Group Coordinator

Agnieszka Niedźwieńska, Ph.D.

 

Agnieszka Niedźwieńska is a Professor at the Jagiellonian University. Her research is focusing on prospective memory, autobiographical memory, memory distortions and psychology of eyewitness testimony. She won several awards for her teaching (2008 and 2009 from the Jagiellonian University Rector) and scientific achievements: Rector's Prize (2000),  Krzyżanowski Scholarship (2004), Prize for the Best Publications in Social Sciences (Jagiellonian University, 2004), the Prize for the best habilitation from the Prime Minister of Poland (2005). She is a member of the Society for Applied Research in Memory and Cognition and the Psychological Committee of the Polish Academy of Sciences.

She has been awarded a Marie Curie Intra European Fellowship from the European Commission to conduct a research project on memory and ageing at the University of Hertfordshire, UK (2014-2016).

 

Email: a.niedzwienska@uj.edu.pl

 

 

Post-doctorate Research Associate

Krystian Barzykowski, Ph.D.

The main subjects of his scientific interests are: voluntary and involuntary autobiographical memories, prospective memory, methodology of memory research, psychological diagnosis and cultural psychology. Krystian earned several scholarships and awards for academic achievements: Doctoral Scholarship (2013, National Science Centre), Polish Minister of Science and Higher Education Scholarship for Outstanding Achievement (2013, 2009), Scholarship from the Minister of Science and Higher Education for Outstanding Young Researchers (2018-2020), French Government Scholarship for Young Researchers (2019). He complited a 6-month internship at the Center on Autobiographical Memory Research (CON AMORE, Aarhus University, Denmark) and 1-month internship in the Hasher Aging & Cognition Lab (Toronto University, Canada). Since 2009 he is a member of the Board of the Polish Psychological Association: Krakow Division.

 

Email: krystian.barzykowski@onet.pl

For more details please visit the ResearchGate profile

Beata Janik, Ph.D.

Beata has a degree in Psychology. Her main areas of study are: neuropsychology of memory, brain oscillations connected to cognitive processes, memory deficits in older adults and methods of improving memory skills. She works in a Memory Clinic taking care of people suffering from dementia.

 

Email: beataa.janik@gmail.com

Kaja Szarras, Ph.D.

Kaja has a degree in psychology. Her main area of interest is functioning of everyday memory with special focus on prospective memory. Kaja's MA thesis titled 'Tomorrow being remembered today. Prospective memory: the Intention Superiority Effect' was  aiming mainly to examine the effects of Intention Superiority Effect on everyday prospective memory. In her PhD she studies the effectiveness of implementation intentions in prospective memory of young adults, in both laboratory and naturalistic settings. These research are partially funded by grants from the Faculty of Philosophy of Jagiellonian University (2017, 2013). Kaja also completed postgraduate studies on psychology of transport.

 

Email: kaja.szarras@gmail.com

 

Agnieszka Moska, Ph.D.

Agnieszka graduated in Mathematics and Psychology. The main areas of her study are: memory for prices, consumer psychology and methodology of social science. She investigates how people remember past prices and what factors influence their memory. She collaborated with California University of Technology (USA) and Comenius University in Bratislava (Slovakia) working on research from economical psychology area.

 

Email: moska.aga@gmail.com

 

 

 

Ph.D. Students

Sabina Hajdas

Sabina holds a degree in Psychology. Her MA thesis was related to the relationship between parental attitudes and prospective memory in preschoolers. The main subject of her scientific interest is the relationship between cognitive psychology and educational psychology. Her PhD research project concerns self-regulated learning. She finished  345-hour Training the Trainers course called "STER" which enabled her to gain skills of working with a group, improved her communicative skills and teaching methods.

 

Email: sabina.hajdas@gmail.com

Radosław Kabut

Radosław has a degree in psychology. His main areas of professional interest are: neuropsychological diagnosis, prospective memory among the elderly, and counselling psychology. His MA thesis addressed an issue of PM deficits which are linked to an increasing age of healthy adults. His PhD research investigates the effectiveness of implementation intentions for the prospective memory performance of individuals suffering from Parkinson's Disease. Radoslaw is currently working at the neurology ward at hospital and he does psychological counselling. He started his postgraduate studies in cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy.

Marta Riess

Marta has a degree in pedagogics and psychology. Her MA thesis was related to prospective memory among students. The main area of her current scientific interests lies between psychology of memory and psychology of education. Her PhD research project concerns teacher's metacognitive knowledge and its relation to teaching/learning process.

 

Email: riessmarta@gmail.com

Ewa Skopicz-Radkiewicz

Ewa has a degree in Psychology. The main subject of her scientic interest is autobiographical memory, especially how it is used to comply some social demands or arrive at beliefs about the past. She also has some background in developmental psychology, especially in research on Theory of Mind. She completed a 3-month internship at the University of Portsmouth where she worked on a project ”The impact of mutually contradictory misinformaton on Eyewitness memory”.

Elżbieta Ślusarczyk

Elżbieta graduated in Psychology and Pedagogy. She is interested in developmental aspects of memory (especially prospective memory) and alternative dispute resolution.

 

Email: slusarczyk.elzbieta@gmail.com

 

 

Michał Wereszczyński

Michał holds a degree in psychology. His main areas of interest are experimental psychology and cognitive psychology. His specific interests are: psychology of ageing, neuropsychological diagnosis, prospective memory, time perception and  spontaneous cognition. He has an experience of  working as a practicing psychologist  by  conducting psychological tests, consulting and performing cognitive training (in nursing house and mental health clinic). His PhD research concerns searching for new, early markers of dementia in older adults.

Maria Wójcik

Maria holds a master’s degree in psychology. Her MA thesis dealt with the influence of affect on performing prospective tasks in everyday life. Her scientific interests are mainly focused on prospective memory. Her PhD research project also belongs to the prospective memory domain, focusing primarily on important predictors of performing prospective tasks in everyday life in early and middle adulthood.

Full-Time Research Fellows

Ewa Ilczuk

Ewa has a degree in Psychology and she is a second-degree student of Sociology. She works as a fellow with Krystian Barzykowski in the project called "Examining the role of working memory in the formation of involuntary autobiographical memories. Investigation of cognitive mechanisms conditioning involuntary autobiographical memories". The main subjects of her scientific interests are:  methodology in the social sciences, social psychology, issues related to the functioning of society, behavioral psychology, education of children and youth, civic education.

International Collaborators

Peter Rendell, Ph.D.

Dr. Peter Rendell (BSc MEd, PhD) is a Professor in the School of Psychology. He completed his PhD in 1995 at Monash University, in psychology on ageing and memory. He has been with Australian Catholic University since it began in 1991 and prior at its predecessor Christ College from 1978.  He has been Assistant Head and Head of School.  He is currently leading the Cognition and Emotion Research Lab that conducts experimental psychology research in the field of cognitive and neuropsychology.  He has been visiting researcher at University of Toronto at Washington University in St Louis, University of Zurich, University of Padova, Dresden University, Jagiellonian University, Osaka University, University of Geneva, Aberdeen University, Oklahoma State University.  He is a registered psychologist with the Psychology Board of Australia, and a member of the Australian Psychological Society, College of Educational and Developmental Psychologists.

 

www: http://apps.acu.edu.au/staffdirectory/?peter-rendell

Lia Kvavilashvili, Ph.D.

Dr. Lia Kvavilashvili is a Professor of Cognitive Psychology at the University of Hertfordshire (Hatfield, Great Britain). Her research addresses important questions about how memory processes operate in a variety of everyday contexts. For example, how do we remember to take a medication or keep an appointment (prospective memory); why do certain memories, words or tunes pop into our mind unexpectedly (involuntary memories) or repeatedly (intrusive memories); and how do we remember emotionally arousing and significant events (flashbulb memories)? She has contributed invited chapters to all edited books on prospective memory and involuntary memories, and is a regular invited presenter at conferences, workshops and research seminars, within the UK, and internationally, including Australia, Canada, China, Germany, Portugal and the US. She is an Associate Editor of journal Memory and ad hoc reviewer for several high impact journals and grant awarding bodies.

Søren Risløv Staugaard, Ph.D.

Dr. Søren R. Staugaard is a post doc. in Cognitive Psychology at the Center of Autobiographical Memory Research at Aarhus University (Aarhus, Denmark). He examines factors predicting the occurrence of involuntary memories, including their distinctiveness and emotional valence as well as the gender and clinical status of participants. More specifically, he is investigating the occurrence of involuntary memories for emotionally negative stimuli in combat veterans diagnosed with posttraumatic stress disorder.

 

 

Research Assistants and Student Research Helpers

1. Katarzyna Filip