Lisa Festag

Wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiterin

Lisa Festag

Universität des Saarlandes
FR Psychologie

Campus A2 4
D-66123 Saarbrücken

Raum 2.15
Telefon (+49) 681/ 302 58095

lisa.festag(at)uni-saarland.de

 

 

Curriculum Vitae

Research Interests

  • Neurocognition of memory (especially associative memory)
  • Methods of cognitive neuroscience

Education

  • 2015-2018: Bachelor of Science (B.Sc.) in Psychology, Saarland University

  • 2018-2021: Master of Science (M.Sc.) in Psychology, Saarland University

Career

  • 11/2016 - 07/2018: Tutor for Quantitative Methods, General Psychology and Methodology Unit, Saarland University

  • 09/2017 - 10/2017: Research intern, Institute of Cognitive Neurosciences, Motivation Lab, Ruhr-University Bochum

  • 04/2018 - 06/2018: Research intern, General Psychology and Methodology Unit, Research Group “Brain and Cognition”, Saarland University

  • 10/2018 - 09/2020: Student research assistant, General Psychology and Methodology Unit, Research Group “Brain and Cognition”, Saarland University

  • 07/2021 - 10/2021: Intern, Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Saarland University Hospital, Homburg

  • Since oct 2021: PhD position, DFG project “Nature, stability and integration of associations acquired by means of fast mapping”, Experimental Neuropsychology Unit, Saarland University

Teaching

  • WS 2022/2023 – SS23: Empirical research seminar in experimental neuropsychology (Empiriepraktikum), B.Sc.Psychologie
  • WS 2023/2024: Seminar 'Data analysis with R I', B.Sc.Psychologie
  • SS 2024: Seminar 'Data analysis with R II', B.Sc.Psychologie
  • WS 2024/2025: Seminar 'Data analysis with R I', B.Sc.Psychologie

 

Conference Contributions

Festag, L., Zaiser, A. K., Meyer, P., & Bader, R. (2023, March). Associations acquired by means of fast mapping are less flexible when critical preconditions are fulfilled. Poster presented at the 3rd edition of the Recollection, Familiarity and Novelty (RFN) Conference, Liège, Belgium.

Festag, L., Tarantini, L., Mecklinger, A., & Bader, R. (2023, March). Context modulates discrepancy attribution processes: Evidence from the word frequency mirror effect. Poster presented at the 3rd edition of the Recollection, Familiarity and Novelty (RFN) Conference, Liège, Belgium.