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Pierpaolo Pani
PeerJ Editor & Reviewer
415 Points

Contributions by role

Reviewer 15
Editor 400

Contributions by subject area

Neuroscience
Psychiatry and Psychology
Human-Computer Interaction
Clinical Trials
Nursing
Mental Health
COVID-19

Pierpaolo Pani

PeerJ Editor & Reviewer

Summary

Dr. Pierpaolo Pani is a Associate Professor within the Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, SAPIENZA, University of Rome. He received a MSc in Experimental Psychology and PhD in Neurophysiolgy (Behavioral and Integrative) at Sapienza University (Rome), and was a post-doc in KULeuven (Laboratory for Neuro- and Psychophysiology).

Dr. Pani's main topics of investigation include Cognitive control, executive functions, goal-oriented behavior and decision making. These topics include behavioral and psychophysiological investigations in humans; behavioral and neuronal dynamics investigations in mammals; characterization of executive functions control in psychiatric conditions.

Animal Behavior Cognitive Disorders Human-Computer Interaction Mental Health Neural Networks Neuroscience Psychiatry & Psychology Translational Medicine

Editorial Board Member

PeerJ - the Journal of Life & Environmental Sciences

Past or current institution affiliations

University of Roma "La Sapienza"

Work details

Associate Professor

University of Roma "La Sapienza"
May 2022
Physiology and Pharmacology
Associate Professor of Physiology

Websites

  • Google Scholar

PeerJ Contributions

  • Edited 3

Academic Editor on

September 19, 2024
The effect of electrical muscle stimulation on intentional binding and explicit sense of agency
Miwa Nagai, Kazuhiro Matsui, Keita Atsuumi, Kazuhiro Taniguchi, Hiroaki Hirai, Atsushi Nishikawa
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.17977 PubMed 39308820
July 24, 2024
Cognitive-behavioral treatment for insomnia and mindfulness-based stress reduction in nurses with insomnia: a non-inferiority internet delivered randomized controlled trial
Wanran Guo, Nabi Nazari, Masoud Sadeghi
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.17491 PubMed 39071123
October 10, 2023
Repeated response execution and inhibition alter subjective preferences but do not affect automatic approach and avoidance tendencies toward an object
Izumi Matsuda, Hiroshi Nittono
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.16275 PubMed 37842069