Mikael Lundqvist

Mikael Lundqvist

Principal Researcher
Telephone: +46852483399
Visiting address: Nobels väg 9, 17177 Stockholm
Postal address: K8 Klinisk neurovetenskap, K8 Psykologi Lundström Lundqvist, 171 77 Stockholm

Research

  • Mikael studies human and animal cognition using a combination of
    electrophysiological recordings and computational modelling. He uses
    simulated networks of neurons to find neural dynamics that can solve various
    cognitive tasks, and then tests predictions from the models in experimental
    data. Currently focused on working memory and attention.

Articles

All other publications

Grants

  • Swedish Research Council
    1 January 2023 - 31 December 2026
    The flexible control over the contents of our working memory (WM) frees us from reflexive behavior and supports central cognitive behaviors such as planning and language comprehension. WM capacity is strongly correlated with individual intelligence and it is one of the most studied aspects of human cognition. A major limitation of previous research on visually related WM is that it has typically required experimental subjects to not move their heads or gaze to create a tightly controlled environment. In everyday life, however, gaze position constantly changes as we walk around, turn our heads, and make eye-movements. The focus of this project is to start mapping the mechanisms that underlie WM processes in real-life, dynamic environments. We will conduct a series of behavioral and EEG experiments that utilize instructed eye-movements while subjects use their WM. This will allow us to determine the impact of gaze shifts while maintaining the experimental control of classical WM experiments. We will simultaneously record behavior, EEG, and gaze shifts to allow direct inference. The goal is to understand how WM representations are transformed following gaze shifts to account for the new frame of reference, and how this impacts behavior. This will ultimately provide us with fundamental insights on how we update contents of WM to serve future behavior. The project will therefore provide important insights into the workings of working memory in real life scenarios.
  • European Research Council
    1 June 2021 - 31 May 2026
  • Swedish Research Council
    1 January 2019 - 31 December 2022
  • Single-trial analysis in Cognition
    Brain and Behavior Research Foundation
    1 January 2018 - 1 January 2019

Employments

  • Principal Researcher, Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, 2022-

Supervision

  • Supervision to doctoral degree

    • Charles Chernik, When memories collide: changing the frame of reference of internal representations, 2024-
    • Frans Nordén, 2023-
    • Johan Liljefors, The Hot-Coal model of working memory, 2022-

News from KI

Events from KI