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| Funder | UK Research and Innovation Future Leaders Fellowship |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | King's College London |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Start Date | Jan 01, 2021 |
| End Date | Dec 31, 2024 |
| Duration | 1,460 days |
| Number of Grantees | 2 |
| Roles | Fellow; Award Holder |
| Data Source | UKRI Gateway to Research |
| Grant ID | MR/T041897/1 |
The aims of the fellowship are to examine how emerging technologies can fundamentally re-envision the conceptual models and mechanisms-of-delivery for existing prevention interventions in the context of child mental health. Such an innovative approach is needed to address the unprecedented mental health treatment gap faced across the UK and worldwide: more than 1 in 10 children and young people have a clinically diagnosable mental health disorder, yet only 30% have had access to appropriate intervention, and less than half of these improve from the treatment.
Mental health promotion interventions are seen as one of the principled ways of addressing these issues: by developing key protective factors (such as emotion regulation or parenting techniques) for both at-risk and general populations, such interventions can improve wellbeing and reduce the incidence of mental disorders. However, even the most effective programmes are still dependent on in-person delivery techniques and intervention mechanisms available since the 60s, thus lacking scalable mechanisms to support children in the everyday settings where protective competencies are needed, and being developed.
The core vision proposed by the fellowship research agenda is that digital technologies can lead to entirely new model of prevention interventions that are fully incorporated into the lives of target populations, thus addressing the need for situated learning support. However, beyond PI's pilot work, HCI and Prevention Science fields lack even a basic understanding of the fundamental research questions necessary to deliver such situated interventions: it is not at all clear, for example, how to design technologies that provide useful contextualised support for children and their adults around protective competencies (technical RQs), how to do so in a psychologically effective way (psychological RQs), and how to design interventions that are engaging for users and are addressing their immediate needs (socio-technical RQs).
The fellowship takes up these challenges and lays out an ambitious programme of work designed to start unpacking these broader issues at the intersection of technology, psychological theory, and human-centred design. We address such highly interdisciplinary agenda by grounding the work in specific case studies that target fundamental protective factors for child mental health --- emotion regulation and positive parenting --- while encompassing all of the issues outlined above.
The case study interventions then serve not only as exemplar proof-of-concept of how situated interventions can be developed (and shown to be efficacious), but also as initial steps towards extrapolating the psychological mechanisms and design patterns that are generalisable to other populations and protective factors. By focusing on carefully selected case studies---complemented with a strong interdisciplinary mentorship network across KCL, Oxford, Stanford, Harvard, Northwestern U, and U of Michigan, among others--- the ambition is to not only create effective interventions that can be deployed at scale, but also influence the wider research communities, and contribute to the UK and EU policy calls to deliver new approaches for mental health promotion.
PI's personal and career growth will be substantially boosted by the fellowship. Beyond enabling a full cycle of truly interdisciplinary work, which would traditionally span a range of UKRI panels and epistemological commitments, the fellowship structure will facilitate a network of academic and clinical partnerships across a range of leading research centres worldwide, developing the basis for PI's interdisciplinary thought leadership for years to come.
These will include, among others, long-term residency at Oxford; as well as close collaboration and repeated visits to US-based mentors (Harvard, Stanford, University of Michigan, Northwestern University).
King's College London
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