91ÅÝܽ

Principal Investigators

    

Thomas M. Spalek, PhD

    

Dr. Spalek completed both his undergraduate and graduate work at the University of Toronto. Upon completing his Ph.D. in 2002, he accepted a position at 91ÅÝܽ and has been here ever since.

His research focuses on mechanisms of attention and memory in normal functioning young adults, using procedures that typically yield phenomena such as the Attentional Blink (AB) and Inhibition of Return (IOR). He is also interested in investigating how cognitive phenomena studied in the lab might play a role in the everyday context of driving a car. To this end, the lab is equipped with sophisticated eye scanning equipment, EEG systems, TMS systems, and a high-fidelity driving simulator. Dr. Spalek is funded by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC).

 

Vincent Di Lollo, PhD

        

Born in Gorizia, in the Italian North-East, Vincent Di Lollo, his parents and two brothers fled to Australia as refugees at the end of WW2. While busy learning English, he worked at a variety of jobs, including as a miner, construction worker, and barman. His English proficiency improved sufficiently to win a scholarship to the University of Western Australia where he completed a Ph.D. in Experimental Psychology and was awarded a Fulbright Fellowship to work at the universities of Indiana, Michigan, and Princeton. After a brief return to work at UWA, he moved to Canada where he has held appointments at the Universities of Manitoba, Alberta, and British Columbia before spending the past 15 years as Adjunct Professor of Psychology at 91ÅÝܽ.

Dr. Di Lollo’s research is aimed at discovering what brain processes mediate the perception of objects and events in the visual world. His work on re-entrant brain pathways draws extensively from the fields of visual attention, computer modeling and event-related potentials. It has resulted in over 200 publications in prestigious scientific journals and professional conferences. Laboratories across the world are building on this work to test and further develop a re-entrant theory of visual perception. In a survey by the American Psychological Society, Di Lollo’s work was listed among the contributions that triggered the most significant changes in the direction of psychological research in the twentieth century.

Dr. Di Lollo has served the Canadian academic community unselfishly in scientific advocacy and in shaping national science policy. He has served as President of the Canadian Society for Brain, Behaviour, and Cognitive Science from which he received the Donald O. Hebb Distinguished Contribution Award, and the Richard C. Tees Distinguished Leadership Award. He twice chaired the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council’s Grant Selection Committee, and is a former Editor of the Canadian Journal of Psychology. In recognition of his scientific achievements and public service, Dr. Di Lollo was elected to Fellowship of the Royal Society of Canada.

 

Lab Manager

Aaron Richardson, MA

Contact: aaron_richardson@sfu.ca

 

    

Graduate Students

Bertrand Sager, MA

Bertrand is an avid motorcyclist, which is what brought him to the study of psychology. Before returning to school, Bertrand worked as a software developer and then a driving instructor. His work is concerned with visual attention and perception; his master’s thesis examined perceptual factors involved in car-motorcycle collisions. Bertrand is very interested in all things related to cognitive psychology, and is currently working on attention research involving Attentional Blink and Object-Substitution Masking.

 

Nadja Jankovic, MA, BSc

Nadja is a PhD student and is interested in the timing characteristics of early perceptual and attentional processes. Her MA work involved a first look at the effects of an attentional alerting stimulus during compound visual search. Nadja is the lab's resident transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) operator, and is using TMS to investigate the temporal dynamics of the human visual system as part of her PhD research. In her free time, Nadja enjoys walking in coastal forests, road cycling, birding, and climbing rocks.  

Taylor Cork, BA

Taylor completed her BA (Hons) under the supervison of Tom and Vince in 2018. Her Honours looked at differences in task demands between various types of visual search. She is currently working on her MA in the lab and is interested in EEG, TMS, and imaging generally.

 

Rachel Yapp, BA

Rachel completed her BA (Hons) under the supervison of Tom and Vince in 2025. Her Honours looked at whether changes in overall luminance are necessary for the visual alerting effect. Rachel is well on track to visit every single country at least once in her life. When she's not trotting around the globe, she loves taking her sweet pup on walks in our local forests.  

    

Research Assistants

Kelsey Hazelwood (Hons. student)

Graham Voiles (Hons. student)

    

Lab Alumni

Regard Booy, MA

Bertrand Sager, MA

Amanjot Grewal, BA

Elisabeth Kreykenbohm, MA

Alison Chung, BA

Ali Jannati, MD, PhD

Benoit Brisson

Ghoufran Talib, BA

Hayley Lagroix, PhD

James Patton, MA

Laura Falcon

Matt Yanko, PhD

Paige McKay

Ricardo Max, PhD

Shannon Gaudry