Emma Scholey
PhD
Postdoctoral Research Associate
- Wellcome Mental Health Award: The neurocognitive mechanisms of repetitive negative thoughts
My work focuses on the causal role of neurocognitive processes in the generation of symptoms of repetitive negative thoughts (RNT; e.g. rumination and worry).
I study how habits - behaviours that are expressed automatically - may be involved in RNT. I examine how the brain learns and expresses habits, and whether the function of specific brain targets is necessary for the control of habitual behaviours. We will test whether neurostimulation to these brain targets can reduce the expression of habitual behaviours, and in turn, RNT.
I previously completed my PhD in Psychology at the University of Birmingham with Prof. Matthew Apps and Prof. Mark Humphries (University of Nottingham), funded by the Medical Research Council. My PhD research explored how people decide when to commit to an opportunity or forego it, especially when these opportunities require physical effort to pursue.
Key publications
Stochastic choice drives variability in patch foraging decisions in humans and rats
Journal article
Scholey EV. et al, (2026), Communications Psychology
Foraging as an ethological framework for neuroscience
Journal article
Grima LL. et al, (2025), Trends in Neurosciences, 48, 877 - 890
The neuroeconomics of work: Computational and neural mechanisms of the dynamics of effort-based decisions
Preprint
Scholey E. et al, (2024)
Fatigue: Tough days at work change your prefrontal metabolites.
Journal article
Scholey E. and Apps MAJ., (2022), Curr Biol, 32, R876 - R879
Recent publications
Stochastic choice drives variability in patch foraging decisions in humans and rats
Journal article
Scholey EV. et al, (2026), Communications Psychology
Foraging as an ethological framework for neuroscience
Journal article
Grima LL. et al, (2025), Trends in Neurosciences, 48, 877 - 890
Stochastic choice drives variability in patch foraging decisions in humans and rats
Preprint
Scholey EV. et al, (2025)
The neuroeconomics of work: Computational and neural mechanisms of the dynamics of effort-based decisions
Preprint
Scholey E. et al, (2024)
Fatigue: Tough days at work change your prefrontal metabolites.
Journal article
Scholey E. and Apps MAJ., (2022), Curr Biol, 32, R876 - R879
