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Author: Aleš Oblak

Bio Note: Aleš Oblak is currently working on his master’s thesis within The Middle European Master’s Programme in Cognitive Science at the University of Ljubljana. His background is in linguistics, but now he is focusing on the phenomenology of memory, specifically on the experiential structure of mnemonic representations in working memory. His main interests are neurophenomenology, epistemology, philosophy of science, and research methodologies.
Affiliation: University of Ljubljana, Slovenia
Publications in Constructivist Foundations
Oblak A. (2022) Steps towards a constructivist psychiatry. Constructivist Foundations 17(2): 169–173. https://constructivist.info/17/2/169
Oblak A. (2022) For and against theory: Some notes on doing neurophenomenology. Constructivist Foundations 17(2): 115–119. https://constructivist.info/17/2/115
Oblak A. (2021) Accusatives, deixis, and pointing fingers. Constructivist Foundations 17(1): 020–022. https://constructivist.info/17/1/020
Oblak A., Boyadzhieva A. & Bon J. (2021) Author’s response: The boundaries and frontiers of perceptual presence. Constructivist Foundations 16(3): 322–326. https://constructivist.info/16/3/322
Oblak A., Boyadzhieva A. & Bon J. (2021) Phenomenological properties of perceptual presence: A constructivist grounded theory approach. Constructivist Foundations 16(3): 295–308. https://constructivist.info/16/3/295
Oblak A. (2021) The hell of being who one ordinarily is: Is it possible to construct stable phenomenological traits of mood disorders? Constructivist Foundations 16(2): 227–229. https://constructivist.info/16/2/227
Oblak A. (2020) Author’s response: Does naturalistic first-person research need methodological pluralism? Constructivist Foundations 15(3): 266–270. https://constructivist.info/15/3/266
Oblak A. (2020) Visual representation in the wild: Empirical phenomenological investigation of visual-spatial working memory in a naturalistic setting. Constructivist Foundations 15(3): 238–250. https://constructivist.info/15/3/238
Oblak A. & Kordeš U. (2018) Neurophenomenology: Ontological remedy for the hard problem? Constructivist Foundations 14(1): 59–61. http://constructivist.info/14/1/059
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