Olivia E. Atherton's Avatar

Olivia E. Atherton

@oliviaatherton.bsky.social

Social-Personality Psychologist. Assistant Professor at UC Riverside. Studying self-regulation, personality, culture, health, and lifespan development. https://srchlab.ucr.edu/

733 Followers  |  547 Following  |  7 Posts  |  Joined: 03.12.2023  |  1.5894

Latest posts by oliviaatherton.bsky.social on Bluesky

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Lifespan exposures to rural–urban conditions and later‐life cognitive function INTRODUCTION Limited research exists on life-course rural–urban residence and cognitive functions. METHODS This study examines associations between rural–urban residence during childhood, adulthoo...

Our new study is published in Alzheimer’s & Dementia! We found that rural residence across the lifespan is associated with lower cognitive function, and childhood rurality is particularly associated with lower cognitive function.

doi.org/10.1002/alz....

21.06.2025 02:06 — 👍 3    🔁 2    💬 1    📌 0
Conference – Association for Research in Personality

ARP 2025 registration is now live! For more information about preconferences, a program overview, how to register, and lodging/transportation, please visit: www.personality-arp.org/conference/.

We hope to see you in the Chicagoland area this summer!

27.03.2025 00:10 — 👍 4    🔁 5    💬 0    📌 1
Conference – Association for Research in Personality

The Association for Research in Personality is soliciting abstracts for the 2025 Biennial Meeting scheduled to take place June 26-28, 2025 in Evanston (suburb of Chicago), IL, USA!

04.12.2024 16:55 — 👍 19    🔁 12    💬 4    📌 2

Awesome! Thanks for the shoutout, Andrew. And, good luck with the revision! If you have any feedback about what works and what doesn’t, we, of course, welcome any and all feedback ☺️

06.03.2024 01:02 — 👍 1    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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When Things Don’t Go According to Plan Methodologists have embraced preregistration as a way to prevent questionable research practices and add transparency to scientific studies. But many researchers end up deviating from those preregiste...

Emily C. Willroth of Washington University in St. Louis and @oliviaatherton.bsky.social of the University of Houston provide a new reporting framework for scientists who alter their research plan after preregistering a study.

15.02.2024 19:27 — 👍 2    🔁 1    💬 0    📌 0
Flyer describing poster presentations happening at SPSP by Priscilla Whang and Sarah Belew. Priscilla will be presenting one poster at the Health Preconference and one poster during the main conference on Friday from 4:30-5:30. Sarah will be presenting her poster at the Happiness and Wellbeing preconference and at the main conference on Thursday from 6-7. Come check out the work they are doing!

Flyer describing poster presentations happening at SPSP by Priscilla Whang and Sarah Belew. Priscilla will be presenting one poster at the Health Preconference and one poster during the main conference on Friday from 4:30-5:30. Sarah will be presenting her poster at the Happiness and Wellbeing preconference and at the main conference on Thursday from 6-7. Come check out the work they are doing!

Going to @spspnews.bsky.social this week? Come check out the work my lab is doing! #SPSP2024 ☀️

06.02.2024 19:01 — 👍 9    🔁 2    💬 0    📌 0
Personality science preconference schedule

Personality science preconference schedule

The schedule is set and registration is live for the SPSP 2024 Personality Science Preconference, Feb 8th 8AM-noon (++ Happiness and Well-being Preconf. in the afternoon).

Register here: spsp.org/events/annua.... Early bird registration ends in 1 month!

06.12.2023 14:29 — 👍 6    🔁 2    💬 0    📌 0

involves a lot of work, time, and skill. I’m optimistic that change in the name of transparency and rigor is on the horizon ☺️

05.12.2023 03:43 — 👍 1    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0

evaluate.) Of course, prereg itself is a skill to be honed (and research doesn’t always go according to plan), so deviations are expected. But, transparency is key. At the same time, all of that does not correct the past lit and like you mentioned, to fully evaluate adherence to prereg plans

05.12.2023 03:40 — 👍 3    🔁 0    💬 1    📌 0

Yes totally! The primary solution we suggest is for authors to fill out the standardized prereg deviations table (to be published along with article), and then AEs/reviewers can evaluate table during the review process to determine risk of bias. (And then future readers would have access to info to

05.12.2023 03:38 — 👍 4    🔁 0    💬 1    📌 0

(TLDR: not disclosing deviations will negatively impact editors perceptions of work and there’s notable variability in what types of deviations are considered major/minor or justifiable, at least among psychology journal editors).

05.12.2023 02:31 — 👍 1    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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Best Laid Plans: A Guide to Reporting Preregistration Deviations Psychological scientists are increasingly using preregistration as a tool to increase the credibility of research findings. Many of the benefits of preregistration rest on the assumption that preregis...

My colleague Emily Willroth and I had the same questions! You might be interested in our forthcoming paper: osf.io/et6km/

05.12.2023 02:29 — 👍 9    🔁 1    💬 1    📌 0

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