Team

Group Leader

Zoe (Chi) Ngo, Dr.

Zoe (Chi) Ngo, Dr.

I received my PhD in Psychology and Neuroscience from Temple University in 2019, after which I conducted my postdoc research at the Center for Lifespan Psychology at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin. In 2025, I began an Emmy Noether Independent Research Group at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development. My research aims to understand how children develop two kinds of memory: one that preserves the specific experiences of our past, and the other that accumulates generalizable knowledge and applies such knowledge to new situations. My research asks two main questions: What are the processes that support each kind of memory? And which changes in children’s brains explain their memory improvements? I examine how the building blocks of an adaptive memory assemble as children move from early to middle childhood by using behavioral and neuroimaging methods.

Team

Ying Lin, Dr.

Ying Lin, Dr.

Postdoc
I received my PhD in Brain and Cognitive Sciences from the University of Rochester in 2023, where I studied visual perceptual decision-making. Through a series of experiments using both classic and novel stimuli, I explored how the brain makes perceptual decisions using reaction time (modeled via drift-diffusion models) and duration thresholds. I’m particularly interested in how these cognitive processes develop and change across the lifespan, with a growing focus on children and older adult populations. Prior to graduate school, I worked at Temple University on projects that examined memory development. Building on my initial interest in developmental cognitive science, my postdoc training will focus on the within-child changes in the neural bases of autobiographical memories from early to middle childhood.
Marie Klara Schmidt

Marie Klara Schmidt

Predoctoral Fellow
I received my Bachelor’s degree in Psychology from Johannes Gutenberg-University in Mainz and my Master’s degrees in Mind and Brain as well as Psychology from Humboldt-University Berlin. My master’s thesis focused on noradrenergic neuromodulation and learning across the adult lifespan. Prior to joining RAVEN, I worked as a research assistant in studies of childhood memory development, where my interest in lifespan memory research originated. In my PhD, I will examine the relation between within-child changes in memory capacities in the laboratory and the real world.
Pedro Espinosa Mireles de Villafranca

Pedro Espinosa Mireles de Villafranca

Predoctoral Fellow
I am a psychologist by training and obtained my MSc degree in Mind and Brain from Humboldt-University Berlin with a focus on Cognitive Neuroscience. In my master’s thesis, I examined the relative influence of perceptual and conceptual similarity on episodic memory. As a RAVEN, my dissertation will investigate the development of real-world autobiographical memory in children.

 

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