The Global Goals
In 2015, UN member states agreed to 17 global to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure prosperity for all. Stephanie's work contributes towards the following SDG(s):
About Stephanie
I am a Teaching and Research Associate in the School of Psychology, where I teach and support undergraduate and master's students across a range of modules and programmes. I am also a doctoral researcher exploring extreme mental imagery, from aphantasia to hyperphantasia, and its implications for cognition. I am proud to collaborate with colleagues to form the School of Psychology's Athena Swan Self-Assessment Team.Ìý
I have a strong background in research methods and extensive experience in teaching and employing a range of approaches, including focus groups with qualitative reflexive analysis, large-scale online behavioural studies, lab-based behavioural and neurosychological experiments, with quantitative analysis from frequentist and Bayesian approaches.Ìý
I am also interested in research-informed policy, and have worked as a research fellow with the Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology to produce a parliamentary research briefing on .Ìý
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Research Interests
Keywords: Mental imagery; extreme imagery; aphantasia
My research interests lie in the exploration of individual differences in mental imagery, with particular focus on the absence of imagery, known as aphantasia. For many, mental imagery is a ubiquitous feature of daily life, from trying to remember where you last had your keys, to visualising how best to rearrange your living room furniture. Imagery also serves as a component in several models of cognitive function and has a role in many interventions and clinical treatments. Thus, aphantasia is not only a fascinating phenomenon in its own right, it also has implications for our understanding of cognition and how we can manage when things go awry.Ìý
I like to employ a range of methods to explore the imagery spectrum, including self-report, large scale online behavioural experiments, lab-based behavioural experiments, and neuroimaging with electroencephalography (EEG) and event-related potentials (ERP).Ìý
Research software
- RStudio
- IBM SPSS
- Jamovi
- OpenSesame
- PsychoPy
- Qualtrics
- JATOS
Teaching
As a Teaching and Research Associate, I lead and support workshops and offer one-to-one support in our undergraduate and master's programmes with a heavy focus on research methods and statistics. My teaching interests and skills include:
- Experimental design, qualitative research (focus groups), and the research process
- Regression, multiple regression, ANOVA, Bayesian statistics, thematic analysis
- Science communication
- RStudio
- OpenSesame, JATOS
I typically teach on the following modules:
- PSYC411: Learning
- PSYC414: Relationships
- PSYC516: Applied Psychology
- PSYC519, PSYC719, PSYC520, PSYC720: Research Methods in Practice
Contact Stephanie
Room 305, Link Block, Drake Circus, Plymouth, PL4 8AA
+44 1752 588079
stephanie.hartgen@plymouth.ac.uk