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Angharad Williams

Angharad Williams

Senior Lecturer

Psychology

Staff Group(s)
Psychology

Role

Senior Lecturer in Psychology (Cognitive Psychology and Cognitive Neuroscience).

Career overview

Dr Angharad Williams () joined NTU Psychology as a senior lecturer in September 2021. Prior to this Angharad was a postdoctoral researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences (Leipzig, Germany), and at Cardiff University Brain Research Imaging Centre (CUBRIC) (Wales, UK). She completed her BSc in Applied Psychology and PhD in Cognitive Neuroscience at Cardiff University.

Research areas

Angharad's research has primarily focused on how we construct event representations (event memory, perception, and imagination).

Areas of interest include:

  • episodic memory
  • autobiographical memory
  • scene perception
  • schema-based memory
  • future thinking
  • pro-environmental behaviour
  • menstrual cycle

External activity

Ad hoc reviewer for: Journal of Neuroscience, Nature Sustainability, Frontiers in Psychology (Sections: Psychopathology, Cognition), Neuropsychologia, Brain and Neuroscience Advances, Memory and Cognition, Neuroscience Letters

Sponsors and collaborators

  • Dr Roland Benoit (Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany)
  • Dr Carl Hodgetts (Royal Holloway, University of London, England)
  • Professor Kim Graham (Cardiff University, Wales)
  • Professor Andrew Lawrence (Cardiff University, Wales)
  • Professor David Linden (Maastricht University, Netherlands)
  • Professor Edward Wilding (University of Birmingham, England)
  • Dr Lisa Evans (Cardiff University, Wales)

Publications

Zsido, R. G., Williams, A. N., Barth, C., Serio, B., Kurth, L., Mildner, T., ... & Sacher, J. (2023). Ultra-high-field 7T MRI reveals changes in human medial temporal lobe volume in female adults during menstrual cycle. Nature Mental Health, 1(10), 761-771. 

Subramanian, L., Skottnik, L., Cox, W. M., Lührs, M., McNamara, R., Hood, K., ... & Linden, D. E. (2021). Neurofeedback training versus treatment-as-usual for alcohol dependence: results of an early-phase randomized controlled trial and neuroimaging correlates. European Addiction Research, 1-14. 

Williams, A. N., & Benoit, R. G. (2021). Imagining our better selves. Nature Sustainability4(5), 381-382. 

Mehler, D., Williams, A. N., Whittaker, J. R., Krause, F., Lührs, M., Kunas, S., ... & Linden, D. E. (2020). Graded fMRI neurofeedback training of motor imagery in middle cerebral artery stroke patients: a preregistered proof-of-concept study. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience14, 226.

Williams, A. N., Ridgeway, S., Postans, M., Graham, K. S., Lawrence, A. D., & Hodgetts, C. J. (2020). The role of the pre-commissural fornix in episodic autobiographical memory and simulation. Neuropsychologia142, 107457.

Hodgetts, C. J., Stefani, M., Williams, A. N., Kolarik, B. S., Yonelinas, A. P., Ekstrom, A. D., ... & Graham, K. S. (2020). The role of the fornix in human navigational learning. Cortex124, 97-110.

Williams, A. N., & Wilding, E. L. (2019). On the sensitivity of event-related potentials to retrieval mode. Brain and Cognition135, 103580.

Williams, A. N., Postans, M., & Hodgetts, C. J. (2019). How the Human Brain Segments Continuous Experience. Journal of Neuroscience39(17), 3172-3174.

Mehler, D. M., Williams, A. N., Krause, F., Lührs, M., Wise, R. G., Turner, D. L., ... & Whittaker, J. R. (2019). The BOLD response in primary motor cortex and supplementary motor area during kinesthetic motor imagery based graded fMRI neurofeedback. NeuroImage184, 36-44.

Williams, A. N., Evans, L. H., Herron, J. E., & Wilding, E. L. (2016). On the antecedents of an electrophysiological signature of retrieval mode. PLOS One11(12), e0167574.

Evans, L. H., Williams, A. N., & Wilding, E. L. (2015). Electrophysiological evidence for retrieval mode immediately after a task switch. NeuroImage108, 435-440.

Course(s) I teach on