Liz Simpson
@simpson.bsky.social
2.9K followers 2.4K following 59 posts
Associate professor of psychology at the University of Miami. Developmental science, infant social behavior. She/her Director of @soccoglab.bsky.social ManyBabies6 - Neonatal imitation: https://manybabies.org/MB6/
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simpson.bsky.social
Rethinking the study of newborn sociality: Challenges and opportunities. #devpsy Free link until Nov 7th:
kwnsfk27.r.eu-west-1.awstrack.me/L0/https:%2F...
Face to face newborn and woman both with open mouth smiles and eye contact.
simpson.bsky.social
A wonderful mentor & impactful research area! Our collaborator @dmessinger.bsky.social is accepting new grad students. #DevSci
umiamipsych.bsky.social
Dr. Daniel Messinger is hoping to accept a doctoral student for fall 2026 admission. If you are interested in working with Dr. Messinger, please visit www.umkids-lab.psy.miami.edu for more information.

For more information, see www.psy.miami.edu/graduate/how-to-apply
simpson.bsky.social
Initiation of Affiliative Interactions and Visual Engagement During Mother-Infant Interactions in Humans, Great Apes and Small Apes #OpenAccess doi.org/10.1007/s107...
Initiation of Affiliative Interactions and Visual Engagement During Mother-Infant Interactions in Humans, Great Apes and Small Apes - International Journal of Primatology
Maternal care is crucial for primate offspring development, particularly in species with prolonged developmental periods, such as humans and other primates. In this study, we used a cross-species and developmental approach to assess the role of mothers and infants in initiating bouts of affiliation (i.e., proximity and grooming) and visual engagement (i.e., unidirectional and mutual gaze) in humans (N = 10), great apes (N = 18) and small apes (N = 20). We observed mother-infant dyads when the offspring was 1, 6 and 12 months of age, using focal sampling. Our results showed that mothers were generally more likely than infants to initiate grooming, unidirectional and mutual gazes, but not proximity. As infants got older, mothers became even more likely to initiate unidirectional and mutual gazes, but infants also started to initiate proximity and unidirectional gazes more frequently, with infant-initiated mutual gazes peaking at around 6 months of age. Moreover, human mothers were more likely to initiate proximity than great ape mothers, and especially more than small ape mothers; in contrast, infants in great and small apes initiated proximity more frequently than human infants. These findings highlight important similarities between humans and other apes in the initiation patterns of affiliative interactions and visual engagement.
doi.org
simpson.bsky.social
Rethinking the study of newborn sociality: Challenges and opportunities. #devpsy Free link until Nov 7th:
kwnsfk27.r.eu-west-1.awstrack.me/L0/https:%2F...
Face to face newborn and woman both with open mouth smiles and eye contact.
Reposted by Liz Simpson
jkileyhamlin.bsky.social
New paper! Here (in Nature Communications) we (Ale Geraci, Luca Surian, Lucia Gabriella Tina, & I; work led/run by Ale) show that 5-day-old newborns selectively attend to two distinct forms of prosocial over antisocial action: approaching versus avoiding and helping versus hindering.
rdcu.be/evorW
Human newborns spontaneously attend to prosocial interactions
Nature Communications - Abilities to distinguish between prosocial and antisocial actions are crucial for sustaining cooperative systems. Here, the authors show that human newborns with just 5 days...
rdcu.be
Reposted by Liz Simpson
soccoglab.bsky.social
scl.psy.miami.edu/for-parents/... #MiamiBaby #MiamiKid #UMiami #BabyCane #FutureCane #ScienceMatters
Reposted by Liz Simpson
umiamipsych.bsky.social
INTERESTED IN APPLYING TO OUR DOCTORAL PROGRAMS?

Applications for Fall 2026 admission will be accepted from September 01, 2025 - December 01, 2025.

ALL application materials must be received no later than DECEMBER 01, 2025.

psy.miami.edu/graduate/how...
Reposted by Liz Simpson
jesstaubert.bsky.social
Delighted to share our latest paper in Communications Psychology on face pareidolia.

doi.org/10.1038/s442...
Reposted by Liz Simpson
utafrith.bsky.social
An exciting finding about the foundations of our prosocial preference.
Human newborns spontaneously attend to prosocial interactions.
Geraci, A., Surian, L., Tina, L.G. et al.

Nat Commun 16, 6304 (2025). doi.org/10.1038/s414...
doi.org
Reposted by Liz Simpson
soccoglab.bsky.social
Kids & Family Festival is tomorrow — Learn about our paid research studies for kids & spin our fun wheel to win a prize! ✨ Miami Dade College - Hialeah Campus #MiamiKid #UMiami #ScienceMatters
Kids and family festival. In benefit of I am MDC fundraising drive. Sat, Aug 16, 10am. Open to the public. Learn, play, and grow! Kids activities, business expo, bounce houses, giveaways, performances, face painting, food, and more! Until supplies last. Free entrance. 1780 West 49th Street, Hialeah, Florida 33012. Flyer in Spanish. Pics of kids having fun.
simpson.bsky.social
Maternal Immune Activation Alters Infant Attentional Processing in a Nonhuman Primate Model #OpenAccess doi.org/10.1016/j.bb...
Redirecting
doi.org
Reposted by Liz Simpson
annikainampudi.bsky.social
Seeing is believing, especially for your immune system. A new study shows that watching visibly sick people approach you in VR can trigger immune responses the same way a vaccine does @science.org

www.science.org/content/arti...
Looking at a sick person in VR can rev up our bodies’ immune systems
New study provides “remarkable” glimpse into how the brain predicts potential infections
www.science.org
Reposted by Liz Simpson
soccoglab.bsky.social
Appointments available - Reserve one for your child & #SupportScience at #UMiami! #ScienceMatters umiami.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_...
Picture of a baby poking out their tongue. University of Miami Infant and Child Studies. Help us learn about children’s social development! Eligibility: ages 0-10. Online and in person studies in Miami. Earn up to $50 per visit. Email us: SCL@ Miami.edu. Text or call us: 305-349-3351.
simpson.bsky.social
Want to learn more? Join us this Sept for a PhD application info session! Interact with faculty & current graduate students! Details will be posted by @umiamipsych.bsky.social when they're available. Meanwhile, please share our Developmental PhD Program brochure: dev.psy.miami.edu/2025-develop...
Developmental faculty smiling and putting their arms around each other laughing Smiling grad students with their arms around each other outside
simpson.bsky.social
I study social cognitive development in infants, children, & primates, focusing on face perception, social interaction, & positive emotions. Recruiting a student to study individual differences in newborn sociality. My lab: @soccoglab.bsky.social people.miami.edu/profile/c5b4... (thread 9/10)
Neonatal imitation - newborn baby face to face with an adult and they are both poking out their tongues Eye tracking - side views of two parents holding their babies while the babies look at a screen showing videos of people interacting and various pictures to see what babies pay attention to. It shows highlighted parts around the eye region, showing babies are making eye contact. Smiling lab group photo making U with hands
simpson.bsky.social
Dr. Rebecca Shearer conducts community-based research with early childhood programs to promote social-emotional skills, school readiness, & early school achievement through classroom-level investigation & intervention. people.miami.edu/profile/rshe... (thread 8/10)
group photo of lab smiling outside classroom of children sitting on the floor and a few are holding up their hands Text says: Developing holistic kindergarten readiness measurements - The Miami-Dade IDEAS Consortium for Children, housed at the University of Miami, is partnering with the local school district to comprehensively assess school readiness. Picture of a little girl holding an adult's hand as they walk away. Small headshot of Dr. Shearer.
simpson.bsky.social
Dr. @lynnkperry.bsky.social studies linguistic regularities (shape bias) & social regularities (peer interactions), language dev in kids w/ lang delays, hearing loss, & ASD. Recruiting students to study interaction in lang/literacy dev w/ hearing loss. people.miami.edu/profile/lkp3... (thread 7/10)
smiling group photo outside in front of a tree with flowers little girl wearing a head camera and playing with toys child reading a book
simpson.bsky.social
Dr. dmessinger.bsky.social studies early interaction of healthy & disturbed dev. Uses objective measures, big behavioral data. Focuses on emotional, social, & language dev in poverty & autism. Recruiting students to study interactions in preschools. people.miami.edu/profile/dmes... (thread 6/10)
man on floor with child playing with blocks smiling group photo outside in front of big tree and lots of greenery sample side from research - modeling objectively measured behavior to understand interaction --> development with various graphs and a picture of a smiling baby and smiling mother
simpson.bsky.social
Dr. Daryl Greenfield's community-based partnership research is on early science & engineering to improve multiple areas of learning & development in children from birth through 8 years of age, including language, literacy, & executive functions. people.miami.edu/profile/dgre... (thread 5/10)
Early Science Initiate logo - unleashing the power of sicenc in early childhood. Picture of a group of children learning about plants and talking to a teacher. Example of a stimulus material that shows a robot and an engaging science question for children photo collage of Dr. Greenfield and his team wearing matching cartoon robot shirts - says "how science club helps children and teachers learn"
simpson.bsky.social
Dr. Britton, affective neuroscientist. Intersection of emotion (approach-avoidance, threat processing, valence flexibility, empathy) & executive funct (flexibility, response inhibition, working mem) related to anxiety. Psychophys, virtual reality, fMRI. people.miami.edu/profile/j.br... (thread 4/10)
BRAIN group: Briding Research on Anxiety Innovations and Neuroscienc Group - lab logo, child smiling and holding out his hand with cartoon brain lightbulbs hanging down chalk board showing sad face and an arrow pointing to a happy face with a hand holding chalk large group photo of students and faculty holding up the U shape with their hands and smiling
simpson.bsky.social
...& children from diverse ethnic & cultural backgrounds. Our outstanding faculty are committed to graduate training & mentorship. Applications are due Dec 1st. The following faculty are accepting new PhD students... dev.psy.miami.edu/research/ind... (thread 3/10)
photo collage showing children with EEG, writing, interacting and various settings with diverse infants and children
simpson.bsky.social
...in academia & beyond. Our program focuses on understanding children’s cognitive, language, social, & emotional development in typically-developing, atypically-developing, & at-risk populations. Our dev studies typically include bilingual children... dev.psy.miami.edu/graduate-tra... (thread 2/10)
photo collage showing graduation pictures, lab field trip on boats in the ocean, students smiling, student holding up thesis paper, infant and child research settings showing babies and kids smiling
simpson.bsky.social
Join us! The Developmental Psychology Doctoral Program at the University of Miami (dev.psy.miami.edu) invites applications for fall 2026. Students are fully funded & receive excellent research training for careers... #DevSci #DevPsy #PsycSciSky #AcademicSky #PhDLife #GradSchool #UMiami (thread 1/10)
sunrise over a beach with palm trees and plants showing a path leading to the ocean with a colorful sky