About
I am a Research Assistant at the Quality and Usability Lab at Technische Universität Berlin, supervised by Prof. Sebastian Möller and Jun.-Prof. Robert P. Spang. I measure how humans perceive and respond to technology, through psychophysiological and subjective measurements. For my Master's thesis, I am investigating how immersive virtual environments affect students' information retention and learning outcomes.
I am increasingly interested in applying these methods to questions about Human-AI Interaction: how people form mental models of AI systems, how conversational AI shapes behaviour and cognition, and how to evaluate its societal and psychological impact. I am currently seeking PhD positions in this field — please feel free to reach out at leon.schreiber@tu-berlin.de.
Download CVResearch Interests
Human-Computer Interaction · Human-AI Interaction · XR · Psychophysiological Measurement · Societal Impact of AI Systems
Publications
Improving a Pupillometry Signal Through Video Luminance Modulation
- Demo Paper Hear the Echo: A Tool for Real-Time Simulation and Conversation Analysis
- Short Paper Depth Matters: Quality of Experience in Stereoscopic 3D versus Conventional 2D Video Telephony
- Short Paper Gaze in the Machine: The Paradox of Artificial Eye Contact in Video Calls
- Short Paper Assessing the Impact of Echo on Conversations in Real-Time Communication Systems
Some of my free time is spent coding and doing photography.
Feel free to challenge me on lichess (I am not a good chess player).