Dr Georgia Panagiotaki
Lecturer in Developmental Psychology
| Job Title | Contact | Location |
|---|---|---|
|
Lecturer
in Developmental Psychology |
G dot Panagiotaki at uea dot ac dot uk
Tel: +44 (0)1603 59 3594 |
Elizabeth Fry Building 2.01 |
Career
- DPhil in Developmental Psychology, University of Sussex, Brighton (2003)
- MSc in Health Psychology, City University, London (1995)
- BSc Hons in Psychology, University of Crete, Greece (1993)
- Member of the British Psychological Society (BPS)
Research interests
- Children’s cognitive development (Children's understanding of biology, health and illness, life and death, health related behaviours, science)
- Cross cultural comparisons in children's understanding of biology
- Children’s social development (understanding of morality)
- Treatment adherence in paediatric epilepsy
- Communication with children in health care settings
Career summary
- Lecturer in Developmental Psychology (2003-2006). School of Psychology, University of East London
- Post-doctoral Research Fellow (2003). School of Psychology, University of East London
- Visiting lecturer (2001-2002). Department of Psychology, Kingston University, London
- Visiting lecturer (2001-2002). Centre for Social Work and Policy, University of Sussex, Brighton
Key Research Interests
A related research area concerns children’s perceptions of health and illness that is their ideas about the causes, symptoms, treatments and prevention of various physical and mental conditions. Some of the questions this research attempts to answer are: 1) What do children know and feel about physical and mental illnesses and what factors influence the way their knowledge develops? 2) How accurately do parents and health professionals (e.g., doctors and nurses) assess children’s perceptions of illness? and 3) To what extent do parents’ own illness perceptions relate to their children’s? Answering these questions has important implications for the way in which information about health and illness is communicated to young children in health care settings.
In collaboration with developmental, health psychologists and pediatricians at UEA and the NNUH I am developing a new study on the psychological factors influencing children’s concordance with the treatment for epilepsy. Factors such as demographic characteristics, cognitive development, self-efficacy, perceptions of risk, and children’s understanding of the causes, consequences and cure of epilepsy will be studied during interviews with children and adolescents with epilepsy. Findings from this exploratory study will be used for the development of an effective intervention that will substantially improve children’s understanding of their condition, its risks, and their concordance with therapy.
Another area of my ongoing research concerns the development of children’s scientific ideas, in particular their understanding of the shape of the earth, gravity and the day–night cycle. This research also investigates how different methods of testing children and adults (e.g., drawings and model selection tasks, open and closed interviews) influence the way individuals represent their knowledge. Recently, and in collaboration with Dr Gavin Nobes at the School of Social Work and Psychology, UEA, I completed an ESRC funded project that explored the origins of children's knowledge of the earth, the structure of their concepts, and how scientific understanding in the domain of astronomy is acquired https://www.uea.ac.uk/swp/people/gnobes/cue.
Selected publications
Siegal, M, Nobes, G and Panagiotaki, G (2011). Nature Geoscience, 4 (3), 130-132
Frede, V, Nobes, G, Frappart, S, Panagiotaki, G, Troadec, B and Martin A (2011). Infant and Child Development, 20 (6), 432-448
Panagiotaki, G., Nobes, G. & Potton, A. (2009). Mental models and other misconceptions in children’s understanding of the earth. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 104, 52–67
Nobes, G. & Panagiotaki, G. (2009). Mental models or methodological artifacts? Adults' 'naïve' responses to a test of children's conceptions of the earth. British Journal of Psychology, 100, 347–363
Nobes, G. & Panagiotaki, G. (2007). Adults' representations of the earth: Implications for children's acquisition of scientific concepts. British Journal of Psychology, 98, 645-665
Panagiotaki, G., Nobes, G., & Banerjee, R. (2006). Is the World Round or Flat? Children's Understanding of the Earth. European Journal of Developmental Psychology, 3 (2), 124-141
Panagiotaki, G., Nobes, G., & Banerjee, R. (2006). Children's Understanding of the Earth: A Methodological Comparison. British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 24 (2), 353-372
Nobes, G., Martin, A., & Panagiotaki, G. (2005). The Development of Scientific Knowledge of the Earth. British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 23, 47-66
Nobes, G., Moore, DJ., Martin, A., Cilifford, B., Butterworth, G., Panagiotaki, G. & Siegal, M. (2003). Children's Understanding of the Earth in a Multicultural Society. Developmental Science, 6 (1), 72-85
Laing, E., Butterworth, G., Ansaril, D., Gsödl, M., Longhi, E., Panagiotaki, G. & Karmiloff-Smith, A. (2002). Atypical Development of Language and Social Communication in Toddlers with Williams Syndrome. Developmental Science, 5 (2), 233-246
Teaching Interests
- Teaching of Developmental and Health Psychology
- Facilitation of Problem Based Learning (PBL) groups
- Facilitation of Consultation Skills Workshops
- Supervision of students' SSS (Self Selected Studies) presentations
Article
Siegal, M, Nobes, G and Panagiotaki, G (2011) Children's knowledge of the Earth. Nature Geoscience, 4 (3). pp. 130-132. ISSN 1752-0894
Frède, V, Nobes, G, Frappart, S, Panagiotaki , G, Troadec, B and Martin, A (2011) The acquisition of scientific knowledge: The influence of methods of questioning and analysis on the interpretation of children’s conceptions of the Earth. Infant and Child Development, 20 (6). pp. 432-448. ISSN 1522-7227
Nobes, G and Panagiotaki, G (2009) Mental models or methodological artefacts? Adults' 'naïve' responses to a test of children's conceptions of the earth. British Journal of Psychology, 100 (2). pp. 347-363. ISSN 00071269
Nobes, G, Panagiotaki, G and Pawson, C (2009) The influence of negligence, intention, and outcome on children’s moral judgments. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 104 (4). pp. 382-397. ISSN 00220965
Panagiotaki, G, Nobes, G and Potton, A (2009) Mental models and other misconceptions in children's understanding of the earth. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 104. pp. 52-67.
Gersch, I, Dowling, F, Panagiotaki, G and Potton, A (2008) Listening to children's views of spiritual and metaphysical concepts: A new dimension to educational psychology practice. Educational Psychology in Practice, 24 (3). pp. 225-236.
Nobes, G and Panagiotaki, G (2007) Adults' representations of the earth: Implications for children's acquisition of scientific concepts. British Journal of Psychology, 98 (4). pp. 645-665.
Panagiotaki, G, Nobes, G and Banerjee, R (2006) Is the world round or flat? Children's understanding of the earth. European Journal of Developmental Psychology, 3 (2). pp. 124-141. ISSN 1740-5629
Panagiotaki, G, Nobes, G and Banerjee, R (2006) Children's representations of the earth: A methodological comparison. British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 24 (2). pp. 353-372. ISSN 0261510X
Nobes, G, Martin, A and Panagiotaki, G (2005) The development of scientific knowledge of the Earth. British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 23 (1). pp. 47-66.
Nobes, G., Moore, D. G., Martin, A. S., Clifford, B. R., Butterworth, G., Panagiotaki, G. and Siegal, M (2003) Children's understanding of the Earth in a multicultural community: mental models or fragments of knowledge? Developmental Science, 6 (1). pp. 72-85. ISSN 1363-755X
Laing, E, Butterworth, G, Ansaril, D, Gsödl, M, Longhi, E, Panagiotaki, G, Paterson, S and Skarmiloff-Smith, A (2002) Atypical Development of Language and Social Communication in Toddlers with Williams Syndrome. Developmental Science, 5 (2). pp. 233-246.
Conference or Workshop Item
Panagiotaki, G, Nobes, G, Ashraf, A, Ikram, S and Lalji, S Children's understanding of the human body, life and death: developmental and cultural influences. In: International Conference on Biological understanding and Theory of Mind: Core Knowledge and Naïve Conceptions in Children and Adults. University of Reims, France.
Administrative Posts/Responsibilities
- Theme Leader for the Psychology curriculum of the MB/BS course

