Deutsch Intern
Department of Psychology I – Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy

M. Sc. Isabel Neumann

Julius-Maximilians-Universität
Department for Psychology I
Marcusstr. 9-11
97070 Würzburg

Room: 111

Phone: +49 931 31-89156
E-Mail: isabel.neumann@uni-wuerzburg.de

ORCID:  0000-0003-1704-9890
Google Scholar: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=FNd9gxgAAAAJ&hl=de

Since 11/2023 Psychotherapeutic trainee at the University Hospital Würzburg, Clinic for Psychiatry, Psychosomatic and Psychotherapy

Since 10/2023

Training as a Psychological Psychotherapist (behavioral therapy) at the WAPP of the University of Würzburg

Since 2022

Research associate in the BMBF project “Relief-VR“at the Department of Psychology I at University of Würzburg in the working group Biological Psychology, Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapie of Prof. Dr. Paul Pauli/ Prof. Dr. Katja Bertsch in cooperation with the Center for Interdisciplinary Pain Medicine at the University Hospital Würzburg

05/2022 – 10/2022

Research visit at the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences at Dartmouth College (USA) in the CANlab of Prof. Tor Wager

Since 2020

PhD student at the Department of Psychology I at University of Würzburg in the working group Biological Psychology, Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapie of Prof. Dr. Paul Pauli

10/2019 – 02/2022 

Tutor for the lecture Clinical Psychology (bachelor) at the Department of Psychology I at University of Würzburg in the working group Biological Psychology, Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapie of Prof. Dr. Paul Pauli

2013 - 2019

Studied psychology at the University of Würzburg

  • Pain and Pain Modulation
  • Psychosocial Influences on Pain
  • Virtual Reality
  • Psychophysiology (EDA, ECG)

Neumann, I., Pauli, P., Andreatta, M., & Käthner, I. (2024). Social support of virtual characters reduces pain perception. European Journal of Pain, 28(806-820). https://doi.org/10.1002/ejp.2220

Neumann, I., Käthner, I., Gromer, D., & Pauli, P. (2023). Impact of perceived social support on pain perception in virtual reality. Computers in Human Behavior, 139, 107490. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chb.2022.107490