About Sam
Prof Sam Wass gained a first-class undergraduate degree in Experimental Psychology at Oxford University. He completed his PhD in London, at the Centre for Brain and Cognitive Development, before being awarded a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship, based at the Medical Research Council Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit at Cambridge University. After that he was awarded an Economic and Social Research Council Future Research Leaders Fellowship, for which he moved to the University of East London, followed by 5-year Starter Grant fellowship from the European Research Council.
Sam is currently Director of the Institute for the Science of Early Years at the University of East London, whose aim is to explore how diverse and rapidly changing early childhood environments shape brain development - with a focus on attention, learning and stress. He works closely with children with SEND, including ADHD, autism and anxiety, and consults for commercial partners (e.g. Procter & Gamble, Kinder), early years organisations and nursery chains (including the EY Alliance, Busy Bees and LEYF), and third-sector organisations such as the Royal Foundation and BookTrust.
Alongside research, he provides policy advice in the UK (for Departments of Education and Health) and internationally, and delivers training for educators and clinicians working with young children.
Sam is married and has three children, Freddie, Rose and Stella.
Research
Sam Wass’ research examines stress, concentration and learning during infancy and early childhood. He uses methods including eyetracking, autonomic monitoring and neuroimaging (EEG) to understand how stress influences children’s concentration and learning, and how young children’s stress, concentration and learning capacities are influenced by the environment, and people around them. Sam works with typically developing children, children being raised in low socio-economic status backgrounds, and children in early stages of developing conditions such as Autism Spectrum disorders, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder and anxiety. You can read more here.
A description of Sam’s current 5-year European Research Council Fellowship project, on how infants’ biological rhythms entrain to the social and physical environment during early life, can be found here.
Sam has received funding as a Principal Investigator from the Medical Research Council, the Economic and Social Research Council, the European Research Council, the Leverhulme Trust, the British Academy and others, and as a co-Investigator from the National Institute of Health Research, the Nuffield Foundation, the MQ Mental Health charity and others.
BabyDev Lab
Sam is leader of the UEL BabyDev Lab. He has active research collaborations with a range of researchers including: Emily Jones (Birkbeck), Mark Johnson (Cambridge/Birkbeck), Bart Boets (Leuven, Belgium), Jukka Leppanen (Tampere, Finland), Stefanie Hoehl (Vienna, Austria), Anne Warlaumont (UCLA, US), Mike Goldstein (Cornell, US), Peter Marschik (Heidelberg, German), and Hanako Yoshida (Houston, US).
Commercial &
Media Partnerships
Sam is also active in the public communication of science. He appears regularly as an early years expert on television (BBC, ITV, Channel 4, Sky) and radio (all channels), and in all national newspapers. Sam has acted as media spokesperson for public campaigns by the Department of Education, Public Health England, Save the Children, Lego, Nickelodeon, and more. He also appeared as one of the psychologists in the multi-award-winning Channel 4 series The Secret Life of 4-, 5- and 6-Year-Olds, produced by Teresa Watkins for RDF Television and supported by the Wellcome Trust. Read more about Sam Wass’ media work here.