people
members of the lab or group

555 your office number
123 your address street
Your City, State 12345
layout: about title: about permalink: / subtitle: #
profile: align: right image: prof_pic.jpg image_circular: true # crops the image to make it circular more_info: > <p>Alter Steinbacher Weg 38</p> <p>Giessen D-35394, Germany</p> <p>+49 641 99 26137</p>
news: true # includes a list of news items latest_posts: false # includes a list of the newest posts selected_papers: true # includes a list of papers marked as “selected={true}” social: true # includes social icons at the bottom of the page —
I am a research scientist at the Department of Psychology, Justus-Liebig Giessen University.
I wonder what makes us different from robots. We’re intelligent biological animals with an immense imaginative perceptual capability. Machines match this intelligence on various isolated functions and I believe, soon, they reach our creative perception. That’s my research interest.
I work in this multidisciplinary domain of brains, minds and machines, aiming to answer how complex behaviour arises from neuronal activity. I compare the neural networks of two organisations: biological versus artificial.
My focus is visual information processing: oscillating in-between psychophysics of visual perception and computational modelling of vision

555 your office number
123 your address street
Your City, State 12345
layout: about title: about permalink: / subtitle: #
profile: align: right image: prof_pic.jpg image_circular: true # crops the image to make it circular more_info: > <p>Alter Steinbacher Weg 38</p> <p>Giessen D-35394, Germany</p> <p>+49 641 99 26137</p>
news: true # includes a list of news items latest_posts: false # includes a list of the newest posts selected_papers: true # includes a list of papers marked as “selected={true}” social: true # includes social icons at the bottom of the page —
I am a research scientist at the Department of Psychology, Justus-Liebig Giessen University.
I wonder what makes us different from robots. We’re intelligent biological animals with an immense imaginative perceptual capability. Machines match this intelligence on various isolated functions and I believe, soon, they reach our creative perception. That’s my research interest.
I work in this multidisciplinary domain of brains, minds and machines, aiming to answer how complex behaviour arises from neuronal activity. I compare the neural networks of two organisations: biological versus artificial.
My focus is visual information processing: oscillating in-between psychophysics of visual perception and computational modelling of vision