Poster session 1 Location: Saal 2a - Veranstaltungszentrum, RUB 
  
Do sleep and prediction error affect the directionality of memory associations? 
 Abbie Louisa Greenwood 
 University of Glasgow, United Kingdom 
 
 Does cognitive neuroscience research on mental imagery need behaviour? 
 Lydia Moonen 
 Radboud University, Netherlands, The 
 
 Cognitive flexibility: A behavioral and EEG entropy study on the role of open monitoring meditation 
 Emma Icardi1,2, Anindita Basu1, Nicola De Pisapia2, Alessandro Treves1 
 1: SISSA, Trieste;
2: University of Trento 
 
 Stochastic echoes: Variability in phonological recall in bilingual and monolingual speakers 
 Stephanie Michelle Fleming 
 University of Glasgow, United Kingdom 
 
 Disentangling the unpredicted: Investigating neural consequences of prediction errors on episodic memory traces using Cloned Hidden Markov Models 
 Sophie Siestrup1,2, Robert Schmidt3, Ricarda I. Schubotz1,2 
 1: University of Münster, Germany;
2: Otto Creutzfeldt Center for Cognitive and Behavioral Neuroscience, Münster, Germany;
3: Ruhr University Bochum, Germany 
 
 Hippocampal prediction errors arise from episodic memories, and not generalised knowledge-based expectations. 
 Dominika Varga1, Petar Raykov2, Beth Jefferies3, Aya Ben-Yakov4, Itamar Ronen1, Chris Bird1 
 1: University of Sussex;
2: MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, University of Cambridge;
3: University of York;
4: Hebrew University of Jerusalem 
 
 Initial vs. induced prediction errors: Influences on memory stability 
 Nina Liedtke1,2, Marius Boeltzig1,2, Ricarda I. Schubotz1,2 
 1: University of Münster, Germany;
2: Otto Creutzfeldt Center for Cognitive and Behavioral Neuroscience, University of Münster, Münster, Germany 
 
 New Evidence for the Similarity between Believed and Nonbelieved Memories from the Fading Affect Bias 
 Valentine Vanootighem 
 University of Liège, Belgium 
 
 Recreativism without heterogeneity 
 Jay Richardson1,2 
 1: Centre for Philosophy of Memory, France;
2: Institut Jean-Nicod, France 
 
 How do congenitally and late blind people imagine fictitious events? 
 Marion Crump1,2, Marie Malinowski1,2, Nadja Abdel Kafi1,2, Julia Taube1,2, Cornelia McCormick1,2 
 1: Universitätsklinikum Bonn, Germany;
2: DZNE, 
 
 Did it happen or not? Memory narratives may hold the answer 
 Lyse Gathoye, Christophe Lejeune, Valentine Vanootighem 
 ULiège, Belgium 
 
 Autobiographical memory in congenitally and late blind individuals in comparison to sighted controls 
 Nadja Abdel Kafi*1,2, Anja Essmann*2, Julia Taube1,2, Marie Malinowski1,2, Sven Lange2, Katharina Wall3, Bettina Wabbels3, Cornelia McCormick1,2 
 1: Department of Old Age Psychiatry and Cognitive Disorders, University Hospital Bonn;
2: German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases, Bonn, Germany;
3: Department of Ophthalmology, University Hospital Bonn, Bonn, Germany 
 
 Mental imagery deficits in aphantasia: effects on autobiographical memory and directive function 
 Prany Wantzen, Arnaud Witt 
 LEAD-CNRS UMR5022, Université Bourgogne Europe, Dijon, France 
 
 From Spontaneous Thought to Memory: Factors Affecting the Recall of Mind-wandering episodes 
 Arya Gilles1, Arnaud D'Argembeau1,2, David Stawarczyk1,2 
 1: University of Liège, Belgium;
2: Fund for Scientific Research FNRS 
 
 The impact of context familiarity on spatio-temporal compression in episodic memory 
 Kevin Nguy, Christel Devue 
 Department of Psychology, University of Liège, Belgium 
 
 The cost of behavioral flexibility in spatial navigation and spatial learning 
 Behnam Ghazinouri, Sen Cheng 
 Ruhr University Bochum, Germany 
 
 Unifying episodic memory and spatial coding in a memory-augmented neural network 
 Jon Recalde, Xiangshuai Zeng, Laurenz Wiskott, Sen Cheng 
 Ruhr Universität Bochum, Germany 
 
 Investigation of the interaction between semantic information and episodic memory traces in primary school children 
 Carina Zoellner, Henry Soldan, Leonie van Well, Romy Skolik, Lana Giesen, Oliver T. Wolf, Sabine Seehagen 
 Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany 
 
 Temporal compression of real-life events in episodic memory: Predicting compression rates from event features 
 Charline Colson, Arnaud D'Argembeau 
 University of Liège, Belgium 
 
 Temporal neural signatures of facial expression and familiarity processing: A cross-dataset EEG study 
 Madeline Molly Ely, Géza Gergely Ambrus 
 Bournemouth University, United Kingdom 
 
 Image memorability shapes the temporal structure of memory 
 Marianna Lamprou Kokolaki, Virginie van Wassenhove 
 CEA/DRF/Inst. Joliot, NeuroSpin; INSERM, Cognitive Neuroimaging Unit; Université ParisSaclay, Gif/Yvette, 91191 France 
 
 Neural correlates of the impact of semantic structure on temporal sequence memory 
 Henry Soldan, Carina Zoellner, Charlotte Pechau, Oliver T. Wolf 
 Ruhr University Bochum, Germany 
 
 Does a shift in mental time translate into a shift in low-frequency oscillations? 
 Anna M. A. Wagelmans, Virginie van Wassenhove 
 Cognitive Neuroimaging Unit, INSERM, CEA, Université Paris-Saclay 
 
 A unified benchmark for human-like memory in artificial agents 
 Lucas Gruaz, Aude Maier, Johanni Brea 
 EPFL, Switzerland 
 
 Quantifying the learning dynamics of single subjects in a reversal learning task with change point analysis 
 Nicolas Diekmann1, Metin Uengoer2, Sen Cheng1 
 1: Institute for Neural Computation, Faculty of Computer Science, Ruhr University Bochum, Germany;
2: Department of Psychology, Philipps University of Marburg, Germany 
 
 Layer-specific fMRI of the human hippocampus in autobiographical memory 
 Antoine Bouyeure1, Khazar Ahmadi1, Viktor Pfaffenrot2, Renzo Huber3, David Norris2,4, Nikolai Axmacher1 
 1: Ruhr University Bochum, Germany;
2: University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany;
3: National Institutes of Health, USA;
4: Radboud University, the Netherlands 
 
 AMBlind: resting-state networks of the blind 
 Ella Gutenberg1,2, Pitshaporn Leelaarporn1,2, Marie Malinowski1,2, Sven Lange1,2, Julia Taube1,2, Sarah Dumitrescu1,2, Bettina Wabbels3, Katharina Wall3 
 1: Department for Cognitive Disorders and Geriatric Psychiatry, University of Bonn Medical Center, Bonn, Germany;
2: German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases, Bonn, Germany;
3: Department of Ophthalmology, University of Bonn Medical Center, Bonn, Germany 
 
 The self-model in episodic memory construction 
 Francesco Fanti Rovetta 
 Ruhr University Bochum, Germany 
 
 Assessing the preferred route of breathing for modulating neural oscillations during human NREM sleep: A pilot study 
 Monika Nemcova1, Jialin Zhao2, Thomas Schreiner2 
 1: GSN, LMU München, Germany;
2: Department of Psychology,LMU München, Germany 
 
 Experientiality markers in memory reports: A semantics-pragmatics puzzle 
 Emil Eva Rosina 
 Ruhr University Bochum, Germany 
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