, The University of Auckland
- 2/2012 – 11/2014: Tutor, The University of Auckland, New Zealand
- 11/2010 – 2/2011: Research Assistant, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, USA; McGovern Institute for Brain Research; Prof. Nancy Kanwisher
- 4/2009 – 4/2010: Student Research Assistant, Justus-Liebig University Gießen, Germany Department of General Psychology; Prof. Karl Gegenfurtner
- 9/2008 – 3/2009: Student Research Assistant, Max-Planck Institute for Brain Research, Frankfurt, Germany; Prof. Wolf Singer
- 10/2007 – 9/2008: Tutor, Justus Liebig University Gießen, Germany
Main research interests
- Face Learning
- Person Recognition
- Visual perception and attention
- EEG oscillations in cognitive processing
- Aging
Methods used: EEG and classical behavioral methods of experimental psychology
Publications
Limbach, K. & Corballis, P. M. (2016), Alpha-power modulation reflects the balancing of task requirements in a selective attention task. Psychophysiology, doi:10.1111/psyp.12774
Limbach, K. & Corballis, P. M. (2016), Prestimulus alpha power influences response criterion in a detection task. Psychophysiology, 53: 1154–1164. doi:10.1111/psyp.12666
Weigelt, S., Limbach, K., Singer, W., & Kohler, A. (2012). Orientation-selective fMRI adaptation in early visual cortex revisited. Human Brain Mapping, 33:707-714.
Publications in preparation:
Limbach, K. & Corballis P.M. (in preparation). Don’t get too excited: High Cortical Excitability is Related to Fast but Incorrect Responses in Visual Discrimination and Selective Attention
Conference presentations:
Limbach, K., Kaufmann, J.M., Wiese, H., & Schweinberger, S.R. (2016). Electrocortical correlates of training face recognition in older adults. Poster at the 22nd Annual Meeting of the Organization for Human Brain Mapping, Geneva, Switzerland
Limbach, K., & Corballis, P.M. (2014). The behavioural effect of attentional EEG alpha modulation is affected by speed-accuracy trade-off. Poster at the 54th Meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research, Atlanta, USA
Limbach, K., & Corballis, P.M. (2014). Speed-accuracy trade-off influences the effect of attentional EEG alpha modulation. Poster at the 12th International Conference on Cognitive Neurosciences, Brisbane, Australia
Limbach, K., & Corballis, P.M. (2013). EEG alpha oscillations predict response criterion. Poster at the 4th Australasian Cognitive Neuroscience Conference, Melbourne, Australia
Limbach, K., & Corballis, P.M. (2013). EEG alpha oscillations as predictors of detection performance and response criterion. Poster at the 53rd Meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research, Florence, Italy
Limbach, K., & Corballis, P.M. (2012). EEG alpha oscillations predict variability in visual signal detection. Poster at the 30th International Australasian winter conference on brain research, Queenstown, New Zealand
Pohl, K., Hüppe, R., & Netter, P.(2007). Coping style and cortisol awakening response (CAR) as predictors of psychobiological reactions to examination stress. Poster at the 13th meeting of the International Society of the Study of Individual Differences, Gießen, Germany
Talks
- 7/2014 – KiwiCam, The University of Auckland
- 4/2014 – Research Group Perceptual Cybernetics, Leibnitz Research Centre for working environment and human factors, Dortmund, Germany
- 2/2014 & 2/2012 – Annual Psychology InHouse Convention, The University of Auckland
- 12/2009 – Experimental Neuropsychology Unit, Department of Psychology, Saarland University, Saarbrücken, Germany
- 11/2008 – General Psychology, Department of Psychology, Justus-Liebig University Gießen, Germany