Paweł Tacikowski was a postdoctoral researcher in the Brain, Body, and Self Laboratory from December 2013 to 2019 and again from 2022 to 2023. His research focused on self-concept, self-awareness, and the sense of bodily self.
Tacikowski, P., Fust J, Ehrsson HH. Fluidity of gender identity induced by illusory body-sex change. Scientific Reports (2020);10(1):14385. doi:10.1038/s41598-020-71467-z. PDF
Tacikowski, P., Weijs M, Ehrsson HH. Perception of Our Own Body Influences Self-Concept and Self-Incoherence Impairs Episodic Memory. iScience, 26 August 2020. PDF
Tacikowski, P., Berger, C. C. & Ehrsson, H. H. (2017). Dissociating the Neural Basis of Conceptual Self-awareness from Perceptual Awareness and Unaware Self-processing. Cerebral Cortex. Epub ahead of print. PDF
Tacikowski, P., Freiburghaus T, & Ehrsson HH. Goal-directed processing of self-relevant information is associated with less cognitive interference than the processing of information about other people. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology (2016) 68:93-100. PDF
Tacikowski, P. & Ehrsson HH. Preferential processing of self-relevant stimuli occurs mainly at the perceptual and conscious stages of information processing. Consciousness and Cognition (2016) 41:139-49. PDF
Tacikowski, P., Brechmann, A., & Nowicka, A. (in press). Cross-modal pattern of brain activations associated with the processing of self- and significant other's name. Human Brain Mapping, doi: 10.1002/hbm.22048. PDF
Tacikowski, P., Brechmann, A., Jednorog, K., Marchewka, A., Dobrowolny, M., & Nowicka, A. (2011). Is it about the self or the significance? An fMRI study of self-name recognition. Social Neuroscience, 6(1), 98-107. PDF
Tacikowski, P., Brechmann, A., Jednorog, K., Marchewka, A., Dobrowolny, M., & Nowicka, A. (2011). How multiple repetitions influence the processing of own, famous and unknown names and faces: An ERP study. International Journal of Psychophysiology, 79, 219-230. PDF
Tacikowski, P., & Nowicka, A. (2010). Allocation of attention to self-name and self-face: An ERP study. Biological Psychology, 84, 318-324. PDF