Research Projects

The Center's seven projects examine different facets of human development across the lifespan on the basis of its guiding propositions.

Head: Markus Werkle-Bergner
The overarching objective of this project is to understand how the dynamic interplay of maturation, personal experiences, and senescence drives and affects plastic changes on neural and behavioral levels across the lifespan. [more]
Heads: Eleftheria Papadaki & Sina Schwarze
This project addresses the questions of whether and how plasticity contributes to development across the lifespan. Special attention is paid to the relationship between neural and behavioral manifestations of plasticity. [more]
Head: Martin J. Dahl
In this project, we use neuroimaging techniques to examine how brain changes in older adulthood are associated with neurodegenerative diseases and age-related cognitive decline. Our particular focus is on certain neurotransmitters, so-called neuromodulators. [more]
Heads: Julia Delius & Ulman Lindenberger
During the 20th century, average life expectancy nearly doubled. More and more individuals in current cohorts of older individuals experience additional years of life between the ages of 70 and 100+. This project makes use of interdisciplinary longitudinal studies to investigate aging. [more]
Head: Sarah Power
ATLAS investigates how memories are encoded, maintained, and retrieved during early development. The project seeks to understand why early memories are forgotten, whether they persist in latent form, and how early memory trajectories shape later cognitive outcomes. [more]
Head: Aaron Peikert
The Formal Methods project is dedicated to developing multivariate mathematical, statistical, and computational research tools that accommodate complex research designs with multimodal assessments collected over a wide range of timescales. It seeks to provide practical solutions to the methodological challenges of lifespan research and related fields of scientific inquiry. [more]
An overview of concluded LIP activities is provided here. [more]
Go to Editor View