Camice Revier is a Postgraduate of Psychiatry at the University of Cambridge. Her research is aimed at expanding the evidence and understanding of the relationship between sleep and social recovery in psychosis. With a secondary aim of examining the mediating effects of changes in cognition as part of the causal pathway. The initiation of this research is based on the findings from her analysis of the National EDEN study, which provided evidence that duration of sleep contributes significantly to social recovery outcomes.
Kirsten is a first-year PhD student working across the Department of Psychology and the MRC Epidemiology Unit. She is broadly interested in understanding the social and cognitive factors around diet choices and eating behaviours in adolescents. Before beginning her PhD, she was working within the Blakemore lab as a research assistant, investigating the impact of social isolation in adolescents, particularly focused on peer influences.
I am a PhD student in Clinical Neurosciences at University of Cambridge, working on developing a vascularized brain organoid/assembiod model for studying neurodegenerative diseases (eg., ALS/FTD) in Dr. Andras Lakatos' lab (Department of Clinical Neurosciences) and Professor Yan Yan Shery Huang's lab (Department of Engineering).
Noam graduated with a PhD in Psychology from Tel Aviv University School of Psychological Sciences and was a Rothschild Postdoctoral Fellow at the Department of Experimental Psychology at the University of Oxford. He holds a special interest in meta-science, research integrity, and applied statistics, both within the Social Sciences and more broadly in research systems.