Kate MacDuffie is a licensed clinical psychologist, a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Washington and a bioethics fellow at the Treuman Katz Center for Pediatric Bioethics at Seattle Children’s Hospital. MacDuffie’s research spans the areas of neuroimaging and neuroethics, with a focus on disclosure of results to participants with psychiatric or neurodevelopmental disorders.
Kate MacDuffie
Postdoctoral fellow
University of Washington
Explore more from The Transmitter
Karen Adolph explains how we develop our ability to move through the world
How do babies' bodies and their environment teach them to move—and how can robots benefit from these insights?
Karen Adolph explains how we develop our ability to move through the world
How do babies' bodies and their environment teach them to move—and how can robots benefit from these insights?
Microglia’s pruning function called into question
Scientists are divided over the extent to which the cells sculpt circuits during development.
Microglia’s pruning function called into question
Scientists are divided over the extent to which the cells sculpt circuits during development.
Early trajectory of Alzheimer’s tracked in single-cell brain atlases
Inflammation in glia and the loss of certain inhibitory cells may kick off a disease cascade decades before diagnosis.
Early trajectory of Alzheimer’s tracked in single-cell brain atlases
Inflammation in glia and the loss of certain inhibitory cells may kick off a disease cascade decades before diagnosis.