Sedanstraße 1, Zi. 017
E-Mail: Zuzanna.Kabulska@psychologie.uni-regensburg.de
Sprechstunde: nach Vereinbarung
Ich bin der Gruppe im Jahr 2024 beigetreten mit einem besonderen Interesse an der Modellierung neuronaler Prozesse. Meine Arbeit liegt an der Schnittstelle von Neurowissenschaften und computergestützten Methoden, wobei ich computergestützte Ansätze nutze, um unser Verständnis des menschlichen Denkens und den zugrunde liegenden neuronalen Mechanismen zu vertiefen.
Publikationen
Kabulska, Z., Zhuang, T. & Lingnau, A., (2024) Overlapping representations of observed actions and action related features. Human Brain Mapping
Zhuang, T., Kabulska, Z. & Lingnau, A., (2023) The representation of observed actions at the subordinate, basic, and superordinate level. Journal of Neuroscience
Kabulska, Z. & Lingnau, A., (2022) The cognitive structure underlying the organization of observed actions. Behavior Research Methods
Kabulska, Z. & Lingnau, A., (2022) Revealing dimensions underlying the organization of observed actions. 2022 Conference on Cognitive Computational Neuroscience
Kabulska, Z. & Lingnau, A., (2021) Revealing the architecture underlying the representation of observed actions – evidence from behavioral and fMRI studies. Journal of Vision
Konferenzbeitrage (Vorträge)
Kabulska, Z. & Lingnau, A. Decoding action categories from brain activity and connectivity patterns. Women in Data Science conference, Regensburg, Germany, May 2023
Kabulska, Z. & Lingnau, A. Decoding action categories from brain activity and connectivity patterns. Concepts, Actions, and Objects (CAOs) workshop, Rovereto, Italy, May 2023
Kabulska, Z. & Lingnau, A. Revealing dimensions underlying the organization of observed actions. Minerva-Gentner-Symposium, Regensburg, Germany, September 2022.
Kabulska, Z. & Lingnau, A. Revealing dimensions underlying the organization of observed actions. Conference on Cognitive Computational Neuroscience, San Francisco, USA, August 2022.
Kabulska, Z. & Lingnau, A. Revealing the architecture underlying the representation of observed actions – evidence from behavioral and fMRI studies. Vision Sciences Society, (remotely), May 2021.