

Between June 2020 and October 2023, I was a Ph.D. student in the Computational Neuroscience of Speech & Hearing group.
Ph.D. Research
Using electrophysiology, my Ph.D. projects focused on how oscillatory brain activity processed slow acoustic modulations in speech signals and how these processes are modulated by internal (i.e., hearing loss) and external (i.e., background noise) factors. Furthermore, I investigated how the aging brain perceives lip movements and how information provided by the visual domain interacts with acoustic speech information. You can find my publications listed on Google Scholar
Previous Research
I received a Master’s degree in Cognitive Neuroscience from the University of Zurich. In my master’s thesis, I investigated neurostructural changes in auditory-related brain areas in older adults with hearing loss using surface-based morphometry.