Aoife Fitzpatrick

Dr.

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Dr. Aoife Fitzpatrick (BSc, MSc, PhD) is an Assistant Professor in the School of Psychology, Dublin City University. Aoife completed her Bachelor of Science in Psychology at Maynooth University. She undertook her postgraduate training at the School of Psychology in Bangor University, North Wales, beginning with a Masters degree in the Foundations of Clinical Neuropsychology. Following this programme, Aoife completed a PhD in Cognitive Neuroscience at the Hand and Brain lab under the supervision of Dr. Ken Valyear.

Aoife then moved to Rome, Italy, to take up a postdoctoral research position in the Neuroscience and Behaviour Laboratory led by Prof. Giandomenico Iannetti at the Centre for Life, Nano, and Neuro Sciences at the Italian Institute of Technology (CLN2S@IIT). During her postdoctoral position, she gained a wide range of experience in the fields of sensorimotor neuroscience and motor decision-making, using cross-species electrophysiological and computational modelling methods.

Aoife teaches a number of modules including Biological Psychology and Neuropsychology in the School of Psychology across programmes including the BSc. in Psychology, and two programmes of the DCU Futures initiative - BSc. in Psychology and Mathematics and BSc. in Psychology and Disruptive Technologies. 

Peer Reviewed Journal

Year Publication
2022 Aoife M. Fitzpatrick; Victor Frak; Neil M. Dundon; Kenneth F. Valyear (2022) 'Hand choice is unaffected by high frequency continuous theta burst transcranial magnetic stimulation to the posterior parietal cortex'. PLoS ONE, . [Link] [DOI]
2019 (2019) 'The neural basis of hand choice: An fMRI investigation of the Posterior Parietal Interhemispheric Competition model'. NeuroImage, . [Link] [DOI]
2019 (2019) 'Now and then: Hand choice is influenced by recent action history'. Psychonomic Bulletin and Review, . [Link] [DOI]

Book Chapter

Year Publication
2016 (2016) 'The Neuroscience of Human Tool Use' In: Evolution of Nervous Systems.

Pre-print

Year Publication
2022 Aoife M. Fitzpatrick; Neil M. Dundon; Kenneth F. Valyear (2022) No effects of offline high frequency transcranial magnetic stimulation to posterior parietal cortex on the choice of which hand to use to perform a reaching task. PREPRINT [Link] [DOI]
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