Nathalia Gjersoe
My research uses both these techniques with a focus on exploring the causes and consequences of cognitive biases and how they can be disrupted. I have a special interest in our relationship with objects and how we negotiate magical thinking and science learning as children and adults. As a consequence of my research interests, I also do a lot of public engagement with children, schools, adults and special communities. I speak regularly on radio and TV and co-host the psychology blog Head Quarters on the Guardian science blog network. I offer staff training for child-based exhibitions and performance and am a frequent consultant for children's TV programming.
I completed my undergraduate training at Edinburgh University which led to a research position with the Scottish Executive, informing policy decisions on childcare. This was followed by a research position with the Transport Research Institute, looking at pedestrian interaction in urban spaces to inform infrastructure design. I gained my PhD from Bristol University, examining developmental change in the way that pre-schoolers weigh up and integrate visual cues to decide what to believe. This led to several successful research grants with the Bristol Cognitive Development Centre exploring the developmental roots and neural correlates of magical thinking. Before starting at the University of Bath, I was a lecturer at Bristol University and the Open University. I am currently the Convenor for the 1st Year core unit 'Representations of Childhood and Youth' and the 2nd Year core unit 'Developmental Psychology.' I am the Chair of the Ethics Committee for the Department of Psychology and sit on the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Ethics Committee and the University Ethics Committee.
Experience- present Lecturer Developmental Psychology, The Open University
- 2008 Bristol University, Developmental Psychology
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