Thomas Gladwin

Biography

My research background is in psychological science, including: PhD research on cognitive control and EEG phase-locking; postdoc positions, spread over various institutes, on electrocorticogram analysis; fMRI and genetics research on schizophrenia; automatic processes and implicit measures; experimental computerized training interventions for addiction; the psychophysiology of freezing; and research related to military mental health care. I worked as a Senior Lecturer for a few years, where I taught e.g. statistics and biological psychology, and as an Impact Assessment Fellow focused on identifying and evidencing societal benefits of academic research. I'm currently primarily involved in applied research, working in the private sector, next to continued curiosity-driven projects.

Email: thomasgladwin@hotmail.com
Personal website: https://tegladwin.com
Mastodon: https://mastodon.online/@TEG

Research Areas

  • The use of computational models and AI within psychological theories and applications of psychological science e.g. to user research.

  • Implicit measures and their improvement.

Selected Publications

  • Gladwin TE (2023). Towards the nature of automatic associations: Item-level computational semantic similarity and IAT-based alcohol-valence associations. Addiction Research and Theory, https://doi.org/10.1080/16066359.2022.2123474.

  • Benjamin T. Sharpe, Monika Halls, Thomas E. Gladwin (2022). The Rise and Fall of the Dot-Probe Task: Opportunities for Metascientific Learning. Seeds of Science. https://doi.org/10.53975/i2gp-smbp

  • Gladwin TE, Halls M, Vink M (2021). Experimental control of conflict in a predictive Visual Probe Task: Highly reliable bias scores related to anxiety. Acta Psychologica, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actpsy.2021.103357.

  • Gladwin TE (2018). Educating students and future researchers about academic misconduct and questionable collaboration practices. International Journal for Educational Integrity, 14:10, https://doi.org/10.1007/s40979-018-0034-9.

  • Gladwin TE, Lindsen JP, de Jong R (2006). Pre-stimulus EEG effects related to response speed, task switching and upcoming response hand. Biological Psychology, 72(1), 15-34, doi: 10.1016/j.biopsycho.2005.05.005.