Kathleen Gates

Kathleen Marie "Katie" Gates is an American neuroscientist, quantitative psychologist, and faculty member in the L. L. Thurstone Psychometric Laboratory at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She is known for her contributions to network analysis, time series analysis, and structural equation modeling toward the development and dissemination of methods for quantifying intra-individual change and person-specific processes as they unfold across time.

Katie Gates
NationalityAmerican
Alma materMichigan State University
City University of New York
Pennsylvania State University
Known forGroup Iterative Multiple Model Estimation (GIMME) algorithm
Scientific career
FieldsNeuroscience
Quantitative psychology
InstitutionsUniversity of North Carolina
ThesisNovel estimation method for arriving at group connectivity maps with fMRI data
Doctoral advisorsMichael Rovine
Peter Molenaar

She and Peter Molenaar are co-inventors of GIMME, an algorithm for finding mathematical models of psychophysiological processes across time.[1]

Career

A native of Troy, Michigan, Gates earned a bachelor's degree from Michigan State University, a master's degree in forensic psychology from the John Jay College of Criminal Justice at the City University of New York, and a PhD in Human Development and Family Studies with a focus in quantitative methods from Pennsylvania State University. She joined the Psychology and Neuroscience faculty at the University of North Carolina in 2013.[2]

She is an elected member of the Society of Multivariate Experimental Psychology.[3]

Research

Gates publishes statistical methods for the analysis of intensive longitudinal data. Her primary source of funding is the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering.[4]

Selected publications

  • Gates, K. M., & Liu, S. (2016). Methods for quantifying patterns of dynamic interactions in dyads. Assessment, 23(4), 459–471.
  • Gates, K. M., Gatzke‐Kopp, L. M., Sandsten, M., & Blandon, A. Y. (2015). Estimating time‐varying RSA to examine psychophysiological linkage of marital dyads. Psychophysiology, 52(8), 1059–1065.
  • Gates, K. M., Molenaar, P. C., Iyer, S. P., Nigg, J. T., & Fair, D. A. (2014). Organizing heterogeneous samples using community detection of GIMME-derived resting state functional networks. PLOS ONE, 9(3), e91322.
  • Gates, K. M., & Molenaar, P. C. (2012). Group search algorithm recovers effective connectivity maps for individuals in homogeneous and heterogeneous samples. NeuroImage, 63(1), 310–319.
  • Gates, K. M., Molenaar, P. C., Hillary, F. G., & Slobounov, S. (2011). Extended unified SEM approach for modeling event-related fMRI data. NeuroImage, 54(2), 1151–1158.
  • Gates, K. M., Molenaar, P. C., Hillary, F. G., Ram, N., & Rovine, M. J. (2010). Automatic search for fMRI connectivity mapping: an alternative to Granger causality testing using formal equivalences among SEM path modeling, VAR, and unified SEM. NeuroImage, 50(3), 1118–1125.

References

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