Brain biomarkers and effective interventions to tackle global poverty from birth

Lead Research Organisation: University of Cambridge
Department Name: Psychology

Abstract

Poverty in early years of life can have devastating effects on cognitive development and mental health. A baby's first 1000 days (from conception to two years of age) are a critical window of vulnerability to exposure to socio-economic and health challenges (i.e. poverty/undernutrition/prematurity). In the UK, it is estimated that 4 million children are raised in households in relative poverty compared with typical UK living standards. At a global level, the impact of poverty is reflected by one third of children in developing countries failing to reach their developmental milestones in cognitive and/or socio-emotional growth. This compromised development, of a core set of age-appropriate skills, has a significant impact on subsequent academic achievement, mental health and economic status. However, the impact of poverty on subsequent brain and cognitive development is rarely studied until later childhood, and into adulthood, when intervention strategies become less effective. For one such global health challenge - developmental disorders - prospective longitudinal studies using neuroscientific tools to study early brain development within high-income settings, have allowed major advances in finding early biomarkers of risk during the first year of life. These studies have recently led to the application of several promising intervention programmes. However, in order to apply this model to the study of cross-cultural global health challenges in low-income settings, we first need to make significant advances in; (i) the applicability of brain imaging for research outside of the lab to better access socially disadvantaged populations, (ii) our understanding of the impact of poverty on brain development and (iii) the development of population-tailored early intervention strategies

To date, global health research has been largely limited to the use of behavioural assessments to measure the effect of exposure to early poverty. However, observable changes in behaviour are often only evident towards the second year of life - despite significantly earlier changes in brain functional and anatomical specialisation - potentially limiting our ability to effectively intervene. Assessing impairment at school age and attempting to retrospectively decode the cascading effects of early environmental insults is unlikely to reveal clear and reliable targets for intervention. It is therefore imperative that neurocognitive development is studied longitudinally, taking contemporaneous measurements of brain function in parallel with measurements of exposure to environmental challenges.

The objective of this interdisciplinary fellowship is to push frontiers in the study of the impact of poverty on brain development, and to intervene in the global, cross-cultural challenges inherent in early adversity. This objective will be pursued through the study of brain and cognitive development in infants from birth, through their first months and years of life across multiple populations. My long-term goal is that, upon completion of this fellowship, I will have provided a mechanism for a shift in the focus of national and international global health projects - away from measuring outcome of poverty in later childhood and adulthood, and towards providing a pathway for protecting infants through intervention in the first days and months of life. To achieve this, I will have (i) determined appropriate low cost, population-tailored early adversity interventions for use in parallel with a widely-applicable developmental brain imaging toolkit, (ii) established a public engagement platform providing early support for parents and families, and (iii) sought opportunities to influence government policy in the area of child development in the UK and partnering sites.

Planned Impact

Approximately 1 in 4 children in the UK are estimated to be living in poverty, with estimates of those living in extreme poverty ($1.9 per day) in Europe at 1.4%, rising to ~50% in Sub-Saharan Africa (UNICEF and World Bank report, 2016). Socially disadvantaged families living in poverty experience considerable burden and the cost to the individual, their family and society can be long-lasting, affecting educational attainment, mental health and wellbeing and subsequent economic growth. Recent estimates of the UK annual societal cost of poverty exceed £78 billion. For children's services the amount spent on poverty equates to 40% of the early years budget. While the development of new methodology has led to huge advances in our understanding of brain and cognitive development over the last decade, this research has been largely restricted to financially mobile participants within high-income settings. Whether in the UK, or at a global level, socially, culturally or financially disadvantaged groups - those most at risk for experiencing socio-economic and health challenges - are far less likely to participate in research. Given that the majority of research is undertaken in cities, where a child lives may also affect access to research and support, as 8 in 10 children living in extreme poverty are from rural, rather than urban, areas. I want to radically change the way that we study families living in low resource areas by bringing tools to measure brain development into the home- and community- settings.

This innovative approach will have benefit to a range of users: for the purposes of my fellowship it will allow me realise my goals to: (1) better understand the impact of poverty on neurocognitive development in the understudied but critical early post-natal period within individuals living in low resource families in the UK; (2) develop appropriate intervention programmes for parents to support early child development and; (3) be of minimum burden to families with young infants. Alongside this, I aim to take a contextualised approach to my research, empowering and engaging the community to provide input to my research plans; and discover who will, and how, they would most benefit from this work. Following this, I want to expand appropriate intervention development to Africa. Initially I will target a sub-set of the population for significant impact in rural Gambia to address undernutrition, then building on this to target an urban population in South Africa to address early adversity. Subsequently, my work will have a wider reach to other African sites and potentially a range of global contexts. I will continue to monitor, review and update impact policies during the project lifecycle, focusing initially on the UK and thereafter moving to an African and multinational perspective.

I envisage several groups of non-academic beneficiaries for our research; (i) individuals with a general interest in child development, and those about to transition into parenthood; (ii) industry and researchers who require access to new tools for research and clinical care; (iii) policy-makers within government interested in tackling poverty and supporting early child development (e.g. "The 1001 critical days" Cross-party manifesto, 2014) to improve economic growth and welfare by increasing the effectiveness of early life public services; (iv) policy makers and associations in Africa interested in investment in science, technology and social prosperity across the continent (i.e. African Academy of Sciences' strategy to drive scientific and technological development in Africa) by enhancing skills development within rural regions and fostering improvements in economic growth and; (v) charities and associations both in the UK (Child Poverty Action Group,) and at an international level (Academics Against Poverty), who provide educational resources, support and healthcare for individuals living in poverty.

Publications

10 25 50

publication icon
Ilyka D (2021) Infant social interactions and brain development: A systematic review in Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews

 
Description Our first 1000 days (from conception to two years of age) are a critical window of vulnerability from exposure to stress, socio-economic and health challenges. As part of this award we pivoted to supporting and documenting the experiences of families going through pregnancy, parenting and infancy during the COVID-19 pandemic by establishing the CoCoPIP Study. Key findings to date include identifying that changes to healthcare provision in the first year of the pandemic increased parents' anxiety levels, and feelings of not being supported. Our findings highlight the need for compensatory social and emotional support for new and expectant parents during times of uncertainty such as a future pandemic or the current cost of living crisis. Furthermore, through a collaboration with a photographer and new parent we profiled parent's experiences during the pandemic in photographs, interviews and study findings in posts on social media, news articles and through public engagement events allowing unrepresented voices to be heard. This has led to our collaborator receiving a photography award, and to widening his photography project on social media to recording the lived experiences of midwives through the pandemic to give them a greater voice.
Exploitation Route By combining our research findings, and continued data collection and analysis of our nationally representative CoCoPIP cohort with research findings from across the world we will continue to measure the impact of COVID-19 on families across the UK so that we can 1) develop an evidence base for future policy to support the adjustment of families in this current crisis and in future public health emergencies, 2) identify those most vulnerable in 'generation COVID' who may benefit from early intervention and 3) increase participation, and insight into the experience, of underrepresented regional/socio- economic and ethnic groups across the UK. For example, we are now following up to learn about how children born during the pandemic are developing, both in how they are adjusting to making friends, to daycare, school or other social settings, and how they are learning to control their actions and emotions and become part of their wider social world.
Sectors Communities and Social Services/Policy,Education,Healthcare,Government, Democracy and Justice

URL https://www.pipkinstudy.com/covid
 
Description COVID in the Context of Pregnancy, Infancy and Parenting (CoCoPIP) Study 
Organisation Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, we have set up the COVID in the Context of Pregnancy, Infancy and Parenting (CoCoPIP) Study. This international online survey is aimed at expectant and new families to understand how COVID and related societal restrictions have impacted their lives. This study is essential for understanding the additional risk that families are experiencing at this time, which will provide vital data for the PIPKIN study to better understand how environmental factors impact on early development. I am PI of this study and coordinate the researchers across our team in setting up the study, collecting data and producing outputs.
Collaborator Contribution At CUHs Prof Topun Austin, a neonatologist, is collaborating with us on this study and providing insights from a healthcare perspective. At University of Oxford, Prof Jane Barlow, is collaborating with us to understand the qualitiative data which is being collected as part of this survey.
Impact None yet, one paper is submitted and others in final stages, dissemination pathways are now being actively explored.
Start Year 2020
 
Description COVID in the Context of Pregnancy, Infancy and Parenting (CoCoPIP) Study 
Organisation University of Cambridge
Department Department of Psychology
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, we have set up the COVID in the Context of Pregnancy, Infancy and Parenting (CoCoPIP) Study. This international online survey is aimed at expectant and new families to understand how COVID and related societal restrictions have impacted their lives. This study is essential for understanding the additional risk that families are experiencing at this time, which will provide vital data for the PIPKIN study to better understand how environmental factors impact on early development. I am PI of this study and coordinate the researchers across our team in setting up the study, collecting data and producing outputs.
Collaborator Contribution At CUHs Prof Topun Austin, a neonatologist, is collaborating with us on this study and providing insights from a healthcare perspective. At University of Oxford, Prof Jane Barlow, is collaborating with us to understand the qualitiative data which is being collected as part of this survey.
Impact None yet, one paper is submitted and others in final stages, dissemination pathways are now being actively explored.
Start Year 2020
 
Description COVID in the Context of Pregnancy, Infancy and Parenting (CoCoPIP) Study 
Organisation University of Oxford
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, we have set up the COVID in the Context of Pregnancy, Infancy and Parenting (CoCoPIP) Study. This international online survey is aimed at expectant and new families to understand how COVID and related societal restrictions have impacted their lives. This study is essential for understanding the additional risk that families are experiencing at this time, which will provide vital data for the PIPKIN study to better understand how environmental factors impact on early development. I am PI of this study and coordinate the researchers across our team in setting up the study, collecting data and producing outputs.
Collaborator Contribution At CUHs Prof Topun Austin, a neonatologist, is collaborating with us on this study and providing insights from a healthcare perspective. At University of Oxford, Prof Jane Barlow, is collaborating with us to understand the qualitiative data which is being collected as part of this survey.
Impact None yet, one paper is submitted and others in final stages, dissemination pathways are now being actively explored.
Start Year 2020
 
Description Generation COVID UK 
Organisation Royal Holloway, University of London
Department Humanities and Arts Research Institute
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution I have formed a partnership with a visual arts researcher to document the experiences of families who have been pregnant, or raised a baby during the COVID pandemic. This partnership focuses on the public facing components of our work, to give voice to the experiences of families during this time. I am a co-founder of the Generation COVID UK, and write articles, as well as contribute to the development of ideas for further public facing outputs.
Collaborator Contribution My partnering co-founder of Generation COVID UK at the University of Royal Holloway has co-written articles with me, promoted our scientific work under this fellowship and continues to collaborate with me in giving families a voice during this time. We continue to work towards funding opportunities for public exhibition of the work that we both do.
Impact Humanities (Royal Holloway) and Psychology (Cambridge). The Conversations article: https://theconversation.com/generation-covid-pregnancy-birth-and-postnatal-life-in-the-pandemic-160644
Start Year 2021
 
Description Optimisation of wearable NIRS for infants 
Organisation University College London
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution I collaborate with the team at UCL to pilot and optimise a new generation of wearable optical imaging (NIRS) headgear for us with infants. I have provided expertise in conducting infant studies, and helping to optimise data collection.
Collaborator Contribution UCL researchers are working in partnership with me to optimise the practical features of the headgear to ensure it fits best with infants. They are also contributing to this collaboration by developing and optimising the software for analysis of NIRS data which will be utilised throughout my fellowship in my studies.
Impact We have published our first article from this work: Frijia, E. M., Billing, A., Lloyd-Fox, S., Rosas, E. V., Collins-Jones, L., Crespo-Llado, M. M., Amadó, M. P., Austin, T., Edwards, A., Dunne, L., Smith, G., Nixon-Hill, R., Powell, S., Everdell, N. L., & Cooper, R. J. (2021). Functional imaging of the developing brain with wearable high-density diffuse optical tomography: A new benchmark for infant neuroimaging outside the scanner environment. NeuroImage, 225, 117490. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2020.117490 This collaboration is multidisciplinary, developmental neuroscience and psychology and medical physics and bioengineering.
Start Year 2019
 
Description Perinatal Imaging in Partnership with Families Study 
Organisation Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution Myself and my research team are setting up a prospective longitudinal study titled the Perinatal Imaging in Partnership with Families (PIPKIN) Study to assess early behaviour and brain function across the perinatal period from pregnancy to five months of age. We are setting up ethics, recruitment strategies, equipment, paradigms, piloting and database management and data storage pathways.
Collaborator Contribution The PIPKIN Study is co-funded by an additional MRC programme grant at the Unviersity of Cambridge to Prof Mark Johnson, and we serve as co PIs, supervising all staff in the study. Research staff are employed through this grant as well so that we can form a larger research team to address the aims of the PIPKIN study. We have a collaborative partner at CUHs, a neonatologist, Prof. Topun Austin, who is contributing to the processes outlined above from the NHS side. He will be a long term partner on this project. A collaboration with Dr Nadja Reissland at Durham University will allow for training and paradigm development in ultrasound measures for the antenatal phase of the PIPKIN Study.
Impact No outputs yet, the study has just begun.
Start Year 2019
 
Description Perinatal Imaging in Partnership with Families Study 
Organisation Durham University
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Myself and my research team are setting up a prospective longitudinal study titled the Perinatal Imaging in Partnership with Families (PIPKIN) Study to assess early behaviour and brain function across the perinatal period from pregnancy to five months of age. We are setting up ethics, recruitment strategies, equipment, paradigms, piloting and database management and data storage pathways.
Collaborator Contribution The PIPKIN Study is co-funded by an additional MRC programme grant at the Unviersity of Cambridge to Prof Mark Johnson, and we serve as co PIs, supervising all staff in the study. Research staff are employed through this grant as well so that we can form a larger research team to address the aims of the PIPKIN study. We have a collaborative partner at CUHs, a neonatologist, Prof. Topun Austin, who is contributing to the processes outlined above from the NHS side. He will be a long term partner on this project. A collaboration with Dr Nadja Reissland at Durham University will allow for training and paradigm development in ultrasound measures for the antenatal phase of the PIPKIN Study.
Impact No outputs yet, the study has just begun.
Start Year 2019
 
Description Perinatal Imaging in Partnership with Families Study 
Organisation University of Cambridge
Department Department of Psychology
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Myself and my research team are setting up a prospective longitudinal study titled the Perinatal Imaging in Partnership with Families (PIPKIN) Study to assess early behaviour and brain function across the perinatal period from pregnancy to five months of age. We are setting up ethics, recruitment strategies, equipment, paradigms, piloting and database management and data storage pathways.
Collaborator Contribution The PIPKIN Study is co-funded by an additional MRC programme grant at the Unviersity of Cambridge to Prof Mark Johnson, and we serve as co PIs, supervising all staff in the study. Research staff are employed through this grant as well so that we can form a larger research team to address the aims of the PIPKIN study. We have a collaborative partner at CUHs, a neonatologist, Prof. Topun Austin, who is contributing to the processes outlined above from the NHS side. He will be a long term partner on this project. A collaboration with Dr Nadja Reissland at Durham University will allow for training and paradigm development in ultrasound measures for the antenatal phase of the PIPKIN Study.
Impact No outputs yet, the study has just begun.
Start Year 2019
 
Description Perinatal Transitions during COVID Collaborative 
Organisation Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Department Evelyn Perinatal Imaging Centre
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Hospitals 
PI Contribution We are currently organising an online Conference and Stakeholder Engagement opportunity to examine the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the experiences of multiple stakeholders throughout pregnancy, birth, and early parenting. The conference will be facilitated by a collaborative team of Cambridge-based healthcare researchers, developmental scientists, and clinicians. Research presented will feature both quantitative and qualitative data gathered via mixed methods (interviews, online surveys) describing pregnancy, birth, and new-born health. It will be held at the end of March 2022.
Collaborator Contribution While we are leading the organisation of this conference, they are supporting this.
Impact Generation COVID UK: Perinatal Transitions Conference on March 30th 2022. Disciplines involved within University of Cambridge: Cambridge Centre for Neuropsychiatric Research, Department of Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology; The Healthcare Improvement Studies (THIS) Institute; Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures, Humanities and Arts Research Institute, Royal Holloway University; Cambridge University Hospitals.
Start Year 2021
 
Description Perinatal Transitions during COVID Collaborative 
Organisation Royal Holloway, University of London
Department Humanities and Arts Research Institute
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We are currently organising an online Conference and Stakeholder Engagement opportunity to examine the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the experiences of multiple stakeholders throughout pregnancy, birth, and early parenting. The conference will be facilitated by a collaborative team of Cambridge-based healthcare researchers, developmental scientists, and clinicians. Research presented will feature both quantitative and qualitative data gathered via mixed methods (interviews, online surveys) describing pregnancy, birth, and new-born health. It will be held at the end of March 2022.
Collaborator Contribution While we are leading the organisation of this conference, they are supporting this.
Impact Generation COVID UK: Perinatal Transitions Conference on March 30th 2022. Disciplines involved within University of Cambridge: Cambridge Centre for Neuropsychiatric Research, Department of Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology; The Healthcare Improvement Studies (THIS) Institute; Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures, Humanities and Arts Research Institute, Royal Holloway University; Cambridge University Hospitals.
Start Year 2021
 
Description Perinatal Transitions during COVID Collaborative 
Organisation University of Cambridge
Department Department of Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We are currently organising an online Conference and Stakeholder Engagement opportunity to examine the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the experiences of multiple stakeholders throughout pregnancy, birth, and early parenting. The conference will be facilitated by a collaborative team of Cambridge-based healthcare researchers, developmental scientists, and clinicians. Research presented will feature both quantitative and qualitative data gathered via mixed methods (interviews, online surveys) describing pregnancy, birth, and new-born health. It will be held at the end of March 2022.
Collaborator Contribution While we are leading the organisation of this conference, they are supporting this.
Impact Generation COVID UK: Perinatal Transitions Conference on March 30th 2022. Disciplines involved within University of Cambridge: Cambridge Centre for Neuropsychiatric Research, Department of Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology; The Healthcare Improvement Studies (THIS) Institute; Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures, Humanities and Arts Research Institute, Royal Holloway University; Cambridge University Hospitals.
Start Year 2021
 
Description RESPECT 4 NeuroDevelopment 
Organisation Birkbeck, University of London
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution I am a network member of this strategic network funded MRC/EPSRC grant. I serve on several panel groups to address collectively the need to advance child-specific neurotechnologies to underpin precision medicine and individual developmental trajectory research.
Collaborator Contribution I am part of a large network of experts and users in developmental research and neuroimage. All network members are contributing to this field. Therefore, this collaboration will enable me to accelerate one of the objectives of my fellowship, to optimise field and home friendly measurements for developmental research. The key objectives of our network are to; (1) build an inclusive multi-disciplinary community through meetings and strategically-targeted working groups; (2) identify barriers, drivers and priority areas for the use of specific neurotechnologies (MRI, EEG, fNIRS) in specific target populations (infants, toddlers) and for specific purposes (biomarkers, intervention), and disseminate results as white papers; (3) develop funding calls for innovative feasibility studies to underpin larger investments in this area; (4) examine ethical challenges through participatory work with parents and the public, develop a communication plan on the responsible use of neurotechnologies in infants and children, and formulate key principles; (5) develop a strategic roadmap to accelerate translation of research technology to scalable tools used in clinics and at home by engaging with industry and NHS partners; (6) attract and train a skilled workforce by organising educational workshops, cross-sector secondments, and developing a strategy for future multi-disciplinary training fellowships. In sum, the network will enable us to build a national hub to transform state-of-the-art neurotechnology into feasible, clinically useful tools that are accepted by users, can be implemented in the UK healthcare system and serve the needs of children with NCs.
Impact Collaboration is only just beginning, so no outcomes as yet.
Start Year 2022
 
Description RESPECT 4 NeuroDevelopment 
Organisation King's College London
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution I am a network member of this strategic network funded MRC/EPSRC grant. I serve on several panel groups to address collectively the need to advance child-specific neurotechnologies to underpin precision medicine and individual developmental trajectory research.
Collaborator Contribution I am part of a large network of experts and users in developmental research and neuroimage. All network members are contributing to this field. Therefore, this collaboration will enable me to accelerate one of the objectives of my fellowship, to optimise field and home friendly measurements for developmental research. The key objectives of our network are to; (1) build an inclusive multi-disciplinary community through meetings and strategically-targeted working groups; (2) identify barriers, drivers and priority areas for the use of specific neurotechnologies (MRI, EEG, fNIRS) in specific target populations (infants, toddlers) and for specific purposes (biomarkers, intervention), and disseminate results as white papers; (3) develop funding calls for innovative feasibility studies to underpin larger investments in this area; (4) examine ethical challenges through participatory work with parents and the public, develop a communication plan on the responsible use of neurotechnologies in infants and children, and formulate key principles; (5) develop a strategic roadmap to accelerate translation of research technology to scalable tools used in clinics and at home by engaging with industry and NHS partners; (6) attract and train a skilled workforce by organising educational workshops, cross-sector secondments, and developing a strategy for future multi-disciplinary training fellowships. In sum, the network will enable us to build a national hub to transform state-of-the-art neurotechnology into feasible, clinically useful tools that are accepted by users, can be implemented in the UK healthcare system and serve the needs of children with NCs.
Impact Collaboration is only just beginning, so no outcomes as yet.
Start Year 2022
 
Description RESPECT 4 NeuroDevelopment 
Organisation University College London
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution I am a network member of this strategic network funded MRC/EPSRC grant. I serve on several panel groups to address collectively the need to advance child-specific neurotechnologies to underpin precision medicine and individual developmental trajectory research.
Collaborator Contribution I am part of a large network of experts and users in developmental research and neuroimage. All network members are contributing to this field. Therefore, this collaboration will enable me to accelerate one of the objectives of my fellowship, to optimise field and home friendly measurements for developmental research. The key objectives of our network are to; (1) build an inclusive multi-disciplinary community through meetings and strategically-targeted working groups; (2) identify barriers, drivers and priority areas for the use of specific neurotechnologies (MRI, EEG, fNIRS) in specific target populations (infants, toddlers) and for specific purposes (biomarkers, intervention), and disseminate results as white papers; (3) develop funding calls for innovative feasibility studies to underpin larger investments in this area; (4) examine ethical challenges through participatory work with parents and the public, develop a communication plan on the responsible use of neurotechnologies in infants and children, and formulate key principles; (5) develop a strategic roadmap to accelerate translation of research technology to scalable tools used in clinics and at home by engaging with industry and NHS partners; (6) attract and train a skilled workforce by organising educational workshops, cross-sector secondments, and developing a strategy for future multi-disciplinary training fellowships. In sum, the network will enable us to build a national hub to transform state-of-the-art neurotechnology into feasible, clinically useful tools that are accepted by users, can be implemented in the UK healthcare system and serve the needs of children with NCs.
Impact Collaboration is only just beginning, so no outcomes as yet.
Start Year 2022
 
Description Conversations with Generation COVID 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Cambridge Science Festival, Conversations with Generation COVID: live Q&A and forum hosted online for perinatal mental health conversations among parents who gave birth during the pandemic. Speakers included researchers, parents and midwives.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL http://www.pipkinstudy.com/perinataltransitions
 
Description Diverse trajectories multistakeholder meeting 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Schools
Results and Impact In December 2022, as part of the Global Scientific Conference on Human Flourishing, the University of Cambridge convened a multistakeholder meeting to consider where the system for inclusion falls short and what school leaders can do to reshape learning environments for all students to thrive. This brought together scientists, educators, clinicians, charity leaders, policymakers, and those with lived experience of neurodivergence. A policy brief is currently being generated from the outcomes of this meeting.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
 
Description Engagement focused website for PIPKIN Research group 
Form Of Engagement Activity Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Study participants or study members
Results and Impact Website created to promote the research programme of our PIPKIN Research Group to general public, in particular families, academics and other stakeholders. As a result of the COVID pandemic this website has also been used to create a hub for information on our national COVID online CoCoPIP study and was used a portal for recruitment nationally. Here we include summaries of outputs of our research findings as well as links to our newly formed Perinatal Transitions during COVID collaborative and our public facing Generation COVID collaborative. Public events linked to this website are taking place later this month. Through the content available on the website the PI of this grant has given school talks at an International school in Paris. The school subsequently reported an increase in interest in understanding the lives of others living in poverty and in Africa, and an interest in using science to look at how we develop from birth.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
URL https://www.pipkinstudy.com/covid
 
Description Experimental Psychology Society Prize lecture 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact I received the 28th Experimental Psychology Society Prize Lecture in 2022 and presented a public lecture on my research. This has led to a wider range of people approaching me about finding out how they can apply some of the ideas and research that I have in their own field as well as triggering invitations to serve on external panels. The live lecture was attended by an audience over 100 and the associated YouTube video has now been viewed 71 times.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=auH0satQdwk
 
Description Generation COVID: Perinatal Transitions in a Pandemic conference 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Generation COVID: Perinatal Transitions in a Pandemic - one-day conference organizing collaboration and recorded talks by general public (expectant mothers), perinatal professionals and practitioners, scientific illustrator and COVID-19 pregnancy and parenting researchers.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL http://www.pipkinstudy.com/COVID
 
Description The Brain across the Lifespan: NIH and BMGF workshop 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact A virtual workshop co-organized by the National Institutes of Health and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Connect researchers focused on different timepoints and levels of resolution, in different model systems and over different timescales, to jointly explore existing and emerging tools and methods for measuring changing brain cellular identity, connectivity, and activity over time, and identify research gaps and opportunities for bridging our understanding of early neurodevelopment to health and disease later in life. An executive summary report was written by NIH and plans for writing a white paper are in the pipeline. The video associated with this workshop is publicly accessible, can be found at https://videocast.nih.gov/watch=45041 and has been viewed over 500 times.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://www.nichd.nih.gov/about/meetings/2022/041822
 
Description The Conversation article 
Form Of Engagement Activity A magazine, newsletter or online publication
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Through a collaboration with a photojournalist - who had been documenting his journey, and other parent's journeys into parenthood during the pandemic - and the CoCoPIP study as part of this award we were invited to submit a long read article to The Conversation. The article has received 1,400+ likes/tweets on social media platforms (Facebook/Twitter) and led to further public engagement events, which sparked questions and discussions with the general public as well as led to further work being established (network of COVID researchers in UK; new photojournalism projects, workshops for practitioners, parents and clinicians)
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
URL https://theconversation.com/generation-covid-pregnancy-birth-and-postnatal-life-in-the-pandemic-1606...