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Social Sciences Division
Associate Professor
Faculty
Social Sciences 2
Room 367
(Winter 2025) Tuesday, 2pm - 3pm; Social Sciences 2 Rm 367; or by appointment
Psychology Faculty Services
Ph.D. in Psychology, University of Wisconsin-Madison
B.A. in Psychology, San Francisco State University
Visual perception and consciousness; The neural correlates of consciousness; metacognition and confidence; perceptual decision making; computational models of perception; working memory; attention and expectations in perception; electrophysiological methods; neural oscillations; machine learning.
Our lab uses psychophysics and computational modeling in concert with tools from cognitive neuroscience to measure and manipulate brain activity in humans in an effort to understand the neural basis of visual awareness, attention, perceptual decision making, and working memory. We have a particular focus on the role of oscillatory brain dynamics in shaping perceptual processing and we have evidence that oscillatory mechanisms could underly the ability of "top-down" factors, such as spatial/temporal attention and perceptual expectations, to modulate perceptual processing.
We also use computational modeling to understand what information is used to compute perceptual decisions and our subjective sense of confidence in those decisions. Our research has uncovered that our sense of confidence in our decisions (e.g., how likely we think we are to be correct) does not rely on the exact same information as the decision itself. This could mean that our subjective impression of what we see is distinct from the visual information that we are capable of responding to. We think this has implications for understanding the neural basis of consciousness and the role that consciousness plays in our behavior, cognition, and beliefs.