Prof. Dr. Sebastian Gluth

Foto: ©ralfkornmann
Leiter des Arbeitsbereiches
Anschrift
Büro
Kontakt
Akademischer Werdegang
10/2020 - | Professor für Allgemeine Psychologie an der Universität Hamburg |
02/2016 - 09/2020 |
Assistenzprofessor für Decision Neuroscience an der Universität Basel |
07/2013 - 01/2016 |
Postdoc in der Abteilung Economic Psychology (PI: Jörg Rieskamp) an der Universität Basel |
07/2009 - 06/2013 |
Doktorand am Institut für Systemische Neurowissenschaften (PI: Christian Büchel) am Universitätsklinikum Hamburg-Eppendorf |
10/2004 - 03/2009 |
Studium der Psychologie an der Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin |
Drittmittel und Auszeichnungen
2024 - 2028 | BMBF Forschungs-Grant Neural and computational mechanisms of flexible goal-directed decision making |
2024 - 2028 | DFG Forschungs-Grant (innerhalb der DFG Forschungsgruppe 5389) Integration of dynamic belief updating across mental disorders and contexts |
2024 - 2027 | DFG Forschungs-Grant Information search in multi- attribute decisions and probabilistic inferences |
2022 | Lehrpreis des Instituts für Psychologie, Universität Hamburg |
2021 - | ERC Starting Grant Tracking the decisions of others with the own mind |
2017 - 2020 | SNF Forschungs-Grant The influence of episodic memory on value-based decision making |
2016 | Dozent des Jahres Auszeichnung (Fakultät für Psychologie, Universität Basel) |
2015 | Steven-Karger Publikationspreis (für Gluth et al., 2015, Neuron; Fakultät für Psychologie, Universität Basel) |
2009 - 2013 | DFG Stipendium (Internationales Graduiertenkolleg CINACS) |
Ausgewählte Publikationen
Bavard, S., Stuchlý, E., Konovalov, A., & Gluth, S. (in press). Humans can infer social preferences from response times alone. PLOS Biology.
Kramer, P.M., & Gluth, S. (2023). Episodic Memory Retrieval Affects the Onset and Dynamics of Evidence Accumulation during Value-based Decisions. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 35, 692-714.
Fontanesi, L., Shenhav, A., & Gluth, S. (2022). Disentangling choice value and choice conflict in sequential decisions under risk. PLOS Computational Biology, 1010478.
Link
Spektor, M.S., Bhatia, S., & Gluth, S. (2021). The elusiveness of context effects in decision making. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 25, 843–854.
Weilbaecher, R.A., Kraemer, P.M., & Gluth, S. (2020). The reflection effect in memory-based decisions. Psychological Science, 31, 1439-1451.
Gluth, S., Kern, N., Kortmann, M., & Vitali, C.L. (2020). Value-based attention but not divisive normalization influence decisions with multiple alternatives. Nature Human Behaviour, 4, 634-645.
Gluth, S., & Meiran, N. (2019). Leave-One-Trial-Out, LOTO, a general approach to link single-trial parameters of cognitive models to neural data. eLife, 8, e42607.
Busemeyer, J.R., Gluth, S., Rieskamp, J., & Turner, B. (2019). Cognitive and neural bases of multi-attribute, multi-alternative value-based decisions. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 23, 251-263.
Spektor, M.S., Gluth, S., Fontanesi, L., & Rieskamp, J. (2019). How similarity between choice options affects decisions from experience: The accentuation-of-differences model. Psychological Review, 126, 52-88.
Gluth, S.*, Spektor, M.S.*, & Rieskamp, J. (2018). Value-based attentional capture affects multi-alternative decision making. eLife, 7, e39659. *equal contribution
Gluth, S., Hotaling, J. M., & Rieskamp, J. (2017). The attraction effect modulates reward prediction errors and intertemporal choices. Journal of Neuroscience, 37, 371-382.
Gluth, S., & Fontanesi, L. (2016). Wiring the altruistic brain. Science, 1028-1029.
Gluth, S., Sommer, T., Rieskamp, J., & Büchel, C. (2015). Effective connectivity between hippocampus and prefrontal cortex controls preferential choices from memory. Neuron, 86, 1078-1090.
Brassen, S., Gamer, M., Peters, J., Gluth, S., & Büchel, C. (2012). Don't look back in anger! Responsiveness to missed chances in successful and non-successful aging. Science, 336, 612-614.
Gluth, S., Rieskamp, J., & Büchel, C. (2012). Deciding when to decide: time-variant sequential sampling models explain the emergence of value-based decisions in the human brain. Journal of Neuroscience, 32, 10686-10698.