I hold a B.Sc. in Psychology from the Technical University of Braunschweig, Germany and an M.Sc. in Psychology with a specialization in Environmental Psychology/Human-Technology Interaction from Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg, Germany. Previously, I worked as a researcher on the human dimensions of autonomous micromobility and active transport in an EU-funded project.
Currently, I am pursuing my Ph.D. at the Department of Psychology at NTNU. I am a member of the research group Citizens, Environment and Safety (CES) and the interdisciplinary PhD cluster Sustainable Mobility (S-MOB). My PhD project focuses on Norwegians' conceptions of sustainable mobility, the perceived sustainability of electric vehicles in the context of UN's Sustainable Development Goals and what can be done to make electric vehicles even more sustainable.
Additionally, I have been involved in a pre-project on carpooling and ride-sharing with Trøndelag Fylkeskommune and as a researcher in the EU project ACCTING, focusing on bottom-up initiatives in energy and transport poverty.