Professor Ottmar Lipp
Faculty of Health,
School of Psychology & Counselling
Biography
I joined QUT's School of Psychology and Counselling as a Professor in 2020. After receiving my PhD in psychology from Justus Liebig Universität, Giessen, Germany, I joined The University of Queensland’s School of Psychology in 1991 and moved to Curtin University in Perth in 2014. My research, both basic and applied, is concerned with emotion, attention and their interaction. In particular, it is concerned with the manner in which emotionally salient stimuli are processed and how emotional responses such as likes, dislikes or fears are acquired, maintained and reduced. This research uses behavioural and psychophysiological paradigms to address these questions.Personal details
Positions
- Professor
Faculty of Health,
School of Psychology & Counselling
Keywords
Emotion, Attention, Fear, Learning, Psychophysiology
Research field
Biological psychology, Cognitive and computational psychology
Field of Research code, Australian and New Zealand Standard Research Classification (ANZSRC), 2020
Professional memberships and associations
Member Society for Psychophysiological Research Australian Society for Experimental Psychology Fellow Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia Association for Psychological Science (USA) Queensland Academy of Arts and Sciences Editor in Chief Biological Psychology Associate Editor Cognition and Emotion Consulting Editor Journal of Experimental Psychology: General Psychophysiology
Publications
- Wang, Y., Lipp, O., Mayo, L., Ney, L. & Yin, J. (2024). Examining the Reliability of the Emotional Conflict Resolution and Adaptation Effects in the Emotional Conflict Task via Secondary Data Analysis, Systematic Review, and Meta-Analysis. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 153(5), 1361–1373. https://eprints.qut.edu.au/248836
- Wang, Y., Olsson, S., Lipp, O. & Ney, L. (2024). Renewal in human fear conditioning: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews, 159. https://eprints.qut.edu.au/248835
- Craig, B. & Lipp, O. (2023). Bodily Cues of Sex and Emotion Can Interact Symmetrically: Evidence From Simple Categorization and the Garner Paradigm. Emotion, 23(8), 2385–2398. https://eprints.qut.edu.au/240848
- Ney, L., FitzSimons-Reilly, A. & Lipp, O. (2023). Reaction time as an outcome measure during online fear conditioning: Effects of number of trials, age, and levels of processing. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 169. https://eprints.qut.edu.au/244631
- Ney, L., Luck, C., Waters, A. & Lipp, O. (2022). Conditional stimulus choices affect fear learning: Comparing fear conditioning with neutral faces and shapes or angry faces. Psychophysiology, 59(10). https://eprints.qut.edu.au/231595
- Lipp, O., Luck, C. & Waters, A. (2022). The absence of differential electrodermal responding in the second half of acquisition does not indicate the absence of fear learning. Psychophysiology, 59(3). https://eprints.qut.edu.au/233277
QUT ePrints
For more publications by Ottmar, explore their research in QUT ePrints (our digital repository).