
Eve Isham, PhD
Lab Director
As the director of the CAT Lab, Eve Isham’s research focuses on time perception and consciousness. Dr. Isham’s PhD training was under the guidance of Professor William (Bill) Banks at Claremont Graduate University/Pomona college. Her postdoctoral training was under the guidance of Professor Joy Geng at UC Davis. Besides research, Dr. Isham also enjoys teaching courses on sensation and perception, psychology of magic and illusions, and psychology of climate change and action.
eaisham@arizona.edu
Jocelyn Teng
Graduate Student
Jocelyn Teng graduated with a B.S. in Psychology from the University of Minnesota, where they worked with Dr. Iris Vilares in the Decision-Making lab and Dr. Meredith Gunlicks-Stoessel in the Promoting Teen Attachment and Development Lab. They are currently a graduate student working with Dr. Eve Isham in the Consciousness-Action-Time (CAT) Lab, where they are studying interval timing and error-monitoring, as well as on moral decision-making.

Logan Burmania
Graduate Student
Logan Burmania currently trains as a cognitive neuroscientist in the Consciousness-Action-Time Lab. They hold their B.A. in Cognitive Studies from Iowa State University, where they were co-sponsored by an experimental psychologist and a philosopher of the mind. There they received extensive interdisciplinary training; including experimentally investigating the relationship between body-based cues in spatial navigation and theoretically differentiating necessary and sufficient conditions of various theories in consciousness.

Tristen Roussell
Graduate Student
Tristen is an incoming PhD student in the Cognition and Neural Systems program at the University of Arizona. Her research interests lie in phenomenal consciousness, particularly the interplay between cognitive control and temporal and spatial learning processes. She completed her B.A. in Psychology at Louisiana Tech University in 2024. During her undergraduate studies, she aided in EEG and behavioral research on visual perception and working memory. Outside of her academic pursuits, Tristen enjoys outdoor activities such as snowboarding and hiking.

Elise Belcher
Undergraduate Research Assistant
Elise is a junior studying psychology and has been a research assistant for over a year. Her research interests include linguistic processing, moral decision making, and organizational psychology.

Colin Bush
Undergraduate Research Assistant

Lindsay Davis
Undergraduate Research Assistant
Lindsay Davis is a junior computer science and psychology dual-major at University of Arizona. Her interests include neurodevelopmental disorders, cognition, and artificial intelligence, especially deep learning systems. Lindsay is also a considerable puzzle enthusiast and enjoys programming, reading, and experimenting with different art forms in her free time.