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Lillian Wieder

Ms Lillian Wieder MSc

PhD Student

Research interests

  • Psychology

Biography

Lillian Wieder is a PhD Student at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience at King's College London. Her research concerns the neurocognitive bases and computational factors underlying dissociative identity disorder.

Before starting at King’s College London, she completed her BSc in Psychology and MSc in Cognitive and Clinical Neuroscience (with distinction) at Goldsmiths, University of London, where she was awarded the British Psychological Society Award for highest overall performance across her undergraduate degree programme. 

Lillian's research has investigated the factors that contribute to, and the links between, suggestibility and dissociative tendencies in the general population. During her work as a research assistant, she conducted two meta-analyses on suggestibility in functional neurological disorder and dissociative and stress-related disorders.

Lilian's MSc dissertation concerned aberrant memory in dissociative amnesia. She is currently working on another meta-analysis looking at the induction of state dissociation in different populations. 

Her research interests, include dissociative states and disorders, functional neurological disorder, predictive processing, trauma, metacognition, suggestibility, and memory.

    Research

    Greyscale Wave
    Awareness & Modulation Lab

    The Awareness & Modulation Lab draws on methods from psychology and neuroscience to study suggestion effects, dissociation, and alterations in awareness.

      Research

      Greyscale Wave
      Awareness & Modulation Lab

      The Awareness & Modulation Lab draws on methods from psychology and neuroscience to study suggestion effects, dissociation, and alterations in awareness.