我要吃瓜

Dr Eva Rafetseder

Associate Professor

Psychology 我要吃瓜, Stirling, FK9 4LA

Dr Eva Rafetseder

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Eva Rafetseder is an Associate Professor of Developmental Psychology at the 我要吃瓜. Her work focuses on the development of cognitive and brain functions across childhood, with an emphasis on how this development is shaped by environmental factors, such as formal school entry and home environments. Specifically, Rafetseder’s empirical approach focusses on the structure of children's reasoning with possible worlds, how evidence and prior beliefs interact to affect their learning and belief revision, the role of social factors (such as learning from others) in guiding learning and how this learning is embedded within environments (school, home) and shaped by individuals’ experiences. She makes use of both neuroimaging (fNIRS) and multivariate developmental methodology (latent growth curve modelling) to track brain-behaviour relationships over time. Rafetseder received her Ph.D. from the University of Salzburg (Austria) in cognitive development in 2010 working with Prof Josef Perner. She then completed a post-doctoral fellowship at the University of Salzburg with Prof Josef Perner (2010-2013) and the University of Konstanz (Germany) with Prof Wolfgang Spohn (2013). She joined the 我要吃瓜 as a Lecturer in 2013, advancing to Senior Lecturer in 2019 and Associate Professor in 2024. Rafetseder is the recipient of the Mercator Fellowship and the Leverhulme Trust Research Fellowship.

Research (4)

I am passionate about uncovering the developmental trajectories of children’s thinking and reasoning, thereby advancing our understanding of the cognitive factors that shape how children think about alternative possible worlds, how they revise their beliefs and what range of emotions they experience as a result. My current work builds on this foundation and investigates how inter-individual differences in intra-individual neurocognitive change predicts academic performance, and how contextual factors, such as home life and age at school entry, affect individual learning.

Projects

Agency, Rationality, and Epistemic Defeat
PI: Dr Giacomo Melis
Funded by: Medical Research Council

The impact of age at school entry on cognitive and academic attainment
PI: Dr Eva Rafetseder
Funded by: The Leverhulme Trust

Dissociating the Effects of Age and Schooling on Neurocognitive Development
PI: Dr Eva Rafetseder
Funded by: Jacobs Foundation

On the acquisition of counterfactual reasoning and ensuing abilities
PI: Dr Eva Rafetseder
Funded by: German Research Foundation

Outputs (26)

Outputs

Commentary

Beck SR & Rafetseder E (2019) Are counterfactuals in and about time?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 42, Art. No.: e245. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0140525x19000591


Commentary

Poulin-Dubois D, Rakoczy H, Burnside K, Crivello C, D?rrenberg S, Edwards K, Krist H, Kulke L, Liszkowski U, Low J, Perner J, Powell L, Priewasser B, Rafetseder E & Ruffman T (2018) Do infants understand false beliefs? We don't know yet – A commentary on Baillargeon, Buttelmann and Southgate's commentary. Commentary on: Baillargeon, R., Buttelmann, D., & Southgate, V. (2018). Invited Commentary: Interpreting failed replications of early false-belief ?ndings: Methodological andtheoretical considerations. Cognitive Development, 46, 112–124. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cogdev.2018.06.001.. Cognitive Development, 48, pp. 302-315. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cogdev.2018.09.005


Article

Caes L, Caldwell CA, Rafetseder E, Grainger C, Renner E, Atkinson M, Shing YL & Kuipers JR (2017) Little Scientists – Big Impact [The Developmental Research Team at the 我要吃瓜 explain why they love their psychology kindergarten]. The Psychologist, 30, pp. 30-33. https://thepsychologist.bps.org.uk/volume-30/october/little-scientists-big-impact


Article

Rafetseder E, Schwitalla M & Perner J (2013) Counterfactual reasoning: From childhood to adulthood. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 114 (3), pp. 389-404. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jecp.2012.10.010


Book Chapter

Perner J & Rafetseder E (2011) Counterfactual and Other Forms of Conditional Reasoning: Children Lost in the Nearest Possible World. In: Hoerl C, McCormack T & Beck S (eds.) Understanding Counterfactuals, Understanding Causation: Issues in Philosophy and Psychology. Consciousness and Self-Consciousness Series. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 90-109. http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/product/9780199590698.do


Teaching

I coordinate the third-year UG module Developmental Psychology. I also run final year electives on various topics and I contribute to the Masters modules Child Development and Psychology Conversion Course. I supervise both undergraduate and postgraduate dissertations.

Research centres/groups