Anna Lange

Doctoral researcher
mail: anna.lange@bccn-berlin.de
 

Anna possesses a diverse academic background that spans multiple fields. She obtained her Bachelor of Science degree in Mathematics with Psychology from Queen Mary University of London. She further pursued her academic journey by completing a Master of Science degree in Computational Neuroscience at the Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience Berlin. During her Master’s program, Anna actively engaged in research at Charite-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, where her work revolved around investigating Human-Robot Interactions using functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI). In parallel, she also contributed to the development of neural networks inspired by human psychology for Robot-Robot Interactions at Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. Both of these positions were part of her involvement in SCIoI Project 09. She is currently part of the Adaptive Systems group at Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin under the supervision of Professor Verena Hafner.

At SCIoI, Anna is working as a PhD for the Project 50. Her current research revolves around enhancing adaptive learning and teaching strategies in robots during social interactions. She achieves this by creating adaptive neural networks grounded in the principles of human psychology.

 

SCIoI Publications:

Pischedda, D., Lange, A., Kirtay, M., Wudarczyk, O. A., Abdel Rahman, R., Hafner, V. V., Kuhlen, A. K., & Haynes, J.-D. (2021). Am I speaking to a human, a robot, or a computer? Neural representations of task partners in communicative interactions with humans or artificial agents. Neuroscience 2021.
Pischedda, D., Lange, A., Kirtay, M., Wudarczyk, O. A., Abdel Rahman, R., Hafner, V. V., Kuhlen, A. K., & Haynes, J.-D. (2021). Who is my interlocutor? Partner-specific neural representations during communicative interactions with human or artificial task partners. 5th Virtual Social Interactions (VSI) Conference.