BATES Kathryn's profile
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BATES KathrynORCID_LOGO

  • Department of Psychology, Kings College London, London, United Kingdom
  • Humanities, Medical Sciences, Social sciences

Recommendations:  0

Review:  1

Areas of expertise
Kathryn’s research seeks to understand how individual differences in brain, cognition, and environment impact youth development to create solutions to support all young people to thrive. She works with stakeholders, including lived experienced young people, charities, and support practitioners, in her research and science communication. She is currently a Co-Investigator on an ESRC-funded project using mixed methods to understand loneliness in socio-economically marginalised young people (PI: Dr Delia Fuhrmann). Kathryn writes regularly for multiple digital platforms on learning and development for parents and teachers (see examples here). In December 2021, she received a competitive KCL/Wellcome Trust Public Engagement grant to co-produce a podcast with young people on youth mental health. We created The Science or Fiction Podcast where we interview researchers to separate the science from the fiction in news headlines on mental health. You can find links to listen and further information here: www.scienceorfiction.co.uk. Catch new episodes on the first Monday of every month.

Review:  1

28 Mar 2024
STAGE 1

Working memory performance in adverse environments: Enhanced, impaired, or intact?

A closer look at working memory changing with adversity

Recommended by based on reviews by Kathryn Bates and 1 anonymous reviewer
Adverse environments involving threat, uncertainty, deprivation and stress can cause significant and long-lasting harm to cognition and development. In this Stage 1 protocol, Vermeent and colleagues (2024) aim to simultaneously test with a single paradigm and statistical model for findings from previous studies showing that human working memory capacity is impaired in adverse environments, as well as other evidence suggesting that adversity may actually enhance updating of working memory. Furthermore, they will also investigate whether working memory is related to each of the adversity types: threat, deprivation, and unpredictability.
 
The findings of this study should help clarify how working memory functions in combination with adversity, and will provide insight into the development of better interventions and training methods for optimal performance in a variety of environments.
 
The manuscript was reviewed by two experts and the recommender. Following two rounds of peer review, and based on detailed responses to the reviewers' comments, I, the recommender, judged that the manuscript met the Stage 1 criteria and therefore awarded in-principle acceptance (IPA).
 
URL to the preregistered Stage 1 protocol: https://osf.io/dp7wc
 
Level of bias control achieved: Level 3. At least some data/evidence that will be used to the answer the research question has been previously accessed by the authors (e.g. downloaded or otherwise received), but the authors certify that they have not yet observed ANY part of the data/evidence.
 
List of eligible PCI RR-friendly journals:
 
References

1. Vermeent, S., Schubert, A.-L., DeJoseph, M. L., Denissen, J. J. A, van Gelder, J.-L. & Frankenhuis, W. E. (2024). Working memory performance in adverse environments: Enhanced, impaired, or intact? In principle acceptance of Version 2 by Peer Community in Registered Reports. https://osf.io/dp7wc
avatar

BATES KathrynORCID_LOGO

  • Department of Psychology, Kings College London, London, United Kingdom
  • Humanities, Medical Sciences, Social sciences

Recommendations:  0

Review:  1

Areas of expertise
Kathryn’s research seeks to understand how individual differences in brain, cognition, and environment impact youth development to create solutions to support all young people to thrive. She works with stakeholders, including lived experienced young people, charities, and support practitioners, in her research and science communication. She is currently a Co-Investigator on an ESRC-funded project using mixed methods to understand loneliness in socio-economically marginalised young people (PI: Dr Delia Fuhrmann). Kathryn writes regularly for multiple digital platforms on learning and development for parents and teachers (see examples here). In December 2021, she received a competitive KCL/Wellcome Trust Public Engagement grant to co-produce a podcast with young people on youth mental health. We created The Science or Fiction Podcast where we interview researchers to separate the science from the fiction in news headlines on mental health. You can find links to listen and further information here: www.scienceorfiction.co.uk. Catch new episodes on the first Monday of every month.