
Bild: Tobias Roth
Prof. Dr. Beatrice G. Kuhlmann (sie/ihr)
Professur für Kognitive Psychologie mit Schwerpunkt kognitives Altern
    Universität Mannheim
Fakultät für Sozialwissenschaften
L 13,15 – Raum 426
68161 Mannheim
Fakultät für Sozialwissenschaften
L 13,15 – Raum 426
68161 Mannheim
Tel.: +49 621 181-3396
Fax: +49 621 181-3997
E-Mail: kuhlmannuni-mannheim.de
Web: sowi.uni-mannheim.de/kuhlmann
Fax: +49 621 181-3997
E-Mail: kuhlmannuni-mannheim.de
Web: sowi.uni-mannheim.de/kuhlmann
- Beruflicher und akademischer Werdegang- Beruflicher Werdegang- seit 2020 - Professorin für Kognitive Psychologie (mit Schwerpunkt kognitives Altern), Universität Mannheim - 2018–2024 - Leiterin der Emmy Noether Nachwuchsgruppe „Source Forgetting in Younger and Older Adults“ - 2015 – 2020 - Juniorprofessorin für Kognitive Psychologie (mit Schwerpunkt kognitives Altern), Universität Mannheim - 2013 – 2015 - Wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiterin, Institute für Experimentelle Psychologie – Abteilung für Mathematische und Kognitive Psychologie (Leitung: Prof. Ute J. Bayen, Ph.D.), Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf - 2008 – 2013 - Forschungs- und Lehrassistentin, Department of Psychology, University of North Carolina at Greensboro, USA - Akademischer Werdegang- 2013 - Promotion (Ph.D. Cognitive Psychology), University of North Carolina at Greensboro, USA (Doktormutter: Dr. Dayna R. Touron) - 2008 - Diplom in Psychologie, Universität Mannheim 
- Herausgebertätigkeit und Mitarbeit in Herausgebergremien- Assoziierte Editorin für „Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications“ (seit 2022)
- Mitglied des Herausgebergremiums für „Metacognition and Learning“ (seit 2020)
- Editorin des Themenhefts „Strategy Contributions to Cognitive Aging“ für Open Psychology (De Gruyter, 2019)
- Mitglied des Herausgebergremiums des „Journal of Cognition“ (seit 2019)
- Mitglied des Herausgebergremiums für „Current Psychology“ (Springer) (seit 2018)
 
- Ad-hoc Gutachtertätigkeit- Ad hoc Gutachterin- Acta Psychologica
- American Journal of Psychology
- Aging, Neuropsychology, and Cognition
- British Journal of Psychology
- Cognition
- Current Psychology
- Consciousness and Cognition
- European Journal of Aging
- Experimental Psychology
- Gerontology
- GeroPsych: The Journal of Gerontopsychology and Geriatric Psychiatry
- Journal of Cognition
- Journal of Individual Differences
- Journal of Experimental Child Psychology
- Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, & Cognition
- Journal of Interindividual Differences
- Memory & Cognition
- Neurobiology of Aging
- Psychology and Aging
- Plos One
- Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology
 - Ad hoc Gutachterin von Förderungsanträgen- Alexander von Humboldt Stiftung
- Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG)
- National Science Foundation
- Psychonomic Society
- Tiroler Wissenschaftsfonds
 
- Forschungsinteressen und Projekte- Forschungsinteressen- Episodisches Gedächtnis, insbesondere Quellengedächtnis
- Kognitives Altern
- Metagedächtnis, insbesondere Gedächtnisstrategien
- Prospektives Gedächtnis
- Formale Modellierung kognitiver Prozesse
 - Laufende Projekte- Kontextabhängiges Erinnern bei älteren Erwachsenen (Sachmittelprojekt, NCN-DFG Beethoven Programm), seit 2019 als Projektleiterin (polnische Projektleitung: Drs. Maciej Hanczakowski und Katarzyna Zawadzka, SWPS Universität in Warschau)
- Quellenvergessen bei jüngeren und älteren Erwachsenen (DFG Emmy Noether-Programm), seit 2018 als Projektleiterin (internationale Kooperationspartner: Prof. Dr. Moshe Naveh-Benjamin, University of Missouri, und Prof. Dr. Karen Mitchell, West Chester University)
- Hierarchische MPT-Modellierung – Methodenvergleiche und Anwendungsrichtlinien (Wissenschaftliches Netzwerk, DFG), seit 2017 als Projektleiterin gemeinsam mit Dr. Julia Groß
- Statistische Modellierung in der Psychologie (SMiP), Graduiertenkolleg GRK 2277 (DFG), seit 2017 als beteiligte Wissenschaftlerin (Sprecher: Prof. Dr. Edgar Erdfelder) 
 SMiP-Webseite
 - Abgeschlossene Projekte- Altersunterschiede in der episodischen Gedächtnisleistung: Die Rolle der Testformatadaptivität und Möglichkeiten der Unterstützung (Sachmittelbeihilfe, Ministerium für Wissenschaft, Forschung und Kunst Baden-Württemberg), 2017–2020 als Projektleiterin
- Quellenvergessen bei jüngeren und älteren Erwachsenen: Ein modellbasierter Ansatz (Anschubfinanzierung, Universität Mannheim Forschungsfonds), 2015–2016 als Projektleiterin
- Alter(n)sgerechte Gestaltung von Webseiten: Ein kognitionspsychologischer Ansatz (Anschubfinanzierung, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Online-Forschung e. V.), 2015–2016 als Projektleiterin gemeinsam mit Prof. Dr. Julia Krönung (Universität Mannheim)
 
- Forschungsförderung, Auszeichnung und Stipendien- Forschungsförderung- 2019–2022 - Sachmittelförderung im Rahmen der Beethoven Classic 3 Förderlinie des polnischen National Science Center (NCN) und der Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) Projekt: Kontextabhängiges Erinnern bei älteren Erwachsenen - 2018–2023 - Fördermittel zur Einrichtung einer Nachwuchsgruppe im Emmy Noether-Programm der Deutschen Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) Projekt: Quellenvergessen bei jüngeren und älteren Erwachsenen - 2017–2020 - Sachmittelförderung im Rahmen des Juniorprofessuren-Programms des Ministerium für Wissenschaft, Forschung und Kunst Baden Württemberg Projekt: Altersunterschiede in der episodischen Gedächtnisleistung: Die Rolle der Testformatadaptivität und Möglichkeiten der Unterstützung - 2017–2020 - Fördermittel zur Einrichtung eines wissenschaftlichen Netzwerks durch die Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) Projekt: Hierarchische MPT Modellierung – Methodische Vergleiche und Anwendungsrichtlinien (gemeinsam mit Dr. Julia Groß) - 2015–2016 - Anschubfinanzierung aus dem Forschungsfonds der Universität Mannheim Projekt: Quellenvergessen bei jüngeren und älteren Erwachsenen – ein modellbasierter Ansatz - 2015–2016 - Anschubfinanzierung durch die Deutsche Gesellschaft für Online-Forschung (DGOF) e. V. Projekt: Alter(n)sgerechte Gestaltung von Webseiten: Ein kognitionspsychologischer Ansatz Interdisziplinäres Projekt in Kooperation mit Prof. Dr. Julia Krönung (Wirtschaftsinformatik) - Auszeichnungen und Stipendien- 2017 - Fellow of the Psychonomic Society - 2015 - Member-Select Speaker Award der Psychonomic Society - 2012–2013 - Dissertation Research Award von der American Psychological Association (APA) - 2011–2012 - John W. Lindsey Memorial Award, Department of Psychology, University of North Carolina at Greensboro - 2010–2011 - Elizabeth-Duffy-Award, Department of Psychology, University of North Carolina at Greensboro - 2009–2010 - Eine Gewinnerin (von 3) der Student Grant Competition, Association for Psychological Science (APS) 
- Publikationen- 2025- Berres, S., Erdfelder, E. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2025). Does sleep benefit source memory? Investigating 12-hr retention intervals with a multinomial modeling approach. Memory & Cognition, 53(2), 467–493. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13421-024-01579-8
- Tanyas, H., Liss, J. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2025). Information accumulation on the item versus source test of source monitoring: Insights from diffusion modeling. Memory & Cognition, 53(4), 1124–1139. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13421-024-01636-2
 - 2024- Sarafoglou, A., Kuhlmann, B. G., Aust, F. & Haaf, J. M. (2024). Refining Bayesian hierarchical MPT modeling: Integrating prior knowledge and ordinal expectations. Behavior Research Methods : BRM, 56, 6557–6581. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13428-024-02370-y
- Streitberger, C., Kuhlmann, B. G., Meier, M. E. & Arnold, N. R. (2024). Connecting working and long-term memory: Bayesian-hierarchical multinomial model-based analyses reveal storage next to retrieval differences. Memory & Cognition, 52(8), 1915–1927. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13421-024-01627-3
- Symeonidou, N. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2024). Enhanced source memory for emotionally valenced sources: Does an affective orienting task make the difference? Cognition and Emotion, 1–22 (i. E.). https://doi.org/10.1080/02699931.2024.2309707
- Zaborowska, O., Kuhlmann, B. G., Zawadzka, K. & Hanczakowski, M. (2024). When confidence reveals more than recognition performance does: The case of context load. Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 50(11), 1722–1739. https://doi.org/10.1037/xlm0001391
 - 2023- Geyer, S., Kuhlmann, B. G., Beller, J. & Grasshoff, J. (2023). The role of school education in time-dependent changes of cognitive abilities in cohorts from midlife to old age. Aging & Mental Health, 27(4), 729–735. https://doi.org/10.1080/13607863.2022.2068132
- Schaper, M. L., Kuhlmann, B. G. & Bayen, U. J. (2023). Metacognitive differentiation of item memory and source memory in schema-based source monitoring. Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 49(5), 743–765.
- Symeonidou, N., Hassan, A., Porstein, I. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2023). Is there an emotionality effect in older adults’ source memory? Aging, Neuropsychology, and Cognition, 30(5), 687–712. https://doi.org/10.1080/13825585.2022.2078778
- Tanyas, H. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2023). The temporal development of memory processes in source monitoring: An investigation with mouse tracking.. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review : PB&R, 30(6), 2305–2314. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13423-023-02289-z
 - 2022- Beller, J., Kuhlmann, B. G., Sperlich, S. & Geyer, S. (2022). Secular improvements in cognitive aging: contribution of education, health, and routine activities. Journal of Aging and Health, 34(6–8), 807–817. https://doi.org/10.1177/08982643211065571
 - 2021- Grasshoff, J., Beller, J., Kuhlmann, B. G. & Geyer, S. (2021). Increasingly capable at the ripe old age? Cognitive abilities from 2004 to 2013 in Germany, Spain, and Sweden. PLOS ONE, 16(7), 1–16. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0254038
- Kuhlmann, B. G., Brubaker, M. S., Pfeiffer, T. & Naveh-Benjamin, M. (2021). Longer resistance of associative versus item memory to interference-based forgetting, even in older adults. Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 47(3), 422–438. https://doi.org/10.1037/xlm0000963
- Kuhlmann, B. G., Symeonidou, N., Tanyas, H. & Wulff, L. (2021). Chapter three – Remembering and reconstructing episodic context: an overview of source monitoring methods and behavioral findings. The Psychology of Learning and Motivation, 75, 79–124. https://doi.org/10.1016/bs.plm.2021.06.002
- Mieth, L., Schaper, M. L., Kuhlmann, B. G. & Bell, R. (2021). Memory and metamemory for social interactions: Evidence for a metamemory expectancy illusion. Memory & Cognition, 49(1), 14–31. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13421-020-01071-z
- Symeonidou, N. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2021). A novel paradigm to assess storage of sources in memory: the source recognition test with reinstatement. Memory, 29(4), 507–523. https://doi.org/10.1080/09658211.2021.1910310
- Symeonidou, N. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2021). Better memory for emotional sources? A systematic evaluation of source valence and arousal in source memory.. Cognition and Emotion, 36(2), 300–316. https://doi.org/10.1080/02699931.2021.2008323
- Wulff, L., Bell, R., Mieth, L. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2021). Guess what? Different source-guessing strategies for old versus new information. Memory, 29(3), 416–426. https://doi.org/10.1080/09658211.2021.1900260
 - 2020- Kuhlmann, B. G., Frank, D. J. & Danner, D. (2020). Louder = larger = clearer : examining the consistency of metamemory illusions. Zeitschrift für Psychologie = Journal of Psychology, 228(4), 296–300. https://doi.org/10.1027/2151-2604/a000427
- Wulff, L. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2020). Is knowledge reliance in source guessing a cognitive trait? Examining stability across time and domain. Memory & Cognition, 48, 256–276. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13421-019-01008-1
 - 2019- Ernst, H. M., Kuhlmann, B. G. & Vogel, T. (2019). The origin of illusory correlations: Biased judgments converge with inferences, not with biased memory. Experimental Psychology, 66(3), 195–206. https://doi.org/10.1027/1618-3169/a000444
- Kuhlmann, B. G. (2019). Metacognition of prospective memory: Will I remember to remember? In J. Rummel (Hrsg.), Prospective memory (S. 60–77). London [u. a.]: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
- Kuhlmann, B. G. (2019). Topical issue on strategy contributions to cognitive aging. Open Psychology, 1(1), 317–322. https://doi.org/10.1515/psych-2018-0020
- Kuhlmann, B. G., Erdfelder, E. & Moshagen, M. (2019). Testing interactions in multinomial processing tree models. Frontiers in Psychology, 10(Article 2364). https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.02364
- Rummel, J., Danner, D. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2019). The short version of the Metacognitive Prospective Memory Inventory (MPMI-s): factor structure, reliability, validity, and reference data. Measurement Instruments for the Social Sciences : MISS, 1(1), 1–8. https://doi.org/10.1186/s42409-019-0008-6
- Schaper, M. L., Kuhlmann, B. G. & Bayen, U. J. (2019). Metacognitive expectancy effects in source monitoring: Beliefs, in-the-moment experiences, or both? Journal of Memory and Language : JML, 107, 95–110. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jml.2019.03.009
- Schaper, M. L., Kuhlmann, B. G. & Bayen, U. J. (2019). Metamemory expectancy illusion and schema-consistent guessing in source monitoring. Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 45(3), 470–496. https://doi.org/10.1037/xlm0000602
 - 2018- Kaiser, A., Kuhlmann, B. G. & Bosnjak, M. (2018). A meta-analysis of inhibitory-control deficits in patients diagnosed with Alzheimer's dementia. Neuropsychology, 32(5), 615–633. https://doi.org/10.1037/neu0000460
- Kuhlmann, B. G. & Undorf, M. (2018). Is all metamemory monitoring spared from aging? A dual-process examination. Psychology and Aging, 33(8), 1152–1167. https://doi.org/10.1037/pag0000318
 - 2017- Frank, D. J. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2017). More than just beliefs: experience and beliefs jointly contribute to volume effects on metacognitive judgments. Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 43(5), 680–693. https://doi.org/10.1037/xlm0000332
- Kuhlmann, B. G., Kornadt, A. E., Bayen, U. J., Meuser, K. & Wulff, L. (2017). Multidimensionality of younger and older adults’ age stereotypes : the interaction of life domain and adjective dimension. The Journals of Gerontology. Series B, Psychological and Social Sciences, 72(3), 436–440. https://doi.org/10.1093/geronb/gbv049
- Kuhlmann, B. G. & Touron, D. R. (2017). Relate it! Objective and subjective evaluation of mediator-based strategies for improving source memory in younger and older adults. Cortex, 91, 25–39. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cortex.2016.11.015
 - 2016- Kuhlmann, B. G. & Bayen, U. J. (2016). Metacognitive aspects of source monitoring. In J. Dunlosky (Hrsg.), The Oxford handbook of metamemory (S. 149–168). Oxford ; New York: Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199336746.013.8
- Kuhlmann, B. G., Bayen, U. J., Meuser, K. & Kornadt, A. E. (2016). The impact of age stereotypes on source monitoring in younger and older adults. Psychology and Aging, 31(8), 875–889. https://doi.org/10.1037/pag0000140
- Kuhlmann, B. G. & Boywitt, C. D. (2016). Aging, source memory, and the experience of „remembering“. Aging, Neuropsychology, and Cognition, 23(4), 477–498. https://doi.org/10.1080/13825585.2015.1120270
- Kuhlmann, B. G. & Touron, D. R. (2016). Aging and memory improvement through semantic clustering: The role of list-presentation format. Psychology and Aging, 31(7), 771–785. https://doi.org/10.1037/pag0000117
- Rummel, J., Marevic, I. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2016). Investigating storage and retrieval processes of directed forgetting: a model-based approach. Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 42(10), 1526–1543. https://doi.org/10.1037/xlm0000266
 - 2014- Kuhlmann, B. G. & Rummel, J. (2014). Context-specific prospective-memory processing: Evidence for flexible attention allocation adjustments after intention encoding. Memory & Cognition, 42(6), 943–949. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13421-014-0405-2
 - 2013- Arnold, N. R., Bayen, U. J., Kuhlmann, B. G. & Vaterrodt, B. (2013). Hierarchical modeling of contingency-based source monitoring: A test of the probability-matching account. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review : PB&R, 20(2), 326–333. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13423-012-0342-7
- Rummel, J., Kuhlmann, B. G. & Touron, D. R. (2013). Performance predictions affect attentional processes of event-based prospective memory. Consciousness and Cognition, 22(3), 729–741. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.concog.2013.04.012
 - 2012- Boywitt, C. D., Kuhlmann, B. G. & Meiser, T. (2012). The role of source memory in older adults' recollective experience. Psychology and Aging, 27(2), 484–497. https://doi.org/10.1037/a0024729
- Kuhlmann, B. G. & Touron, D. R. (2012). Mediator-based encoding strategies in source monitoring in young and older adults. Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 38(5), 1352–1364. https://doi.org/10.1037/a0027863
- Kuhlmann, B. G., Vaterrodt, B. & Bayen, U. J. (2012). Schema bias in source monitoring varies with encoding conditions: support for a probability-matching account. Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 38(5), 1365–1376. https://doi.org/10.1037/a0028147
 - 2011- Bayen, U. J. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2011). Influences of source–item contingency and schematic knowledge on source monitoring : Tests of the probability-matching account. Journal of Memory and Language : JML, 64(1), 1–17. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jml.2010.09.001
- Kuhlmann, B. G. & Touron, D. R. (2011). Older adults' use of metacognitive knowledge in source monitoring: spared monitoring but impaired control. Psychology and Aging, 26(1), 143–149. https://doi.org/10.1037/a0021055
 
- Konferenzbeiträge- Vorträge- Schönung, D. N., Symeonidou, N. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2024). Do older adults particularly benefit from conceptual emotional sources? A replication and extension of May et al. (2005). TeaP 2024, 66. Tagung experimentell arbeitender Psycholog:innen, Conference of Experimental Psychologists, Regensburg, Germany.
- Streitberger, C. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2024). Do we remember dually coded information better because of an advantage in storage or retrieval? 53. Kongress der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Psychologie (DGP) 2024, Wien, Austria.
- Streitberger, C. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2024). Three sides of one coin? Comparing storage and retrieval of three multinomial models. TeaP 2024, Tagung experimentell arbeitender Psycholog:innen (TeaP), Regensburg, Germany.
- Streitberger, C. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2023). Storage or retrieval underlying the picture superiority effect – That is the question. 64th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society, San Francisco, CA.
- Streitberger, C., Quevedo Pütter, J., Erdfelder, E. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2023). Are recall and recognition conditionally independent? Testing the retrieval independence assumption in multinomial modeling. ESCOP 2023, 23rd Conference of the European Society for Cognitive Psychology, Porto, Portugal.
- Streitberger, C., Quevedo Pütter, J., Erdfelder, E. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2023). Validation of free-recall-then-recognition multinomial processing tree model. TeaP 2023, 65. Tagung experimentell arbeitender Psycholog:innen, Conference of Experimental Psychologists, Trier, Germany.
- Symeonidou, N. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2023). Enhanced Source Memory for Emotional Sources: What Is the Role of Encoding Instructions? 65st Conference of Experimental Psychologists (TEAP), Trier, Germany.
- Tanyas, H., Kuhlmann, B. G. & Erdfelder, E. (2023). Testing the serial processing model of item and source retrieval: Applying the additive factor method to source monitoring. TeaP 2023, 65. Tagung experimentell arbeitender Psycholog:innenen, Conference of Experimental Psychologists, Trier, Germany.
- Tanyas, H., Liss, J. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2023). Information accumulation on the item versus source test of source monitoring: Insights from diffusion modeling. Psychonomics 2023, 64. Annual Meeting of Psychonomic Society, San Francisco, CA.
- Kuhlmann, B. G., Symeonidou, N., Tanyas, H., Schönung, D. N., Pinkinelli, J., Mitchell, K. & Naveh-Benjamin, M. (2022). Item versus source memory: Dissociations in forgetting patterns. TeaP 2022, 64. Tagung experimentell arbeitender Psycholog:innen, Online.
- Streitberger, C., Kuhlmann, B. G., Arnold, N. R. & Meier, M. E. (2022). Is working memory linked to encoding or retrieval processes in long-term memory? 63rd Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society, Boston, MA.
- Streitberger, C., Kuhlmann, B. G., Arnold, N. R. & Meier, M. E. (2022). Connecting working and long-term memory: A Bayesian-hierarchical multinomial modeling analysis of encoding and retrieval processes. 64. Tagung experimentell arbeitender Psycholog:innen (TeaP), Online.
- Symeonidou, N., Hassan, A., Porstein, I. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2022). Is there an age-related positivity effect in source memory? Cognitive Aging Conference 2022, Atlanta, GA.
- Tanyas, H., Kuhlmann, B. G. & Erdfelder, E. (2022). Do item and source memory operate in strict sequence? Application of the additive factor method on source monitoring. 8. International Symposium on Brain and Cognitive Science, Online.
- Tanyas, H., Kuhlmann, B. G. & Erdfelder, E. (2022). Does better memory render faster retrieval? Investigating the speed of memory processes in source monitoring. 63rd Annual Meeting, Psychonomic Society, Boston, MA.
- Tanyas, H., Kuhlmann, B. G. & Erdfelder, E. (2022). Estimating (guessing-corrected) speed of item and source memory: Extension of two-high-threshold multinomial model of source monitoring. TeaP 2022, 64. Tagung experimentell arbeitender Psycholog:innen, Online.
- Tanyas, H. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2021). Temporal Dynamics of Item and Source Memory: A Mouse-Tracking Study. 62nd Annual Meeting of Psychonomic Society, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA., New Orleans, LA, Hybrid.
- Tanyas, H., Misirlisoy, M. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2021). Are source monitoring processes affected by methodological differences? : An investigation of source presentation and testing. TeaP 2021, Online.
- Schaper, M. L., Kuhlmann, B. G. & Bayen, U. J. (2019). Judgments of Guessing partially correct the expectancy illusion on Judgments of Source. 61. Tagung experimentell arbeitender Psychologen (TeaP), London, United Kingdom.
- Singmann, H., Heck, D. W., Barth, M., Groß, J. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2019). A Bayesian and Frequentist multiverse pipeline for MPT models—applications to recognition memory. 61. Tagung experimentell arbeitender Psychologen (TeaP), London, United Kingdom.
- Symeonidou, N. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2019). Source reinstatement facilitates source retrieval. 61. Tagung experimentell arbeitender Psychologen (TeaP), London, United Kingdom.
- Wulff, L. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2019). Is source guessing automatic or controlled? Examining cognitive load and aging. 61. Tagung experimentell arbeitender Psychologen (TeaP), London, United Kingdom.
- Kuhlmann, B. G. & Rummel, J. (2018). Supporting older adults' adaptation to fast-changing context in prospective memory monitoring: Effects of implementation intentions and blocking. 5th International Conference on Prospective Memory (ICPM5), Melbourne, Australia.
- Wulff, L. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2018). Stereotype reliance in source guessing: Stability across time and stimulus domain. Psychonomics International, International Meeting of the Psychonomic Society, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
- Kuhlmann, B. G. (2017). I still remember where I saw this: No evidence for faster source forgetting in older adults. 59. Tagung experimentell arbeitender Psychologen (TeaP), Dresden, Germany.
- Kuhlmann, B. G. (2017). Ready … set … test! Exploring older adults’ adaptation to the expected memory-test format. Geneva Aging Series VI, St. Légier, Switzerland.
- Schaper, M. L., Kuhlmann, B. G. & Bayen, U. J. (2017). Consistency illusion in source monitoring: A-priori beliefs or in-the-moment experience? 59. Tagung experimentell arbeitender Psychologen (TeaP), Dresden, Germany.
- Wulff, L., Schaper, M. L., Kuhlmann, B. G., Bayen, U. J. & Meißner, F. (2017). Age stereotype reliance in source guessing: Implicit or explicit? 59. Tagung Experimentell Arbeitender Psychologen, Dresden, Germany.
- Kuhlmann, B. G. (2016). Expected test format moderates age-related differences in recognition memory. 6th International Conference on Memory, ICOM 6, Budapest, Hungary.
- Kuhlmann, B. G. (2016). Ready, set, recall! Revisiting the memory benefits of expecting a recall test. International Meeting of the Psychonomic Society 2016, Granada, Spain.
- Kuhlmann, B. G. & Rummel, J. (2016). Imagine *not* doing this! Can implementation intentions be used to prevent older adults' commission errors for completed intentions? Prospective Memory Workshop 2016, St. Légier, Switzerland.
- Marevic, I., Rummel, J. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2016). A multinomial modeling approach to separating storage and retrieval processes in list-method and item-method directed forgetting. 6th International Conference on Memory, ICOM 6, Budapest, Hungary.
- Schaper, M. L., Kuhlmann, B. G., Bayen, U. J. & Halbach, A.-L. (2016). Item-memory and source-memory predictions in schema-based source monitoring. 6th International Conference on Memory, ICOM 6, Budapest, Hungary.
- Wulff, L. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2016). Source guessing as a cognitive trait: Parameter stability across time. Seventh Annual JAGS and WinBUGS Workshop on “Bayesian Modeling for Cognitive Science”, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
- Kuhlmann, B. G., Kornadt, A. E., Bayen, U. J., Meuser, K. & Wulff, L. (2015). Hat das der Jüngere oder der Ältere gesagt? Einfluss von Altersstereotypen auf die Gedächtnisleistung. 22. Tagung der Fachgruppe Entwicklungspsychologie der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Psychologie (DGPs), Frankfurt, Germany.
- Kuhlmann, B. G. & Touron, D. R. (2014). Aging and memory improvement through semantic clustering: The role of list-presentation format. Cognitive Aging Conference 2014, Atlanta, GA.
- Kuhlmann, B. G. & Touron, D. R. (2014). Making memory better: Supporting semantic clustering in (older) adults with low working memory capacity. 3rd Geneva Aging Series, Geneva, Switzerland.
- Kuhlmann, B. G. & Touron, D. R. (2013). Gedächtnisverbesserung im Alter: Unterstützung von Kategorisierungsstrategien bei älteren Erwachsenen durch das Präsentationsformat. 21. Tagung der Fachgruppe Entwicklungspsychologie der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Psychologie (DGPs), Saarbrücken, Germany.
- Kuhlmann, B. G. & Touron, D. R. (2012). Age differences in source memory: An exploration of encoding strategy use. Cognitive Aging Conference 2012 / Society of Clinical Geropsychology, Atlanta, GA.
- Kuhlmann, B. G. & Touron, D. R. (2012). Individual and age-related differences in source memory: The role of mediator-based encoding strategies. Annual Meeting of the North Carolina Cognition Group, Chapel Hill, NC.
- Kuhlmann, B. G. & Sahakyan, L. (2011). When, where, what? Source memory for temporal, spatial, and perceptual details. Annual Meeting of the North Carolina Cognition Group, Greensboro, NC.
- Kuhlmann, B. G. & Touron, D. R. (2010). Younger and older adults’ metacognitive inferences for source monitoring. Southeastern Psychological Association SEPA Annual Meeting 2010, Chattanooga, TN.
- Kuhlmann, B. G. & Touron, D. R. (2010). Younger and older adults’ reliance on metacognitive knowledge in source monitoring. Cognitive Aging Conference 2010, Atlanta, GA.
 - Poster- Symeonidou, N. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2021). Emotional valence and arousal of sources does not improve source memory. In A. Huckauf, M. Baumann, M. Ernst, C. Herbert, M. Kiefer & M. Sauter (Hrsg.), TeaP@Home 2021 : Abstracts of the 63rd Conference of Experimental Psychologists, March 14 – 16, 2021, Ulm, Germany (S. 243–244). , Universität Ulm, Institut für Psycholigie und Pädagogik: Ulm.
- Symeonidou, N. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2021). Memory for emotional events: Do valence and arousal affect memory for contextual details? In G. W. Alpers (Hrsg.), Grundlagen- und Psychotherapieforschung Hand in Hand : 38. Symposium Klinische Psychologie und Psychotherapie, Mannheim, 12.05.-15.05.2021, Programm (S. 383). , Universität Mannheim Service & Marketing GmbH: Mannheim.
- Noeltner, M., Krönung, J. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2020). Disarming prejudice: how ease of use mitigates the detrimental effect of IT-based stereotype threat on the IT task performance of older adults. In 40th International Conference on Information Systems (ICIS 2019) : Munich, Germany, 15–18 December 2019 (S. 1–18). , Curran Associates, Inc.: Red Hook, NY.
- Symeonidou, N. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2020). Emotional content = better memory!? Source memory deficit for negative high-arousing sources. In C. Dobel, C. Giesen, L. A. Grigutsch, J. M. Kaufmann, G. Kovács, F. Meißner, K. Rothermund & S. R. Schweinberger (Hrsg.), TeaP 2020 : abstracts of the 62nd Conference of Experimental Psychologists : Jena, Germany March 22–25, 2020 (S. 302). , Pabst Science Publishers: Lengerich.
- Symeonidou, N. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2020). Rethinking source memory and guessing: General mechanisms and determinants. In C. Lange-Küttner (Hrsg.), TeaP 2019 : abstracts of the 61st Conference of Experimental Psychologists : 61. TeaP 2019 (Tagung Experimentell Arbeitender PsychologInnen) April, 15th to 17th, London, England, United Kingdom (S. ). , Pabst Science Publishers: Lengerich.
- Kuhlmann, B. G. (2019). Helping yourself and others remember: Age differences in self-generated memory cues. In 5th International Conference Aging & Cognition 2019 : April 24–26 : abstract book (S. 38). , University of Zurich: Zürich.
- Kuhlmann, B. G. (2018). Age-related differences in metacognitive monitoring and control when preparing for recall. In A. C. Schütz (Hrsg.), 60. TeaP 2018 : abstracts of the 60th Conference of Experimental Psychologists : March, 11th to 14th Marburg, Germany (S. 145). , Pabst Science Publishers: Lengerich.
- Kuhlmann, B. G. (2018). Can older adults flexibly adapt encoding to the expected memory-test format? Evidence from expecting free versus cued recall. In Abstracts of the Psychonomic Society : 59th Annual Meeting, November 2018 (S. 218). Abstracts / Psychonomic Society : ... Annual Meeting, Psychonomic Society: Madison, WI.
- Kuhlmann, B. G. (2018). Ready ... set ... test! Examining older adults' adaptation to the expected memory-test format. In 2018 Cognitive Aging Conference : 2018 CAC Plenary Program (S. 34). , Georgia Institute of Technology: Atlanta, GA.
- Kuhlmann, B. G., Brubaker, M. S., Pfeiffer, T., Bröder, A. & Naveh-Benjamin, M. (2018). Aging and interference in item vs. associative memory: Better interference-resistance of associative memory, even in older adults. In 2018 Cognitive Aging Conference : 2018 CAC Poster Abstracts (S. 312). , Georgia Institute of Technology: Atlanta, GA.
- Rummel, J., Hicks, J. L. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2018). Prospective-memory associated attentional decoupling is context dependent. In Abstracts of the Psychonomic Society : 59th Annual Meeting, November 2018 (S. 223). Abstracts / Psychonomic Society : ... Annual Meeting, Psychonomic Society: Madison, WI.
- Wulff, L. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2018). Stereotype reliance in source guessing: State versus cognitive trait? In A. C. Schütz (Hrsg.), 60. TeaP 2018 : abstracts of the 60th Conference of Experimental Psychologists : March, 11th to 14th Marburg, Germany (S. 299). , Pabst Science Publishers: Lengerich.
- Kuhlmann, B. G., Bröder, A. & Pfeiffer, T. (2017). Differential short-term interference in item versus source memory: Resistance of source memory, even in older adults. In 58th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society : Vancover, British Columbia, Canada, 9–12 September 2017 : Abstracts (S. 6). Abstracts / Psychonomic Society : ... Annual Meeting, Psychonomic Society: Madison, WI.
- Kuhlmann, B. G. (2016). Beware of free recall! Age-related deficit in adapting study behavior to the memory-test format. In J. Funke (Hrsg.), TeaP 2016 : abstracts of the 58th Conference of Experimental Psychologists : Heidelberg, Germany, March, 21–23, 2016 (S. 179). , Pabst Science Publishers: Lengerich.
- Kuhlmann, B. G. (2016). Differential forgetting in item versus source memory over a 1-hour delay: Perfect maintenance of source memory, even in older adults. In 57th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society : November 2016 : book of abstracts (S. 144). Abstracts / Psychonomic Society : ... Annual Meeting, Psychonomic Society: Austin, TX.
- Panitz, J., Kuhlmann, B. G. & Besken, M. (2016). The influence of deception on memory and metamemory: A multinomial processing tree analysis. In J. Funke (Hrsg.), TeaP 2016 : abstracts of the 58th Conference of Experimental Psychologists : Heidelberg, Germany, March, 21–23, 2016 (S. 246). , Pabst Science Publishers: Lengerich.
- Rummel, J. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2016). Metacognitive awareness and prospective memory: Understanding the cue-focality effect. In J. Funke (Hrsg.), TeaP 2016 : abstracts of the 58th Conference of Experimental Psychologists : Heidelberg, Germany, March, 21–23, 2016 (S. 281). , Pabst Science Publishers: Lengerich.
- Schaper, M. L., Kuhlmann, B. G., Bayen, U. J. & Halbach, A.-L. (2016). Is schema-consistent source guessing compensatory? In J. Funke (Hrsg.), TeaP 2016 : abstracts of the 58th Conference of Experimental Psychologists : Heidelberg, Germany, March, 21–23, 2016 (S. 287–288). , Pabst Science Publishers: Lengerich.
- Kuhlmann, B. G. (2015). If it’s loud I’ll remember all about it! Metacognitive illusions about volume in source monitoring. In 56th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society : November 19 – 22 Chicago, Illinois, USA : Abstracts (S. 6). Abstracts / Psychonomic Society : ... Annual Meeting, Psychonomic Society: Madison, WI.
- Kuhlmann, B. G. (2015). Loud = Better! Metacognitive illusions about volume transfer to source memory and bias source attributions. In C. Bermeitinger (Hrsg.), TeaP 2015 : Abstracts of the 57th Conference of Experimental Psychologists : Hildesheim, Germany, March, 8–11, 2015 (S. 149). , Pabst Science Publishers: Lengerich.
- Rummel, J., Marevic, I. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2015). Different methods, different processes? A multinomial modeling approach to the investigation of directed forgetting processes. In 56th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society : November 19 – 22 Chicago, Illinois, USA : Abstracts (S. 166). Abstracts / Psychonomic Society : ... Annual Meeting, Psychonomic Society: Madison, WI.
- Undorf, M. & Kuhlmann, B. G. (2015). How and what am I doing? New findings on metacognitive monitoring and control. In C. Bermeitinger (Hrsg.), TeaP 2015 : Abstracts of the 57th Conference of Experimental Psychologists : Hildesheim, Germany, March, 8–11, 2015 (S. 20). , Pabst Science Publishers: Lengerich.