Marie Skłodowska-Curie Senior Research Fellow, University of York
I am a Senior Research Fellow in the Department of Psychology, University of York. I am primarily interested in the nature and function of sleep, and how sleep relates to health and cognition. Recently, I have been studying the role that sleep plays in strengthening memories that we form during day, both in healthy populations and clinical groups including those with schizophrenia and post-traumatic stress disorder.
I also have a long-standing interest in unusual sleep experiences, particularly phenomenon such as sleep paralysis and exploding head syndrome. Here, my research has focused on the causes and correlates of these experiences, and enhancing awareness within the medical and research communities.

‘Sleeping on it’ really does help and four other recent sleep research breakthroughs
Jun 03, 2024 11:10 am UTC| Health
Twenty-six years. That is roughly how much of our lives are spent asleep. Scientists have been trying to explain why we spend so much time sleeping since at least the ancient Greeks, but pinning down the exact functions of...