People
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Ulrike Rimmele, Ph.D. Postdoc New York University University of Zürich, PhD in Psychology and Neuroscience, 2006 University of Tübingen, Master of Science in Neural and Behavioural Science, 2002 University of Konstanz, Wesleyan University, Bachelor of Science in Biology, 2000 email: ur228 (add @nyu.edu)
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Research
Neurobiology of emotional learning and memory
Stress and cognitive processing
Neural mechanisms of prosocial behavior
Publications
Rimmele U., Hediger K., Heinrichs M., Klaver P. (2009) Oxytocin makes a face in memory familiar. The Journal of Neuroscience. 29(1), 38-42.
Rimmele U., Spillmann M., Baertschi C., Wolf O., Weber C., Ehlert U., Wirtz P. (in press) Melatonin improves memory acquisition under stress independent of stress hormone release. Psychopharmacology.
Rimmele U., Seiler R., Marti B., Wirtz P., Ehlert U., Heinrichs M. (in press) The level of physical activity affects adrenal and cardiovascular reactivity to stress. Psychoneuroendocrinology.
Wirtz P., Siegerist J., Rimmele U., Ehlert U. (2008) Higher overcommitment to work is associated with lower norepinephrine secretion before and after acute psychosocial stress in men. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 33(1), 92-9.
Rimmele U., Zellweger B., Marti B., Seiler R., Mohiyeddini C., Ehlert U., Heinrichs M. (2007) Trained men show lower cortisol, heart rate and psychological responses to psychosocial stress compared with untrained men. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 32(6), 627-35.
Kremers J., Rimmele U. (2007) The spatial extent of lateral interactions in flicker perception. Vision
Research, 47(1), 16-21.
Domes, G., Heinrichs, M., Rimmele, U., Reichwald, U. & Hautzinger, M. (2004) Acute stress impairs recognition for positive words – association with stress-induced cortisol
secretion. Stress, 7, 173-181.
Rimmele U., Domes G., Mathiak K. & Hautzinger M. (2003) Cortisol has different effects on human memory for emotional and neutral stimuli. NeuroReport, 14 (18) 2485-
2488.
Other
Consultant for the OECD project "Brain and Learning" 2003-2007 www.oecd.org/edu/brain
Posters
Rimmele, U. (2008). Oxytocin Improves Social Memory in Humans. Attention and Performance Symposium XXIII. Stowe, VT.