Pamela Bäss, PhD

Affiliations: 
2013-2014 Transfer Centre of Neuroscience University of Ulm, Ulm, Baden-Württemberg, Germany 
 2014- Institute for Psychology University of Hildesheim, Hildesheim, Niedersachsen, Germany 
Area:
Cognitive neuroscience, Motor processing
Website:
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Pamela_Baess
Google:
"Pamela Bäss"
Bio:

Education
2006 Diploma Psychology (MSc equivalent), University of Leipzig, Germany; Topic: "Evaluative judgments in patients with frontal lesions and healthy controls".

2009 PhD (Dr. rer. nat.), University of Leipzig, Germany; Topic: "Processing of self-initiated sounds: Evidence from EEG studies".

Career
02/2006-02/2009 PhD-Graduate programme "Attention in Cognition", Leipzig, Germany (Prof. Erich Schröger)
03/2009-07/2010 PostDoc at the Department of Psycholgy, Max-Planck-Institute of Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany (Prof. Wolfgang Prinz)
08/2010 - 12/2012 PostDoc at the Low Temperature Lab, Brain Research Unit, Aalto University School of Science and Technology, Finland
01/2013 - 05/2014 Work group leader (executive functions) and researcher, Transfer centre of Neuroscience, University of Ulm
06/2014- Research staff and Lecturer, Department of General Psychology, University of Hildesheim

(Show more)

Mean distance: (not calculated yet)
 
BETA: Related publications

Publications

You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect.

Jacobsen T, Bäß P, Roye A, et al. (2021) Word class and word frequency in the MMN looking glass. Brain and Language. 218: 104964
Bäss P, Jacobsen T, Schröger E. (2008) Suppression of the auditory N1 event-related potential component with unpredictable self-initiated tones: evidence for internal forward models with dynamic stimulation. International Journal of Psychophysiology : Official Journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology. 70: 137-43
Grimm S, Schröger E, Bendixen A, et al. (2008) Optimizing the auditory distraction paradigm: behavioral and event-related potential effects in a lateralized multi-deviant approach. Clinical Neurophysiology : Official Journal of the International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology. 119: 934-47
See more...