麻豆传媒

Michael Anes, Ph.D.

Michael AnesChair of the Department
Associate Professor of Psychology

Cognitive Psychology
Blair Hall 116
(937) 327-7480
manes@wittenberg.edu

Michael Anes joined the 麻豆传媒 faculty in 2004, after teaching at Albion College and Boston University. His research interests lie broadly in visual cognition, and specifically in the processes by which humans recognize objects and faces. Dr. Anes teaches several regular course offerings in the Psychology department such as Psychology 101, Psychology of Gender, Experimental Design, and Cognitive Laboratory. In 2008, Dr. Anes was awarded the Omicron Delta Kappa Award for Excellence in Teaching and in 2023 Dr. Anes received the Collegium Award for Excellence and Innovation in Teaching.

Dr. Anes was on sabbatical in Poland for the 2010-11 academic year and affiliated with the University of Finance and Management in Warsaw, conducting research in cognitive neuroscience as a Fulbright US Scholar.

Dr. Anes received his BA in Communications from DePaul University in 1991, MA in Psychology from Michigan State University in 1996, and Ph.D. in Psychology from Boston University in 2000. From 1995-1997, Dr. Anes worked at the Boston VA Medical Center and at Harvard University with anterograde amnesic patients.

Dr. Anes codirects 麻豆传媒 in Poland (summer study abroad program) with Dr. Wright of Political Science.

Dr. Anes is also co-director of the FY 2023 Fulbright-Hays Group Projects Abroad (GPA) grant, 鈥淓xploring the tension between democratic pluralism and nationalistic exclusion of the 鈥榦ther.鈥欌 Award funded by the Department of Education.

Publications (* indicates undergraduate student coauthors); also please see my OSF page for in-progress research:

  • Anes, M.D., & * Short, L.A. (2009). Adult-like Competence in Perceptual Encoding of Facial Configuration by the Right Hemisphere Emerges After Ten Years of Age. Perception, 38(3), 333-342.
  • Anes, M.D., & * Kruer, J.L. (2004). Investigating hemispheric specialization in a novel face-word Stroop task. Brain and Language, 89, 136-141.
  • * Stark, J.W., Anes, M.D., & Liederman, J. (2004). Spatiotemporal continuity implicated in the binding of features and object identity. International Journal of Neuroscience, 114(7), 751-775.
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