Martin Schaefer

Martin Schaefer

Postdoctoral Researcher
Visiting address: Nobels väg 9, 17177 Stockholm
Postal address: K8 Klinisk neurovetenskap, K8 Psykologi Lundström Arshamian, 171 77 Stockholm

About me

  • 2014 Bachelor of Science - Liberal Arts & Sciences, Maastricht University
    2016 Master of Science - Neurochemistry with Molecular Neurobiology, Stockholm University
    2023 PhD in cognitive neuroscience - Karolinska Institute

Research

  • Breathing is one of the fundamental rhythms of life, with its effects stretching far beyond basic oxygenation.
    During my PhD project I used EEG and physiological methods to investigate how breathing affects brain activity and behavioral performance.

    Currently I investigate how respiration affects pupil size and visual perception.

Articles

All other publications

Grants

  • Rhythms of Life, Rhythms of Perception: How Breath and Heart Shape and Coordinate Vision
    Swedish Research Council
    1 June 2026 - 31 May 2029
    Emerging evidence suggests that foundational bodily rhythms, such as breathing and heartbeats, actively shape how we perceive and interact with our environment. This project investigates how breathing and cardiac cycles interact to shape visual perception and coordinate our exploratory behavior. I will determine how breathing and heartbeat rhythms influence two fundamental visual functions— detecting objects and discriminating their features—and establish whether these bodily signals coordinate eye movements and exploratory behavior during visual search. Three progressive studies will combine physiological monitoring (breathing, heartbeat, brain activity) with behavioral testing. Study 1 examines how breathing and cardiac phases affect basic visual detection and discrimination using controlled laboratory tasks. Study 2 investigates whether these rhythms coordinate eye movements during visual search, to optimize search efficiency. Study 3 employs virtual reality environments to test whether bodily rhythms organize natural exploratory behavior, including head and body movements, during realistic search scenarios. This research challenges the traditional view of the brain as separate from the body, instead proposing that visceral rhythms serve as organizing principles for perception. By revealing how breathing and heartbeat shape and coordinate vision and exploration, this work will advance our understanding of embodied cognition and the fundamental principles of perception.

Employments

  • Postdoctoral Researcher, Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, 2024-2027

Degrees and Education

  • Degree Of Doctor Of Philosophy, Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, 2024

Distinction and awards

  • Early Career Advancement Prize, The Early Career Advancement Prize is awarded to PhD students within 5 years of completing their PhD who are the primary author on a paper of particularly high quality. Besides a certificate, the recipient will have their work published for free and the publicity channels of i-Perception will be used to highlight the work., i-Perception, SAGE Publishing (United States), 2026

News from KI

Events from KI