
Resting-State EEG Signatures of Visual Exploration Styles
DPG1 classroom - Department of General Psychology - via Venezia 8 Padova
11.05.2020
Miriam Celli (PhD student PNC)
DPG1 classroom - Department of General Psychology - via Venezia 8 Padova
11.05.2020
Miriam Celli (PhD student PNC)
11.05.2020
During these days of the COVID-19 pandemic, posts, advice and articles suggesting ways to cope with the situation are proliferating, such as culinary recipes that teach us how to do things. They may offer useful suggestions but my students, patients, daughters, relatives and friends are teaching me
An ongoing research project of the Douglas Mental Health University Institute of McGill University (Canada) in collaboration with Prof. Sabrina CipollettaThis research project aims to investigate the experience of COVID-19 in terms of traumatic event and potential inductor of trauma-and stress
DPG1 classroom - Department of General Psychology - via Venezia 8 Padova
Rena Bayramova (M.Sc. Cognitive neuroscience and clinical neuropsychology CN2)
Human perception of a visual scene is hierarchically organized. Such rapid, albeit coarse, global processing allows people to create a useful context in which local details can be successively allocated. Lack of the typical hierarchical global-to-local visual processing is longitudinally predictive