About Me

I am a PhD researcher at UCL studying pedestrian visual behaviour at crossings using eye-tracking, EEG, and EDA. My work focuses on how individuals employ visual attention and decision-making in real-world environments. I am passionate about understanding human perception and safety in urban mobility.

My research is interdisciplinary, bridging psychology, neuroscience, and transport to analyse pedestrian behaviour in different lighting and traffic conditions.

Research Interests

My research explores cognitive processes related to pedestrian safety, perception, and attention. I analyse physiological and behavioural data to understand how individuals assess crossing decisions under different environmental factors.

  • Eye-tracking analysis of pedestrian gaze behaviour.
  • EEG-based neural correlates of decision-making.
  • EDA responses and physiological arousal in traffic environments.

Projects

  • Pedestrian Decision-Making in Urban Traffic: Investigating the role of visual attention in road-crossing scenarios.
  • EEG and Eye-tracking Integration: Exploring cognitive load and environmental awareness.
  • Tube Surfers: A project exploring London Underground and passenger comfort