Ingrid Olson
Professor of Psychology at Fox School of Business
Schools
- Fox School of Business
Links
Biography
Fox School of Business
Dr. Ingrid Olson received her undergraduate degree from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. After a brief hiatus working at Northwestern Medical School in Chicago, Dr. Olson moved to New Haven, Connecticut to pursue a PhD at Yale University. She worked first with Tom Carew, then Marvin Chun and Truett Allison in the Department of Psychology. Professor Olson’s dissertation was on a type of statistical learning called “contextual cueing.” While at Yale, she also began working with Yuhong Jiang to study visual working memory.
For her postdoc, she stayed in New Haven, but moved to the medical school to work with John Gore on biomedical imaging. Dr. Olson is currently a professor of psychology at Temple University. Her research is on various types of memory – episodic memory, semantic memory, and working memory – as well as the intersection of memory with decision processes, language, and social processing.
Selected Publications
Von der Heide, R.J., Skipper, L.M., Klobusicky, E. & Olson, I.R. (2013). Dissecting the uncinate fasciculus: disorders, controversies, and a hypothesis, Brain, 136 (Pt 6),1692-1707.
Ross, L. & Olson, I.R. (2012). What’s unique about unique entities? An fMRI investigation of the semantics of famous faces and landmarks. Cerebral Cortex, 22(9), 2005-2015.
Richmond, L., Morrison, A., Chein, J. & Olson, I.R. (2011). Working memory training and transfer in older adults. Psychology and Aging, 26(4): 813-822
Ross, L., McCoy, D., Wolk, D., Coslett, H.B. & Olson, I.R. (2010). Improved proper name recall by electrical stimulation of the anterior temporal lobes.
Simons, J., Peers, P., Mazuz, Y., Berryhill, M.E. & Olson, I.R. (2010). Dissociation between memory accuracy and memory confidence following bilateral parietal lesions. Cerebral Cortex. 20(2), 479-485.
Jiang, Y., Olson, I.R. & Chun, M.M. (2000). Organization of visual short term memory. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 26(3), 683-702
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