I am the lead researcher (principal investigator) of the Muslim Diversity Study, currently working as a postdoctoral research fellow and lecturer in the School of Psychology, Speech and Hearing at the University of Canterbury (Christchurch, New Zealand).
In the multi-city longitudinal Muslim Diversity Study, my team and I concentrate on investigating the effects of religion on social attitudes, values, resilience, flourishing, meaning-making, overall well-being, and experiences of Muslims in New Zealand. In this capacity, I lead a team of 28 research assistants
and numerous collaborators, fostering a collaborative and enriching research environment.
During PhD, I received training in cognitive psychology and neuroscience, with a primary emphasis on memory suppression and utilising brainwave (EEG/ERP) data to examine possession of criminal knowledge. Additionally, my research encompasses contemplative neuroscience, where I aim to explore neural correlates of contemplative practices.
I use experimental (behavioural as well as neuroscientific) and observational research methods.
Since the end of 2022, I have been using GitHub
with RStudio
and Quarto
to learn, produce, and share code. Occasionally, I use Matlab
and Python
too.
- Human flourishing
- Psychology of religion
- Contemplative neuroscience
- Cognitive psychology: memory suppression
- Forensic neuroscience
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As PI and postdoctoral research fellow in the
Muslim Diversity Study
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As PI in
Controlling unwanted memories: A multisite registered replication of the Think/No-Think effect
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As PI in
Resting EEG microstates during contemplative practices
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As PI in the
Artificial Intelligence-Based Crime Detection in Aotearoa: Real-life and Virtual Reality Applications
Since 2021, I have developed a track record of effective leading and supervising research at different levels (PhD, Masters, and Honours).
My experience encompasses teaching statistics, research methods, cognitive psychology, and neuroscience, consistently earning positive feedback each year. I take pride in my ability to embrace constructive criticism and continuously enhance my teaching approach. Currently, I teach the following courses:
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Postgraduate Computational Contemplative-Neuroscience (2023-Present)
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Undergraduate Intermediate Research Methods and Statistics (2022-2024)
My immediate goal is to become a permanent (tenure-track) lecturer in psychology
. Psychology and science fascinate me a great deal and my lifelong goal is to conduct good science and contribute to open science.
For more information, please check my website.