People
Principle Investigator
Alexandra Georgescu is a Senior Research Scientist working in the mental health tech industry, and was previously a Lecturer (Assistant Professor) in Psychology within the BSc Psychology team at the Institute pf Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience (IoPPN) at King's College London. Before that, she held a Marie Curie postdoctoral research fellowship in the Social Neuroscience Group at the Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London. Before that she worked at the Autism Outpatient Clinic and Social Neuroimaging Lab of the University Hospital of Cologne. |
Students
Michael Clements is a PhD student at at King's College London (co-supervised with Dr. Caroline Catmur) who works on the mimicry phenomenon in VR.
Burcu Goz Tebrizcik is a PhD student at at King's College London (co-supervised with Dr. Ellie Dommett) who works on the link between interoception and social functioning in Autism and ADHD.
Sevim Koeroglu is an MSc student from the University of Cologne and Akhina Gaches, Jiawen Li and Khai Lie Ho are BSc Psychology students at KCL working on a project on naive observers' first impressions of people with autism.
Jessica Glazov, Rahila Kashif and Stephanie Gu are BSc Psychology students at KCL working on a project on the measurement of trustworthiness in VR.
Burcu Goz Tebrizcik is a PhD student at at King's College London (co-supervised with Dr. Ellie Dommett) who works on the link between interoception and social functioning in Autism and ADHD.
Sevim Koeroglu is an MSc student from the University of Cologne and Akhina Gaches, Jiawen Li and Khai Lie Ho are BSc Psychology students at KCL working on a project on naive observers' first impressions of people with autism.
Jessica Glazov, Rahila Kashif and Stephanie Gu are BSc Psychology students at KCL working on a project on the measurement of trustworthiness in VR.
Collaborators
Oya Celiktutan
Simone Dalla Bella
Ellie Dommett
Christine Falter
Antonia Hamilton
Takuya Koumura
Daniel Roth
Wolfgang Tschacher
Kai Vogeley
Simone Dalla Bella
Ellie Dommett
Christine Falter
Antonia Hamilton
Takuya Koumura
Daniel Roth
Wolfgang Tschacher
Kai Vogeley
Join the Lab
There are no funded positions available at the moment and the lab is currently not active.
Alumni
Larissa Bruebach was an MSc student in human-Computer Interaction from the University of Wuerzburg who joined the lab for two months in spring 2020 for an Erasmus + Traineeship opportunity and worked on a project on the measurement of trustworthiness in VR (Unity).
Guoqing Yu was a BSc Psychology student from Zhejiang University who joined the lab with a studentship placement for two months in the summer of 2019 and worked on a project to implement webcam eyetracking in online social perception studies.
Sophia Schrembs (BSc Psychology) and Lauren Hebburn (MSc Neuroscience) were students at King's College London who worked on an eyetracking project investigating the connection between antisaccade training, microsaccades and impulsivity. They are co-supervised with Dr. Ellie Dommett.
Carolin Zerzer was a BSc Psychology Student (co-supervised with Christine Falter-Wagner) at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München. She worked on a project on the chronography of interactions with autistic individuals using hierarchical time patterns.
Mira Lemke, Kim Khoo, Rachel Choy and Celia Boussebaa were BSc Psychology Students at King's College London. They investigated whether naive observers' first impressions of people with autism differ depending on whether the autistic person is seen during an interaction with a typical person or with another person with autism and whether different types of diagnostic disclosure affect impression formation of people with autism.
Weiyang Wu (co-supervised with Oya Celiktutan) was a MSc Robotics student at King's College London who performed automatic analyses and machine learning classifications of autistic nonverbal behaviour from dyadic interactions.
Marius Kuschefski was a medical student at the University of Cologne, who completed a doctoral thesis on the question of how people with autism perceive nonverbal cues of dominance and power from observed dyadic observations.
Pauline Sturz was a MSc Psychology student at the University of Cologne who annotated conversations between people with and without autism and quantified turn-taking events, as well as other types of conversational behaviours.
Banika Ahuja (MSc Cognitive Neuroscience) and Connor Dunbar (MSc Social Cognition) were UCL students co-supervised with Dr. Antonia Hamilton who investigated how the manipulation of the timing and similarity of an imitative action is perceived using VR and fNIRS.
Guoqing Yu was a BSc Psychology student from Zhejiang University who joined the lab with a studentship placement for two months in the summer of 2019 and worked on a project to implement webcam eyetracking in online social perception studies.
Sophia Schrembs (BSc Psychology) and Lauren Hebburn (MSc Neuroscience) were students at King's College London who worked on an eyetracking project investigating the connection between antisaccade training, microsaccades and impulsivity. They are co-supervised with Dr. Ellie Dommett.
Carolin Zerzer was a BSc Psychology Student (co-supervised with Christine Falter-Wagner) at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München. She worked on a project on the chronography of interactions with autistic individuals using hierarchical time patterns.
Mira Lemke, Kim Khoo, Rachel Choy and Celia Boussebaa were BSc Psychology Students at King's College London. They investigated whether naive observers' first impressions of people with autism differ depending on whether the autistic person is seen during an interaction with a typical person or with another person with autism and whether different types of diagnostic disclosure affect impression formation of people with autism.
Weiyang Wu (co-supervised with Oya Celiktutan) was a MSc Robotics student at King's College London who performed automatic analyses and machine learning classifications of autistic nonverbal behaviour from dyadic interactions.
Marius Kuschefski was a medical student at the University of Cologne, who completed a doctoral thesis on the question of how people with autism perceive nonverbal cues of dominance and power from observed dyadic observations.
Pauline Sturz was a MSc Psychology student at the University of Cologne who annotated conversations between people with and without autism and quantified turn-taking events, as well as other types of conversational behaviours.
Banika Ahuja (MSc Cognitive Neuroscience) and Connor Dunbar (MSc Social Cognition) were UCL students co-supervised with Dr. Antonia Hamilton who investigated how the manipulation of the timing and similarity of an imitative action is perceived using VR and fNIRS.