# Research assistant
Sarah Delobel is a psychologist and research assistant at the Laboratory of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology (CENLab) at the University of Geneva. She contributes to projects investigating the cognitive and affective roles of the cerebellum in post-stroke patients, as well as to experimental studies exploring the links between emotion and habitual learning. She is also a teaching assistant at the Geneva Motivation Lab, where she contributes to the course Exploration of Automatic Cognitive Processes: Cognitive Biases, Priming, and Implicit Memory.
She holds a Master’s degree in Integrative Clinical Psychology with a Cognitive Orientation from the University of Geneva and currently works as an assistant psychologist in neuropsychology at the Fondation des Aigues-Vertes. There, she conducts neuropsychological assessments and interventions with individuals presenting intellectual disabilities associated with psychiatric disorders.
She has also collaborated as a research assistant at the Geneva Motivation Lab and co-authored an article (with Dr. Framorando) on bilateral stimulation of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortices (F3/F4) and motivation. Her master’s thesis, supervised by Prof. Julie Péron and Isabele Jacot de Alcântara, focused on personality, cognition, and psychopathology in multiple sclerosis.
As part of her master’s program, she also completed a clinical internship at the Developmental Psychiatry Unit (UPDM) of the Geneva University Hospitals, where she deepened her clinical reasoning and interest in neurodevelopmental and psychiatric disorders.
Before that, she worked at the eccePAN Laboratory (Ecology, Cognition, Communication, Emotion) on the impact of emotional context on social learning in children.
Her research interests include clinical and fundamental neuropsychology, affective and cognitive neuroscience, as well as integrative and innovative approaches involving psychiatry, neurology, neuromodulation, and electrophysiology.
Publications
Framorando, D., Delobel, S., & Razzetto, A. (submitted). High-Definition tDCS of the DLPFC: Effects on Effort-Related Cardiac Reactivity Across Sexes. Manuscript submitted for publication, Psychophysiology.
Delobel, S. (2025). Personnalité, cognition et psychopathologie dans la sclérose en plaques [Master’s thesis, University of Geneva].