Dr. Marcus Möschl
Postdoc
NameDr. Marcus Möschl
Gleichstellungsbeauftrager der Fakultät Psychologie
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RESEARCH INTERESTS
My research focuses on mechanisms and modulators of goal-directed behavior. I am particularly interested in prospective remembering, intention deactivation, shielding and shifting of intentions, and effects of acute and chronic stress on cognitive functions. Currently, I investigate whether we can manipulate the balance between stable shielding of task goals and flexible switching between them, and aim to specify the micro-structure and sub-processes of intention retrieval in prospective memory.
SCIENTIFIC EDUCATION
10/2019 | Dr. rer. nat., TU Dresden, Germany. Thesis: “Prospective Memory and Intention Deactivation: Challenges, Mechanisms and Modulators”. (Supervisors: Dr. Moritz Walser, Prof. Dr. Thomas Goschke) |
12/2013 | Diploma in Psychology at TU Dresden, Germany. Thesis: "On the Deactivation of Intentions: Aftereffects of Residually Activated Completed Intentions" (Supervisors: Moritz Walser, PD Dr. Rico Fischer, Prof. Dr. Thomas Goschke) |
PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE
since 11/2021 | Equal Opportunities Officer at the faculty of psychology |
since 06/2020 |
Principal Investigator in CRC 940, Project A1 "Neurobehavioral Mechanisms of the Shielding and Shifting of Intentions" |
01/2015 – 10/2019 | PhD Student, Department of Psychology, TU Dresden |
PUBLICATIONS
google scholar
Kurtz, M., Scherbaum, S., Walser, M., Kanske, P., & Möschl, M. (2022). Dissociating sub-processes of aftereffects of completed intentions and costs to the ongoing task in prospective memory: A mouse-tracking approach. Memory & Cognition. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13421-022-01289-z
Möschl, M., Schmidt, K., Enge, S., Weckesser, L. J., & Miller, R. (2022). Chronic stress and executive functioning: A specification-curve analysis. Physiology & Behavior, 243, 113639. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.physbeh.2021.113639
Weckesser, L. J., Schmidt, K., Möschl, M., Kirschbaum, C., Enge, S., & Miller, R. (2021). Temporal stability and effect dynamics between executive functions, perceived chronic stress, and hair cortisol concentrations. Developmental Psychology, 57(7), 1149–1162. https://doi.org/10.1037/dev0001193
Möschl, M., Fischer, R., Bugg, J. M., Scullin, M. K., Goschke, T., & Walser, M. (2020). Aftereffects and deactivation of completed prospective memory intentions: A systematic review. Psychological Bulletin, 146(3), 245–278. https://doi.org/10.1037/bul0000221
Möschl, M., Walser, M., Surrey, C., & Miller, R. (2019). Prospective memory under acute stress: The role of (output) monitoring and ongoing-task demands. Neurobiology of Learning and Memory, 164, 107046. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nlm.2019.107046
Möschl, M., Walser, M., Plessow, F., Goschke, T., & Fischer, R. (2017). Acute stress shifts the balance between controlled and automatic processes in prospective memory. Neurobiology of Learning and Memory, 144, 53–67. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nlm.2017.06.002
Walser, M., Goschke, T., Möschl, M., & Fischer, R. (2016). Intention Deactivation: Effects of Prospective Memory Task Similarity on Aftereffects of Completed Intentions. Psychological Research. doi:10.1007/s00426-016-0795-9
Open Science Collaboration. (2015). Estimating the reproducibility of psychological science. Science, 349(6251), aac4716. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aac4716
TEACHING
since 2016 | Experimentalpsychologisches Praktikum (1–2 courses/year) |
GRANTS & AWARDS
06/2020– 06/2024 |
Research Grant, German Research Foundation, CRC 940, Project A1 |
06/2014 |
Centralized research fund, Department of Psychology, Technische Universität Dresden , "The reliability of prospective memory and intention deactivation under acute stress" |
01/2014– 12/2014 |
PhD Fellowship, Integrated Research Training Group, CRC 940 |