research tasks june 2023

Pokemon Go Field Research tasks & rewards for August 2024

pokemon go audino header

If you’re looking for a roundup of all the Pokemon Go Field Research tasks in August 2024, we’ve broken them down into categories, alongside details of the Research Breakthrough rewards you can earn.

Field Research is a long-running feature in Pokemon Go that gives Trainers a variety of tasks to complete to earn rewards. Completing seven tasks over seven days will result in a Research Breakthrough, which is a guaranteed encounter with a desirable Pokemon.

These Field Research tasks incorporate various elements of gameplay. Some will ask you to catch different types of Pokemon, others require you to take part in Raid Battles , and a few will task you with earning Candies or Hearts with your Buddy .

For August 2024, Trainers can earn an encounter with Hisuian Growlithe, Larvitar, Audino, Axew, Furfrou, and Jangmo-o as a Research Breakthrough. These are quite rare creatures in Pokemon Go, so it’s worth catching as many as possible during the Shared Skies season festivities. 

Pokemon Go Field Research

Completing the following tasks will get you one of the rewards listed in the right column . If there are multiple potential rewards, you’ll be given one of them at random.

Catching Field Research Tasks

Bidoof / Patrat / Bunnelby
Magikarp / Stufful / Wimpod
Dratini / Bagon / Axew
Swinub/ Buizel / Tympole
Pidgey / Mareep / Electrike
Clamperl
10 Venusaur Mega Energy / 10 Sceptile Mega Energy
10 Charizard Mega Energy / 10 Blaziken Mega Energy
10 Blastoise Mega Energy / 10 Swampert Mega Energy
10 Pidgeot Mega Energy
Vulpix / Poliwhirl / Wingull / Hippopotas/ Snover / Roggenrola / Vanillite
Alolan Diglett

Vulpix / Psyduck

Throwing Field Research Tasks

 Diglett / Alolan Diglett / Sudowoodo
Omanyte / Kabuto
Plusle / Minun
Binacle / Clamperl / Elygem / Kabuto / Omanyte
Anorith / Lileep
Slakoth / Makuhita
Make 5 Great Curveball Throws in a row Spinda
Gible
Beldum / Gible / Larvitar

Battling Field Research Tasks

Poliwag / Marill / Croagunk
Sandygast
Lapras
Aerodactyl / Alolan Exeggutor / Alolan Marowak
Win a Archen / Tirtouga
Alolan Ratatta

Buddy Field Research Tasks

Bunnelby / Buneary / Dedenne / Glameow / Jigglypuff / Litleo
Galarian Stunfisk / Stunfisk

Friendship Field Research Tasks

Send 5 Gifts and add a Sticker to each Luvdisc
Abra

Egg Field Research Tasks

Darumaka / Nincada / Scyther / Sudowoodo / Trubbish
Hatch 2 Eggs Galarian Darumaka /  Feebas / Mawile / Sneasel

Miscellaneous Field Research Tasks

Pawmi
Eevee
Bulbasaur / Charmander / Squirtle

Snivy / Tepig / Oshawott 

10 Venusaur Mega Energy / 10 Blastoise Mega Energy / 10 Charizard Mega Energy / 10 Beedrill Mega Energy / 10 Pidgeot Mega Energy / 10 Manectric Mega Energy / 10 Aggron Mega Energy

Litten / Popplio / Rowlett
25 Gyarados Mega Energy / 25 Steelix Mega Energy / 25 Houndoom Mega Energy
Onix
Aron / Doduo / Ralts / Remoraid
Galarian Slowpoke / Growlithe / Hisuian Growlithe / Slowpoke
Cottonee / Croagunk / Trapinch
Chinchou / Surskit
Doduo / Hoothoot
Geodude / Bincale

Special shout-out to Go Hub for help with these details.

What is Field Research in Pokemon Go?

Field Research is a series of tasks that are obtained by spinning a PokeStop or Gym . Players looking to rack up rewards will have to travel as they are only able to complete one task a day for each location.

Each task contains an objective, and trainers are given a reward for achieving it. Rewards can range from items like Poke Balls to encounters with specific Pokemon, which you can see in the tables above.

How do I unlock a Research Breakthrough?

To unlock a Research Breakthrough and get an encounter with the current month’s Pokemon, you’ll need to complete one Field Research task every day for seven days . The good news is they don’t have to be consecutive days, so you could do this over the space of a month if you wanted to.

Once you’ve completed a task, make sure you claim the reward on the Field Research progress page to earn a stamp. You can only earn one stamp per day, but completed tasks can be saved up and claimed at a later date to earn a stamp.

Once seven stamps have been earned, you can claim your Research Breakthrough reward by opening the package that appears at the top of the Field Research progress page.

Pokemon Go Research Breakthrough

How to get a Research Breakthrough in Pokemon Go

There are six potential Research Breakthrough encounters in August: Hisuian Growlithe, Larvitar, Audino, Axew, Furfrou, and Jangmo-o. They will be rewarded randomly, so you can’t predict which Pokemon you’ll get.

You’ll need to earn your seventh Field Research stamp and claim your big reward before the end of the season if you want to get one of these Pokemon, as a different set of rewards could take over then.

If you earn a stamp every day in August, you’ll be able to earn up to four Research Breakthroughs, meaning you’ll get the chance to catch four of these Pokemon, which is a great way to stock up on Candy.

Is there a Shiny Research Breakthrough in Pokemon Go?

According to the official season hub for Pokemon Go’s Shared Skies season, all of the Pokemon listed as Research Breakthrough rewards are available to get in Shiny forms, making them perfect targets for players who value rare and hard-to-get ‘mons. 

All past Pokemon Go Research Breakthrough rewards

Screenshot of Legendary Bird trio Moltres in Pokemon Go.

Interested in seeing all of the past ‘mons made available through Research Breakthroughs in Pokemon Go’s history? Take a look at the full list below:

2018 Research Breakthrough Rewards

April 2018 Moltres
May 2018 Zapdos
June 2018 Articuno
July 2018 Snorlax
August 2018 Raikou
September 2018 Entei
October 2018 Suicune
November 2018 Shedinja
December 2018 Articuno / Zapdos / Moltres / Raikou / Entei / Suicune

2019 Research Breakthrough Rewards

January to February 2019 Articuno / Zapdos / Moltres / Entei / Raikou / Suicune / Ho-Oh / Lugia
March to April 2019 Entei / Raikou / Suicune / Ho-Oh / Lugia / Regirock / Regice / Registeel
May to June 2019 Ho-Oh / Lugia / Latios / Latias
July to August 2019 Latios / Latias / Kyogre / Groudon
September to October 2019 Flower Crown Eevee
November to December 2019 Articuno / Zapdos / Moltres / Kyogre / Groudon

2020 Research Breakthrough Rewards

January 2020 Lapras
February 2020 Woobat
March 2020 Ferroseed
April 2020 Alolan Exeggutor
May 2020 Shinx
June 2020 Trapinch
July 2020 Larvitar
August 2020 Scraggy
September 2020 Alolan Raichu
October 2020 Shedinja
November 2020 Togetic
December 2020 Lapras and Darumaka

2021 Research Breakthrough Rewards

January 2021 Chansey
February 2021 Snorlax
March 2021 Gible
April 2021 Frillish
May 2021 Galarian Ponyta
June 2021 Clamperl
July 2021 Rufflet
August 2021 Chimecho
September 2021 Ditto
October 2021 Yamask
November 2021 Vullaby
December 2021 Deino

2022 Research Breakthrough Rewards

January 2022 Onix
February 2022 Espurr
March 2022 Alolan Vulpix
April 2022 Alolan Marowak
May 2022 Alolan Grimer
June 2022 Klink
July 2022 Lickitung
August 2022 Galarian Stunfisk
September 2022 Medicham
October 2022 Shedinja
November 2022 Starmie
December 2022 Bagon / Deino / Delibird / Furfrou / Galarian Mr Mime / Goomy

2023 Research Breakthrough Rewards

January 2023 Bagon / Deino / Delibird / Furfrou / Galarian Mr Mime / Goomy
February 2023 Bagon / Deino / Delibird / Furfrou / Galarian Mr Mime / Goomy
March 2023 Furfrou / Gible / Goomy / Parasect / Pinsir / Snorlax
April 2023 Furfrou / Gible / Goomy / Parasect / Pinsir / Snorlax
May 2023 Furfrou / Gible / Goomy / Parasect / Pinsir / Snorlax
June 2023 Audino / Beldum / Furfrou / Goomy / Noibat / Sableye
July 2023 Audino / Beldum / Furfrou / Goomy / Noibat / Sableye
August 2023 Audino / Beldum / Furfrou / Goomy / Noibat / Sableye
September 2023  Sableye / Bagon / Galarian Farfetch’d / Furfrou / Goomy / Larvitar
October 2023  Sableye / Bagon / Galarian Farfetch’d / Furfrou / Goomy / Larvitar
November 2023  Sableye / Bagon / Galarian Farfetch’d / Furfrou / Goomy / Larvitar
December 2023  Lapras / Galarian Weezing / Galarian Mr. Mime / Furfrou / Goomy 

2024 Research Breakthrough Rewards

January 2024 Lapras /Galarian Weezing / Galarian Mr. Mime, Furfrou / Goomy / Jangmo-o
February 2024 Lapras /Galarian Weezing / Galarian Mr. Mime, Furfrou / Goomy / Jangmo-o
March 2024 Goomy / Hisuian Sneasel / Furfrou / Sandygast /  Jangmo-o / Dubwool
April 2024 Goomy / Hisuian Sneasel / Furfrou / Sandygast /  Jangmo-o / Dubwool
May 2024 Goomy / Hisuian Sneasel / Furfrou / Sandygast / Jangmo-o / Dubwool
June 2024 Hisuian Growlithe / Larvitar / Audino / Axew / Furfrou / Jangmo-o
July 2024 Hisuian Growlithe / Larvitar / Audino / Axew / Furfrou / Jangmo-o

Field Research Breakthrough Shiny rates

Just like most species, Pokemon encounters from Field Research and Breakthrough rewards have a Shiny rate of around 1 in 450 . While not the best odds, it’s still better than most of the mainline RPGs.

If you want to increase your chances of finding a Shiny variation, make sure you don’t miss a single day of Field Research, as you’ll be able to get up to four Research Breakthrough encounters this way.

If you would like to stay updated with more stuff going on this month, check out the current Shadow Raid schedule and all the upcoming events .

Pokémon Go August Field Research tasks and their rewards explained

All Field Research tasks listed, plus Special Research and Research Breakthroughs work in Pokémon Go.

Pokémon Go Field Research was a major addition for the game in 2018, introducing new Pokémon Go tasks for players to accomplish.

Completing Pokémon Field Research tasks in Pokémon Go also provides unique rewards as part of Research Breakthroughs , while Special Research tasks help you uncover never before seen Pokémon, including the elusive Mythical Pokémon Mew .

On this page:

Pokémon Go August Field Research tasks and Research Breakthrough rewards

Pokémon go field research quests explained, research breakthroughs explained, what are special research quests, everything else you need to know about research quests in pokémon go.

The August Field Research in Pokémon Go offers a collection of new and old Field Research tasks.

After completing seven tasks, the August Research Breakthrough reward Pokémon can be either Hisuian Growlithe, Larvitar, Audino, Axew, Furfrou or Jangmo-o .

As for the individual August Field Research rewards (via the community work on the Silph Road subreddit), we're also waiting for the Spinda form to be confirmed (though it could be Form 9, but there's a chance it will be both Form 7 and 8), they are as follows:

Pokémon Go August Research tasks and rewards:

Catching Pokémon related Field Research tasks

  • Catch 5 Pokémon reward - Bidoof, Patrat or Bunnelby
  • Catch 7 Pokémon reward - Magikarp, Stufful or Wimpod
  • Catch a Dragon-type Pokémon reward - Dratini, Bagon or Axew
  • Catch 5 Water or Ground-type Pokémon reward - Swinub, Buizel or Tympole
  • Catch 5 Electric or Flying-type Pokémon reward - Pidgey, Mareep or Electrike
  • Catch 7 different species of Pokémon reward - Diglett
  • Catch 15 different species of Pokémon reward - Clamperl
  • Catch 5 Pokémon with Weather Boost reward - Vulpix, Poliwag, Wingull, Hippopotas, Snover, Roggenrola or Vanillite
  • Use 5 Razz Berries to help catch Pokémon reward - Vulpix or Psyduck

Buddy related Field Research tasks

  • Earn 2 Candies walking with your buddy reward - Jigglypuff, Glameow, Buneary, Bunnelby, Litleo or Dedenne
  • Earn 3 Candies walking with your buddy reward - Stunfisk or Galarian Stunfisk

Poké Balls Throwing related Field Research tasks

  • Make 5 Nice Throws reward - Diglett, Alolan Diglett or Sudowoodo
  • Make 10 Nice Throws reward - Plusle or Minun
  • Make 3 Great Throws reward - Omanyte, Kabuto, Clamperl, Binacle or Elgyem
  • Make 5 Great Throws reward - Slakoth or Makuhita
  • Make 3 Great Throws in a row reward - Lileep or Anorith
  • Make 5 Great Throws Curveballs reward - Omanyte or Kabuto
  • Make 5 Great Curveball Throws in a row reward - Spinda (Form 9 - to be confirmed)
  • Make 2 Excellent Throws reward - Gible
  • Make 3 Excellent Throws in a row reward - Larvitar, Beldum or Gible

Egg related Field Research tasks

  • Hatch an Egg reward - Scyther, Sudowoodo, Nincada, Trubbish or Darumaka
  • Hatch 2 Eggs reward - Sneasel, Mawile, Feebas, Galarian Darumaka

Battle related Field Research tasks

  • Win in the Go Battle League reward - Poliwag, Marill or Croagunk
  • Defeat 3 Team Go Rocket Grunts reward - Alolan Rattata

Raid related Field Research tasks

  • Win a Raid reward - Sandygast
  • Win 2 Raids reward - Lapras
  • Win 5 Raids reward - Alolan Marowak, Exeggutor or Aerodactyl
  • Win a Level 3 or higher Raid reward - Archen or Tirtouga

Friend related Field Research tasks

  • Send 5 Gifts and add a Sticker to each - Luvdisc
  • Trade a Pokémon - Abra

Snapshot Field Research tasks

  • Take a snapshot of a wild Pokémon reward - Trapinch, Croagunk or Cottonee
  • Take 3 snapshots of different wild Water-type Pokémon reward - Chinchou or Surskit
  • Take 3 snapshots of different wild Flying-type Pokémon reward - Doduo or Hoothoot
  • Take 3 snapshots of different wild Rock-type Pokémon reward - Geodude or Binacle

Powering up Pokémon Field Research tasks

  • Power up Pokémon 3 times reward - Bulbasaur, Charmander or Squirtle
  • Power up Pokémon 5 times reward - Snivy, Tepig or Oshawott encounter
  • Power up Pokémon 7 times reward - Rowlet, Litten or Popplio

Miscellaneous Field Research tasks

  • Evolve a Pokémon reward - Eevee
  • Purify 3 Shadow Pokémon reward - Onix
  • Explore 2km reward - Pawmi
  • Spin 3 PokéStops or Gyms reward - Doduo, Hisuian Growlithe, Slowpoke or Galarian Slowpoke

Field research are missions collected one at a time by spinning a PokéStop, and will involve finding certain creatures, engaging in battles and other activities.

Every day PokéStops will give you a new quest, and each type of quest can have one of many different rewards, from previously Raid-exclusive consumables such as TMs and Rare Candy and common items such as Poké Balls.

research tasks june 2023

Examples of quest types include:

  • Catch one or two specific Pokemon (such as 3x Pidgey or Murkrow)
  • Catch specific Types (such as catch 10x Normal Type Pokemon)
  • Catch Weather -boosted Types
  • Hatch a certain number of Eggs
  • Battle in a Gym a certain number of times
  • Battle in a Raid a certain number of times
  • Evolve a certain number of Pokemon
  • Make a certain number of specific throws (such as Nice, Great or Excellent)
  • Spin a certain number of PokeStops

Some of these quest rewards even give you the chance to catch a mystery Pokémon. There's nothing exclusive here, but there does include uncommon and rare Pokémon, such as Tangela and Chansey, depending on the quest in particular.

As well as from a PokéStop, one additional research quest will also be added to your list at midnight local time. If you have a full roster of research, then you'll receive a fourth regardless - though if you still have four the following evening, no more will be added.

It's also worth knowing that, as of Thursday 1st June 2023 with the release of the Season of Hidden Gems , the quests and associated rewards now rotate on a seasonal basis. The only excpetion to this rule is the Spinda field research task. This means that both the field research tasks and rewards will remain the same for three months in total, only changing when a new season - both in Pokémon Go and real life - rolls around.

Finally, it's also worth knowing that if you pick up a quest, you are free to delete it and catch another by spinning another Pokéstop. You can also complete as many as you like in a day - so when you have space in your inventory, return to a PokéStop to start quest. Spin the same Pokéstop and you'll just get the same quest again though - Pokéstops give out set rewards, that are generally tailored to their location, which refresh every day at midnight. So if you want a new quest you'll need to spin another stop.

Event-exclusive field research tasks can also be saved in your field research collection and completed after said event ends.

Completing one Field Research quest per day will give you a stamp. Get seven stamps - which will take seven days - completes something known as a Research Breakthrough .

These have even greater rewards - including Stardust and Mystery Items - as well as an encounter with a very rare or Legendary Pokémon .

You'll also receive plenty of other items too - including a chance at Rare Candy, Pokéballs, Berries, 2,000 Stardust, 3,000 XP, and a Sinnoh Stone .

research tasks june 2023

The best news about these Research Breakthrough catches is they cannot run away - it has a flee chance of 0 per cent - so the pressure is off. However, it has the same catch rate as normal, so be prepared for it to break out of your balls.

This means you can use Pinap Berries, or even use it as a chance to rack up some of the harder throwing-based Special Research streaks, without any risk of it running away.

It also comes with strong IVs, too, as if the Pokémon was appearing in a Raid encounter or Egg. It always appears at level 15, which is the same for all mystery Pokémon caught from Field Research rewards.

If you're curious, here is all the Research Breakthrough rewards so far:

Research Breakthrough rewards from 2018 to 2024:

  • April 2018: Moltres reward and Fire-themed Field Research
  • May 2018: Zapdos reward and Electric-themed Field Research
  • June 2018: Articuno reward and Ice / Water-themed Field Research
  • July 2018: Snorlax reward and Kanto-themed Field Research
  • August 2018: Raikou reward and Electric-themed Field Research
  • September 2018: Entei reward and Fire-themed Field Research
  • October 2018: Suicune reward and Water-themed Field Research
  • November 2018: Shedinja reward and Bug-themed Field Research
  • December 2018: Articuno, Zapdos, Moltres, Entei, Raikou and Suicune reward
  • January to February 2019: Articuno, Zapdos, Moltres, Entei, Raikou, Suicune, Ho-Oh and Lugia reward
  • March to April 2019: Entei, Raikou, Suicune, Ho-Oh, Lugia, Regirock, Regice and Registeel reward
  • May to June 2019: Ho-Oh, Lugia, Latios and Latias reward
  • July to August 2019: Latios, Latias, Kyogre and Groudon reward
  • September to October 2019: Flower crown Eevee reward
  • November to December 2019: Articuno, Zapdos, Moltres, Kyogre and Groundon reward
  • January 2020: Lapras that knows Ice Shard and Ice Beam
  • February 2020: Woobat
  • March 2020: Ferroseed
  • April 2020: Alolan Exeggutor
  • May 2020: Shinx
  • June 2020: Trapinch
  • July 2020: Larvitar
  • August 2020: Scraggy
  • September 2020: Alolan Raichu
  • October 2020: Shedinja
  • November 2020: Togetic
  • December 2020: Lapras and Darumaka
  • January 2021: Chansey
  • February 2021: Snorlax
  • March 2021: Gible
  • April 2021: Frillish
  • May 2021: Galarian Ponyta
  • June 2021: Clamperl
  • July 2021: Rufflet
  • August 2021: Chimecho
  • September 2021: Ditto
  • October 2021: Yamask
  • November 2021: Vullaby
  • December 2021: Deino
  • January 2022: Onix
  • February 2022: Espurr
  • March 2022: Alolan Vulpix
  • April 2022: Alolan Marowak
  • May 2022: Alolan Grimer
  • June 2022: Klink
  • July 2022: Lickitung
  • August 2022: Galarian Stunfisk
  • September 2022: Medicham and a Premium Raid Pass
  • October 2022: Shedinja
  • November 2022: Starmie
  • December 2022, January and February 2023: Galarian Mr. Mime, Delibird, Bagon, Deino, Furfrou or Goomy
  • March, April and May 2023: Parasect, Pinsir, Snorlax, Gible, Furfrou or Goomy
  • June, July and August 2023: Sableye, Beldum, Audino, Furfrou, Goomy or Noibat
  • September, October and November 2023: Galarian Farfetch'd, Larvitar, Sableye, Bagon, Furfrou or Goomy
  • December 2023, January and February 2024: Lapras, Galarian Weezing, Galarian Mr. Mime, Furfrou, Goomy or Jangmo-O
  • March, April and May 2024: Hisuian Sneasel, Furfrou, Goomy, Sandygast, Jangmo-o and Dubwool
  • June, July and August 2024: Hisuian Growlithe, Larvitar, Audino, Axew, Furfrou, Jangmo-o

Finally, the question is - when do the special reward Pokémon change in your Research Breakthrough progress? It's when you claim the reward for your final Field Research task.

So, you can complete the task, but just don't claim the reward for that task before 1pm PST / 9pm UK time of the first of the month, as doing so will activate the arrival of the Special Research reward at the top of the screen.

If it's before then, it'll be the reward for the month before (so in October 2018, this was Suicune). Wait until after, it'll be the next month's (so in November 2018, this is Shedinja).

To clarify further, this is when you complete the task, not open it. Even if you then open it after the change, it'll be the prior month's Pokémon. To be safe, wait until it's the new month if you want to get the latest creature.

The Shared Skies Season is here! Go Fest 2024 may have been and gone, but you can still play around with the Fusion mechanic. Meanwhile, ticket holders can finish Go Fest 2024: A Shadowy Caper and The Dusk Settles . Don't forget to try out Routes , Gift Exchange and Party Play while you're hunting down rare Pokémon , fighting in the Go Battle League or competing in PokéStop Showcases .

research tasks june 2023

Special Research quests, meanwhile, are story-based questlines with unique rewards. Unlike Field Research quests, these are fixed objectives that every player will face, and appear in the game infrequently.

The first available is ' A Mythical Discovery ', with the arrival of the game's first Mythical creature - Mew - as the end reward.

Our A Mythical Discovery explains the eight steps required to unlock Mew, which includes finding specific Pokémon, participating in Raid and Gym battles, and reaching a certain Trainer level.

Since then we've seen more special research quests arrive for other mythical Pokémon, like Celebi and Meloetta , and ones themed around battling Team Go Rocket or investigating the Ultra Beasts. Ocassionally, you can even purchase a special research from the in-game Pokémon Go store, like Wish Granted , which will allow you to earn additional Pokémon, items or avatar clothing.

Make sure you're playing Pokémon Go regularly to ensure you're keeping up with all of the special research quests! Remember - since they don't have deadlines, you can complete these quests at your own pace.

Though the quest features are well explained in the game, there's some nuance that will help you get the most out of each objective you undertake.

  • Completing one of the Special Research objectives will not add a daily stamp to your Research Breakthrough progress - it must be from a Field Research quest instead.
  • You can cancel and complete as many Field Research quests as you want per day.
  • As long as you have space for it, you will recieve one field research task automatically every day.
  • It's possible to have multiple of the same Field Quest at once, and complete them all at the same time.
  • Pokémon encounters from Research quests always feature Level 15 Pokémon, with the 66 per cent to 100 per cent IV spreads you also find in Raid or Egg encounters, and are unaffected by the weather.
  • Certain Special Research quests (also known as Mew steps ) will be automatically completed if you complete their requirements since they are impossible to 'repeat', such as reaching a certain Trainer or medal level.

research tasks june 2023

  • You can spin the same PokéStop for Stop-spinning quests, and there is no difference between Gym Discs and PokéStop Discs when completing spin quests - though Gym Discs don't count towards "new Pokéstop" quests.
  • You don't have to 'view' a quest in the quest screen to complete it, so if you don't have time to check what it is (if you're on a bus and there are PokéStops and Pokémon to catch quickly, for example) then it can wait - and if it's the right type of quest, you might have started work on it by the time you check it.
  • Pokémon Go Plus can be used to collect quests from PokéStops and complete objectives.
  • The mystery Pokémon you can catch after completing certain Field Research quests have the same high-end IV range as Egg and Gym Pokémon.
  • You have to catch the mystery Pokémon in order to clear the research from your quest log - you can run away and come back, but you need to catch it to clear the quest, even if it's a rubbish Pokémon. Fleeing and trying again won't reset the Pokémon's stats, either - once it spawns, they're fixed.
  • You can "cheese" the "Battle in X number of Raids" quests, by deliberately dodging your way through them until the timer runs out and retrying repeatedly. This is a great way to save on Raid Passes and complete the quest quickly, if you don't mind killing some time. Note that EX Raids do also count towards Raid quests, too.
  • Catching evolved forms of Pokémon does count towards "Catch X number of Y Pokémon" quests. So I could catch a Gloom for a "Catch 2 Oddish" quest and it would count.

Cover image for YouTube video

  • Similarly, throwing better-tierd throws than required in ball-throwing quests counts too. So throwing a Great or Excellent Throw will count towards "Make 5 Nice Throws".
  • You can miss days and not lose your streak of Stamps - it's just a cap of one Stamp that can be earned per day, not a "streak" that can be lost by missing a day, like the ones for spinning a Pokéstop or catching a Pokémon every day.
  • Dittos count towards the types they're disguised as too - so a Ditto disguised as a Pidge will count towards "Catch 3 Pidgey" quests.
  • Hatching and evolving Pokémon doesn't count towards catching tasks, you have to physically catch them in the wild or from Raid or mystery Pokémon encounters.
  • You can indeed work towards two quests at once - so landing a Great Throw on a Pidgey will both count towards "Catch 3 Pidgey" and "Make 3 Great Throws" quests.
  • You can delay claiming rewards for both Field and Special Research, although they'll need to be cleared before you get new ones. Delaying the rewards for you Special Research in particular is a good idea, as some of the later requests reward thousands of XP - it might be worth popping a Lucky Egg before claiming them all together.

Thanks to the Silph Road subreddit for filling in the gaps on some of the above.

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Pokémon Go ‘A Shadowy Disturbance’ Special Research quest steps, rewards

Complete these research quests for a Shadow Regirock

by Julia Lee

Giovanni stands with a Shadow Regirock in Pokémon Go

“A Shadowy Disturbance” is the latest Giovanni research quest in Pokémon Go.

Making its debut in late June 2023 as part of the “ Solstice Horizons ” event, it ends with an encounter and opportunity to catch Shadow Regirock .

“A Shadowy Disturbance” is part of a long line of Giovanni research quests, which started back in 2019 with “ A Troubling Situation .” If “From the Shadows” is not appearing for you, first clear the most recent Giovanni quest in your quest log — the previous one was March 2023’s “ From the Shadows ” — to allow this new quest to become available.

The second half of the “Solstice Horizons” event sees a Team Go Rocket Takeover, which ushers in changes to eggs and Shadow Pokémon, which will be active until the event concludes on June 25 at 8 p.m. local time .

‘A Shadowy Disturbance’ tasks and rewards

“A Shadowy Disturbance” Special Research will be available to unlock until the next Giovanni quest and highlighted Shadow Legendary encounter arrives later in the year. Once unlocked, there is no time limit to complete the quest.

Step 1 of 5

  • Catch 15 Pokémon (5 Pinap Berries)
  • Spin 5 Poké Stops or gyms (10 Poké Balls)
  • Defeat 3 Team Go Rocket grunts (1 Mysterious Component)

Rewards: 1,000 XP, 1,000 Stardust, Aron encounter

Step 2 of 5

  • Transfer 10 Pokémon (10 Great Balls)
  • Defeat 6 Team Go Rocket Grunts (3 Mysterious Components)

Rewards: 1,500 XP, 1,500 Stardust, Graveler encounter

Step 3 of 5

  • Defeat the Team Go Rocket Leader Arlo (2,500 XP)
  • Defeat the Team Go Rocket Leader Cliff (2,500 XP)
  • Defeat the Team Go Rocket Leader Sierra (2,500 XP)

Rewards: 2,500 XP, 300 Stardust , 1 Super Rocket Radar

Step 4 of 5

  • Find the Team Go Rocket Boss (10 Max Potions)
  • Battle the Team Go Rocket Boss (10 Ultra Balls)
  • Defeat the Team Go Rocket Boss (6 Max Revives)

Rewards : 3,000 XP, 3,000 Stardust, Sableye encounter

You’ll be able to catch the final Shadow Pokémon in Giovanni’s team once you have used your Super Rocket Radar. This varies depending on when you play the quest; from June 2023 until when the next Giovanni quest debuts, this will be Shadow Regirock .

Step 5 of 5

  • Claim reward (2,500 XP)

Rewards : 5,000 XP, 4,500 Stardust, 2 Silver Pinap Berries

Team Go Rocket Takeover event changes

As well as the above quest, the second half of the “ Solstice Horizons ” event is also host to a Team Go Rocket Takeover until June 25 at 8 p.m. local time , with the following changes:

  • Boosted Team Go Rocket balloon spawns and PokéStop encounters
  • Shadow Pokémon can forget Charged Attack Frustration with a Charged TM
  • Shadow raids appear more often
  • Rocket Grunts change their Shadow Pokémon line-ups
  • Leaders Sierra, Cliff, and Arlo change their team line-ups
  • Giovanni changes team line-up

Artwork from Pokemon Go showing the new Team Rocket admins, Giovanni, and a group of shadow Pokemon

12km Egg changes

Best of luck taking down Giovanni once again!

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The Latest ⚡️

List of Field Research tasks and rewards/2023

TodayView Icon General

  • 1.1 Catching Pokémon related tasks
  • 1.2 Throwing Poké Balls related tasks
  • 1.3 Battle related tasks
  • 1.4 Other tasks
  • 2.1 Catching Pokémon related tasks
  • 2.2 Throwing Poké Balls related tasks
  • 2.3 Battle related tasks
  • 2.4 Other tasks
  • 3.1 Catching Pokémon related tasks
  • 3.2 Throwing Poké Balls related tasks
  • 3.3 Battle related tasks
  • 3.4 Other tasks
  • 4.1 Catching Pokémon related tasks
  • 4.2 Throwing Poké Balls related tasks
  • 4.3 Battle related tasks
  • 4.4 Other tasks
  • 5.1 Catching Pokémon related tasks
  • 5.2 Throwing Poké Balls related tasks
  • 5.3 Battle related tasks
  • 5.4 Other tasks
  • 6.1 Catching Pokémon related tasks
  • 6.2 Throwing Poké Balls related tasks
  • 6.3 Battle related tasks
  • 6.4 Other tasks
  • 7.1 Catching Pokémon related tasks
  • 7.2 Throwing Poké Balls related tasks
  • 7.3 Battle related tasks
  • 7.4 Other tasks
  • 8.1 Catching Pokémon related tasks
  • 8.2 Throwing Poké Balls related tasks
  • 8.3 Battle related tasks
  • 8.4 Other tasks
  • 9.1 Community Day tasks
  • 9.2 New Year's tasks
  • 9.3 Twinkling Fantasy tasks
  • 9.4 Lunar New Year tasks
  • 9.5 Crackling Voltage tasks
  • 9.6 Valentine's Day tasks
  • 9.7 Luvdisc Research Day tasks
  • 9.8 Primal Rumblings tasks
  • 9.9 Pokémon GO Tour: Hoenn - Global tasks
  • 9.10 Catch Mastery: Hitmonlee, Hitmonchan, and Hitmontop tasks
  • 9.11 Festival of Colors tasks
  • 9.12 Let's GO! tasks
  • 9.13 April Fowl's Day: Pidgey Pandemonium tasks
  • 9.14 Spring into Spring tasks
  • 9.15 A Mystic Hero tasks
  • 9.16 Sustainability Week tasks
  • 9.17 Stunfisk Limited Research tasks
  • 9.18 An Instinctive Hero tasks
  • 9.19 A Valorous Hero tasks
  • 9.20 Rising Shadows tasks
  • 9.21 Searching for Gold Research Day tasks
  • 9.22 Water Festival: Beach Week tasks
  • 9.23 Solstice Horizons tasks
  • 9.24 Dark Flames tasks
  • 9.25 7th Anniversary Party tasks
  • 9.26 Blaze New Trails tasks
  • 9.27 Riolu Hatch Day tasks
  • 9.28 Adventure Week tasks
  • 9.29 Glittering Garden tasks
  • 9.30 Pokémon World Championships tasks
  • 9.31 Noxious Swamp tasks
  • 9.32 Pokémon GO Fest 2023: Global tasks
  • 9.33 A Paldean Adventure tasks
  • 9.34 Ultra Unlock: Paldea tasks
  • 9.35 Oddish Research Day tasks
  • 9.36 Psychic Spectacular tasks
  • 9.37 Out to Play tasks
  • 9.38 Azurill Hatch Day tasks
  • 9.39 Detective Pikachu Returns Event tasks
  • 9.40 Harvest Festival tasks
  • 9.41 Halloween Part 1 tasks
  • 9.42 Incense Day: Skorupi tasks
  • 9.43 Halloween Part 2 tasks
  • 9.44 Día de Muertos tasks
  • 9.45 Festival of Lights tasks
  • 9.46 Fashion Week tasks
  • 9.47 Party Up! tasks
  • 9.48 Along the Routes tasks
  • 9.49 Catch Mastery: Ice tasks
  • 9.50 Adamant Time tasks
  • 9.51 Holiday Part 1 tasks
  • 9.52 Holiday Part 2 tasks
  • 11 References

Please, note that there are always only either: specific amount of Stardust , or XP , or just one kind of item , or a particular Pokémon encounter for a single task completed, which means only one of following possible rewards is rewarded for single Field Research task completed not all of them!

January 2023 [ ]

Shiny Dedenne was available since Jan 10.

Catching Pokémon related tasks [ ]

Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Catch 5 Pokémon
 

 
Catch 7 Pokémon
 
Catch 10 Pokémon


Catch a -type Pokémon
 

 



Catch 5 -type Pokémon
Catch 10 -type Pokémon



Catch 10 -type Pokémon



Catch 10 -type Pokémon



Catch 10 -type Pokémon



Catch 5 Pokémon with Boost
 

 

 

 



Catch 10 Pokémon with Weather Boost


Catch a


Catch 3
 
Use 5 to help catch Pokémon
 



Throwing Poké Balls related tasks [ ]

Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Make 5 Nice Throws
 



Make 3 Nice Throws in a row


Make 2 Nice Curveball Throws in a row


Make 3 Great Throws
 

 

 



Make 3 Great Throws in a row
 





Make 3 Great Curveball Throws




Make 3 Great Curveball Throws in a row


Make 5 Great Curveball Throws in a row
 
Make an Excellent Throw



Make 3 Excellent Throws in a row
 
Make 5 Curveball Throws in a row


Battle related tasks [ ]

Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Win a raid
 
Win 5 raids
 
Win a three-star raid or higher
 

 
Battle in
 

Other tasks [ ]

Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Hatch an
 

Hatch 2 Eggs
 
Spin 3 or
 



Spin 5 PokéStops or Gyms
 
Spin 10 PokéStops or Gyms


a Pokémon
 
Pokémon 3 times
 

 

 
Power up Pokémon 5 times
 

 

 




Power up Pokémon 7 times
 

 

 
Power up Pokémon 10 times
Send 5 and add a sticker to each
 

 
a Pokémon
 
Earn 2 walking with your
 
Earn 3 Candies walking with your buddy
Earn 3 hearts with your buddy
 
Feed your buddy 3 times
 
Take a of a wild Pokémon
 

 

 
Take 5 snapshots of wild Pokémon
 

February 2023 [ ]

Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Catch 5 Pokémon
 

 
Catch 7 Pokémon
 
Catch 10 Pokémon


Catch 7 different species of Pokémon
Catch a -type Pokémon
 

 



Catch 10 -type Pokémon



Catch 10 -type Pokémon



Catch 10 -type Pokémon



Catch 10 -type Pokémon



Catch 5 Pokémon with Boost
 

 

 

 



Catch 10 Pokémon with Weather Boost


Catch a


Use 5 to help catch Pokémon


Use 5 Razz Berries to help catch Pokémon
 
Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Make 5 Nice Throws
 



Make 3 Nice Throws in a row


Make 2 Nice Curveball Throws in a row


Make 3 Great Throws
 

 

 



Make 3 Great Throws in a row
 





Make 3 Great Curveball Throws




Make 3 Great Curveball Throws in a row


Make 5 Great Curveball Throws in a row
 
Make an Excellent Throw


Make 2 Excellent Throws
 
Make 3 Excellent Throws in a row
 
Make 5 Curveball Throws in a row


Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Win a raid
 
Win 5 raids
 
Win a three-star raid or higher
 

 
Battle in
 
Defeat 3
Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Hatch an
 
Hatch 2 Eggs
 

 

 
Spin 3 or
 



Spin 5 PokéStops or Gyms
 
Spin 10 PokéStops or Gyms


a Pokémon
 
Pokémon 3 times
 

 

 
Power up Pokémon 5 times
 

 

 




Power up Pokémon 7 times
 

 

 
Power up Pokémon 10 times
Send 5 and add a sticker to each
 

 
a Pokémon
 
Earn 2 walking with your
 
Earn 3 Candies walking with your buddy
Earn 3 hearts with your buddy
 
Take a of a wild Pokémon
 

 

 
Take 5 snapshots of wild -type Pokémon
 

Walk 4 km
 

March 2023 [ ]

Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Catch 5 Pokémon
 
Catch 7 Pokémon
 
Catch 10 Pokémon


Catch a -type Pokémon
 

 



Catch 10 -type Pokémon



Catch 10 -type Pokémon



Catch 5 Water-type Pokémon
 
Catch 10 -type Pokémon



Catch 10 -type Pokémon



Catch 5 Pokémon with Boost
 

 

 

 



Catch 10 Pokémon with Weather Boost


Catch a


Use 5 to help catch Pokémon


Use 3 Pinap Berries to help catch Pokémon
 
Catch 2
 
Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Make 5 Nice Throws
 



Make 3 Nice Throws in a row


Make 2 Nice Curveball Throws in a row


Make 3 Great Throws
 

 

 



Make 3 Great Throws in a row
 





Make 3 Great Curveball Throws




Make 3 Great Curveball Throws in a row


Make 5 Great Curveball Throws in a row
 
Make an Excellent Throw


Make 3 Excellent Throws in a row
 
Make 5 Curveball Throws in a row
 



Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Hatch an
 

 
Hatch 2 Eggs
 

 
Spin 3 or
 



Spin 5 PokéStops or Gyms
 
Spin 10 PokéStops or Gyms


a Pokémon
 
Pokémon 3 times
 

 

 
Power up Pokémon 5 times
 

 

 




Power up Pokémon 7 times
 

 

 
Power up Pokémon 15 times
Send 3 and add a sticker to each
 

a Pokémon
Earn 2 walking with your
 
Earn 3 Candies walking with your buddy
Earn 5 Candies walking with your buddy
 
Earn 5 hearts with your buddy
 
Take a of a wild Pokémon
 

 

 
Take 3 snapshots of wild -type Pokémon

April 2023 [ ]

Shiny Stunfisk was available since Apr 23.

Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Catch 5 Pokémon
 

 
Catch 7 Pokémon
 
Catch 10 Pokémon


Catch a -type Pokémon
 

 



Catch 10 -type Pokémon



Catch 10 -type Pokémon



Catch 10 -type Pokémon



Catch 10 -type Pokémon



Catch 5 Pokémon with Boost
 

 

 

 



Catch 10 Pokémon with Weather Boost


Catch a


Use 5 to help catch Pokémon


Use 5 Nanab Berries while help catching Pokémon
 
Catch 2
 

 
Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Make 5 Nice Throws
 



Make 3 Nice Throws in a row


Make 2 Nice Curveball Throws in a row


Make 3 Great Throws
 

 

 



Make 3 Great Throws in a row
 





Make 3 Great Curveball Throws




Make 3 Great Curveball Throws in a row


Make 5 Great Curveball Throws in a row
 
Make an Excellent Throw


Make 3 Excellent Throws
 
Make 3 Excellent Throws in a row
 
Make 5 Curveball Throws in a row


Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Use 10 supereffective Charged Attacks
Win a raid
 
Win 5 raids
 
Win a three-star raid or higher
 

 
Battle in
Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Hatch an
 

 
Hatch 2 Eggs
 
Spin 3 or
 

 

 



Spin 5 PokéStops or Gyms
 
Spin 10 PokéStops or Gyms


a Pokémon
 
Pokémon 3 times
 

 

 
Power up Pokémon 5 times
 

 

 




Power up Pokémon 7 times
 

 

 
Send 4 and add a sticker to each
 

 
a Pokémon
Earn 2 walking with your
 
Earn 3 Candies walking with your buddy
 
Earn 5 Candies walking with your buddy
Play with your buddy
 
Take a of a wild Pokémon
 

 

 
Take 6 snapshots of wild Pokémon
 

 

May 2023 [ ]

Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Catch 5 Pokémon
 

 
Catch 7 Pokémon
 
Catch 10 Pokémon


Catch a -type Pokémon
 

 



Catch 10 -type Pokémon



Catch 10 -type Pokémon



Catch 10 -type Pokémon



Catch 5 -type Pokémon
 
Catch 10 Normal-type Pokémon



Catch 5 Pokémon with Boost
 

 

 

 



Catch 10 Pokémon with Weather Boost


Catch a


Use 5 to help catch Pokémon
 



Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Make 5 Nice Throws
 



Make 3 Nice Throws in a row


Make 2 Nice Curveball Throws in a row


Make 5 Nice Curveball Throws in a row
 
Make 3 Great Throws
 

 

 



Make 3 Great Throws in a row
 





Make 3 Great Curveball Throws




Make 3 Great Curveball Throws in a row


Make 5 Great Curveball Throws in a row
 
Make an Excellent Throw


Make 3 Excellent Throws in a row
 
Make 5 Curveball Throws in a row


Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Use 10 supereffective Charged Attacks
Win a raid
 
Win 5 raids
 
Win a three-star raid or higher
 

 
Purify 3


Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Hatch an
 

 
Hatch 2 Eggs
 
Spin 3 or
 



Spin 5 PokéStops or Gyms
 
Spin 10 PokéStops or Gyms


a Pokémon
 
Pokémon 3 times
 

 

 
Power up Pokémon 5 times
 

 

 




Power up Pokémon 7 times
 

 

 
Send 3 and add a sticker to each
 
a Pokémon
 

 
Earn 2 walking with your
 
Earn 3 Candies walking with your buddy
 
Take a of your buddy
 
Take a snapshot of a wild Pokémon
 

 

 
Take 2 snapshots of wild -type Pokémon
 
Walk 3 km
 

Hidden Gems [ ]

Starting this Season , Field Research tasks began to rotate Seasonally rather than monthly. Spinda task will still rotate monthly. [1]

Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Catch 5 Pokémon
 

 

 
Catch 7 Pokémon
 

 

Catch 10 Pokémon
 

 

 



Catch 15 Pokémon
 

 

 
Catch 7 different species of Pokémon
 
Catch 15 different species of Pokémon
 
Catch a -type Pokémon
 

 

 



Catch 10 -type Pokémon




Catch 10 -type Pokémon




Catch 10 -type Pokémon




Catch 10 -type Pokémon



Catch 5 Pokémon with Boost
 

 

 

 

 

 




Catch 10 Pokémon with Weather Boost


Catch a


Use 5 to help catch Pokémon


Use 5 Razz Berries to help catch Pokémon
 

 
Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Make 5 Nice Throws
 

 

 



Make 10 Nice Throws
 

 
Make 3 Nice Throws in a row


Make 2 Nice Curveball Throws in a row


Make 3 Great Throws
 

 

 

 

 



Make 5 Great Throws
 

 

 
Make 3 Great Throws in a row
 

 





Make 3 Great Curveball Throws
 





Make 3 Great Curveball Throws in a row


Make 5 Great Curveball Throws in a row (Jun)
 
Make 5 Great Curveball Throws in a row (Jul)
 
Make 5 Great Curveball Throws in a row (Aug)
 
Make an Excellent Throw


Make 2 Excellent Throws
 
Make 3 Excellent Throws in a row
 

 

 
Make 5 Curveball Throws in a row


Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Win a raid
Win 3 raids
 

 
Win 5 raids
 

 

 
Win a three-star raid or higher
 

 
Win in the
 

 

 
Defeat 3
 

 
Purify 3
Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Hatch an
 

 

 

 

 

 
Hatch 2 Eggs
 

 

 

 

Spin 3 or
 

 

 

 



Spin 5 PokéStops or Gyms
 



 

 
a Pokémon
 
Pokémon 3 times
 

 

 
Power up Pokémon 5 times
 

 

 






Power up Pokémon 7 times




Power up Pokémon 10 times

Send 5 and add a sticker to each
 

 

 
a Pokémon
 

 
Earn 2 walking with your
 

 

 

 

 

 
Earn 3 Candies walking with your buddy
 

 
Earn 3 hearts your buddy
 

 

 
Take a of a wild Pokémon
 

 

 
Take snapshots of 3 different wild -, -, or -type Pokémon
 

 

 
Walk 1 km
 
Walk 4 km
 

Adventures Abound [ ]

Shiny Solosis was available since Sep 20. Shiny Hisuian Growlithe was available since Sep 27. Shiny Gothita was available since Nov 15.

Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Catch 5 Pokémon
 

 

 

 
Catch 7 Pokémon
 

 

Catch 10 Pokémon


Catch 7 different species of Pokémon
 
Catch 15 different species of Pokémon
 
Catch a -type Pokémon
 

 

 



Catch 10 -type Pokémon




Catch 10 -type Pokémon




Catch 10 -type Pokémon




Catch 10 -type Pokémon



Catch 5 Grass- or -type Pokémon
 

 
Catch 5 - or -type Pokémon
 

 
Catch 5 Pokémon with Boost
 

 

 

 

 

 




Catch 10 Pokémon with Weather Boost


Catch a


Use 5 to help catch Pokémon


Use 5 Razz Berries to help catch Pokémon
 

 
Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Make 5 Nice Throws
 

 

 



Make 10 Nice Throws
 

 
Make 3 Nice Throws in a row


Make 2 Nice Curveball Throws in a row


Make 3 Great Throws
 

 

 

 

 



Make 5 Great Throws
 

 
Make 3 Great Throws in a row
 

 





Make 3 Great Curveball Throws




Make 5 Great Curveball Throws
 
Make 3 Great Curveball Throws in a row


Make 5 Great Curveball Throws in a row (Sep)
 
Make 5 Great Curveball Throws in a row (Oct)
 
Make 5 Great Curveball Throws in a row (Nov)
 
Make an Excellent Throw


Make 2 Excellent Throws
 
Make 3 Excellent Throws in a row
 

 

 
Make 5 Curveball Throws in a row


Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Win a raid
 
Win 2 raids
 
Win 5 raids
 

 

 
Win a three-star raid or higher
 

 
Win in the
 

 

 
Defeat 3
 
Purify 3
Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Hatch an
 

 

 

 

 
Hatch 2 Eggs
 

 

 

 
Spin 3 or
 

 

 

 



Spin 5 PokéStops or Gyms
 

 

 

 
a Pokémon
 
Pokémon 3 times
 

 

 
Power up Pokémon 5 times
 

 

 






Power up Pokémon 7 times




Power up Pokémon 10 times

Send 5 and add a sticker to each
 

 

 
a Pokémon
 
Earn 2 walking with your
 

 

 

 

 

 
Earn 3 Candies walking with your buddy
 

 
Take a of a wild Pokémon
 

 

 
Take snapshots of 3 different wild -type Pokémon
 
Take snapshots of 3 different wild -type Pokémon
 
Take snapshots of 3 different wild -type Pokémon
 
Explore 2 km
 

 

Timeless Travels [ ]

Shiny Cryogonal was available since Dec 9. Shiny Vanillite was available since Dec 25.

Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Catch 5 Pokémon
 

 
Catch 7 Pokémon
 

 

Catch 10 Pokémon
 

 

 



Catch 7 different species of Pokémon
 
Catch 15 different species of Pokémon
Catch a -type Pokémon
 

 

 



Catch 10 -type Pokémon




Catch 10 -type Pokémon




Catch 10 -type Pokémon




Catch 10 -type Pokémon



Catch 5 Grass- or -type Pokémon
 

 

Catch 5 Pokémon with Boost
 

 

 

 

 

 

 



Catch 10 Pokémon with Weather Boost


Catch a


Use 5 to help catch Pokémon
 

 



Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Make 5 Nice Throws
 

 

 



Make 10 Nice Throws
 

 
Make 3 Nice Throws in a row


Make 2 Nice Curveball Throws in a row


Make 3 Great Throws
 

 

 

 

 



Make 5 Great Throws
 

Make 3 Great Throws in a row
 

 





Make 3 Great Curveball Throws




Make 5 Great Curveball Throws
 

 
Make 3 Great Curveball Throws in a row


Make 5 Great Curveball Throws in a row (Dec)
 
Make an Excellent Throw


Make 2 Excellent Throws
 
Make 3 Excellent Throws in a row
 

 

 
Make 5 Curveball Throws in a row


Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Win a raid
 
Win 2 raids
 
Win 5 raids
 

 

 
Win a three-star raid or higher
 

 
Win in the
 

 

 

 
Defeat 3


 
Purify 3
 

 
Task Possible encounters Possible rewards
Hatch an
 

 

 

 

 
Hatch 2 Eggs
 

 

 

 

 
Spin 3 or
 

 

 

 



Spin 5 PokéStops or Gyms
 

 

 

 
a Pokémon
 
Pokémon 3 times
 

 

 
Power up Pokémon 5 times
 

 

 






Power up Pokémon 7 times




Power up Pokémon 10 times

Send 5 and add a sticker to each
 
a Pokémon
 

 
Earn 2 walking with your
 

 

 

 

 

 
Earn 3 Candies walking with your buddy
 

 
Take a of a wild Pokémon
 

 

 
Take snapshots of 3 different wild -type Pokémon
 
Take snapshots of 3 different wild -type Pokémon
 
Take snapshots of 3 different wild -type Pokémon
 
Explore 2 km
 

 

Event-only tasks [ ]

Following Field Research tasks were available during the certain events .

Community Day tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of specific Community Days .

Task Community Day Possible rewards
Catch 3
Catch 3
Catch 3
Catch 3 or Galarian Slowpoke
Catch 3
Catch 3
Catch 3
Catch 3
Catch 3
Catch 3
Catch 3
Catch 3
Catch 3
Catch 3 or Galarian Wooper
Catch 3
Catch 3 Pokémon featured during 2023 Community Days
64. ( , 2023)
65. ( , 2023)
66. ( , 2023)
67. ( , 2023)
68. ( , 2023)
69. ( , 2023)
70. ( , 2023)
71. ( , 2023)
73. ( , 2023)
74. ( , 2023)
75. ( , 2023)
76. ( , 2023)
77. ( , 2023)
78. ( , 2023)
79. ( , 2023)
80. ( and 17 , 2023)





(Slowpoke and Poliwag day only)
(Swinub day only)
(Fennekin day only)
(Charmander day only)
(Mareep day only)
Catch 3 72. ( , 2023)
 

New Year's tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of New Year's 2023 .

Task Possible rewards
Hatch an
Hatch 2 Eggs

Twinkling Fantasy tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Twinkling Fantasy .

Task Possible rewards
5  
Catch 30 Pokémon
Catch 5 -type Pokémon  
Make 3 Nice Throws  
Make 3 Great Throws  
Win 3

Lunar New Year tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Lunar New Year 2023 .

Task Possible rewards
25  
 
Open 3  
 
 
 
 

Send 3 Gifts and add a sticker to each  
 
a Pokémon  
 

Crackling Voltage tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Crackling Voltage . "Defeat 2 Team GO Rocket Grunts" was only available during Team GO Rocket takeover.

Task Possible rewards
5  
 
Defeat 2


Pokémon 3 times  
Power up Pokémon 5 times  
Walk 3 km

Valentine's Day tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Valentine's Day 2023 .

Task Possible rewards
Make 5 Great Curveball Throws in a row  
Spin 5 and  
 
Spin 10 PokéStops or Gyms  
 
 
Open 5  
Send 3 Gifts and add a sticker to each  
Earn 3 hearts with your  
 
 
Earn 10 hearts with your buddy  
 

Luvdisc Research Day tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Luvdisc Research Day .

Task Possible rewards
5
Use 3 to help catch Pokémon
Use 3 Pinap Berries while catching Pokémon
Make 3 Nice Throws in a row
Make 3 Nice Curveball Throws
Make 3 Great Throws
Make a Great Curveball Throw
Make 5 Curveball Throws
Make 3 Curveball Throws in a row
Battle in a
Use a super effective Charged Attack
3 -type Pokémon
Spin 2 or Gyms
Earn a exploring with your
Earn 3 hearts with your buddy
 

Primal Rumblings tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Primal Rumblings .

Task Possible rewards
a

Catch a

Catch a

Catch 3 originally discovered in the region

Pokémon GO Tour: Hoenn - Global tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Pokémon GO Tour: Hoenn - Global .

Task Possible rewards
5 -type
10 Grass-type Pokémon
Catch 5 -type Pokémon
Power up 10 Fire-type Pokémon
Catch 5 -type Pokémon
Power up 10 Water-type Pokémon
█s█ 5 ██r██e█ t█ ███p ███ch ███é███
(Use 5 to help catch Pokémon)
 
██k█ 3 G███t ███v█b███ T███w█ █n a ██w
(Make 3 Great Curveball Throws in a row)
 
█r███f██ 5 ███é███
(Transfer 5 Pokémon)
 
█v██v█ a N██c█d█
( a )
 
Primal Surge: Catch 10 Pokémon
Primal Surge: Earn a walking with your




Primal Surge: Win a  
 
Primal Surge: Hatch an  
 
 
Primal Surge: Power up -type Pokémon 5 times
Primal Surge: Power up Water-type Pokémon 5 times
 
 
 

Catch Mastery: Hitmonlee, Hitmonchan, and Hitmontop tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Catch Mastery: Hitmonlee, Hitmonchan, and Hitmontop .

Task Possible rewards
Make 7 Great Throws
Make 5 Great Curveball Throws
Make 3 Curveball Throws in a row
 

Festival of Colors tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Festival of Colors 2023 .

Task Possible rewards
15  
Catch 5 different species of Pokémon  
 
 
 
Catch 8 different species of Pokémon  
 
 
Catch 10 different species of Pokémon


Let's GO! tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Let's GO! . "Defeat 2 Team GO Rocket Grunts" was only available during Team GO Rocket takeover.

Task Possible rewards
3  
 
 
Catch 10
Catch 20 Pokémon
Transfer 15 Pokémon
Defeat 2

April Fowl's Day: Pidgey Pandemonium tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of April Fowl's Day: Pidgey Pandemonium .

Task Possible rewards
Transfer 3  

Spring into Spring tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Spring into Spring 2023 .

Task Possible rewards
Hatch an  
 
Hatch 2 Eggs  
Hatch 4 Eggs  

A Mystic Hero tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of A Mystic Hero .

Task Possible rewards
3



Catch 5 Pokémon
a Pokémon
Evolve 3 Pokémon
Evolve 5 Pokémon

Sustainability Week tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Sustainability Week 2023 .

Task Possible rewards
3 -type
Use 5 to help catch Pokémon
Feed your 3 times
 
Catch 5 -type Pokémon
Catch 5 -type Pokémon
Catch 5 -type Pokémon

Stunfisk Limited Research tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Stunfisk Limited Research .

Task Possible rewards
5
Use 3 to help catch Pokémon
Use 3 Pinap Berries while catching Pokémon
Make 3 Nice Throws in a row
Make 3 Nice Curveball Throws
Make 3 Great Throws
Make a Great Curveball Throw
Make 5 Curveball Throws
Make 3 Curveball Throws in a row
Battle in a
Use a super effective Charged Attack
3 -type Pokémon
Spin 2 or Gyms
Earn a exploring with your
Earn 3 hearts with your buddy
Open 5
Send 3 Gifts and add a sticker to each
 
 

An Instinctive Hero tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of An Instinctive Hero .

Task Possible rewards
Hatch an  
 
 
Hatch 2 Eggs  
 
Hatch 3 Eggs
 

A Valorous Hero tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of A Valorous Hero .

Task Possible rewards
Battle in a
Battle 3
a
Power up Pokémon 5 times
Power up Pokémon 10 times  

Rising Shadows tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Rising Shadows .

Task Possible rewards
10 -type
Catch 10 -type Pokémon
Win a
Defeat 2

Searching for Gold Research Day tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Searching for Gold Research Day .

Task Possible rewards
5
Use 3 to help catch Pokémon
Use 3 Pinap Berries while catching Pokémon
Make 3 Nice Throws in a row
Make 3 Nice Curveball Throws
Make 3 Great Throws
Make a Great Curveball Throw
Make 5 Curveball Throws
Make 3 Curveball Throws in a row
Battle in a
Use a super effective Charged Attack
Pokémon 3 times
Spin 2 or Gyms
Earn a exploring with your
Earn 3 hearts with your buddy
Open 5
Send 3 Gifts and add a sticker to each
 
 
 
 
 

Water Festival: Beach Week tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Water Festival: Beach Week .

Task Possible rewards
5 -type
Catch 15 Water-type Pokémon  
Catch 25 Water-type Pokémon
Make 5 Nice Throws  
Make 5 Great Throws  
Make 10 Great Throws
Hatch an Egg  

Solstice Horizons tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Solstice Horizons . "Defeat 2 Team GO Rocket Grunts" was only available during Team GO Rocket takeover.

Task Possible rewards
10  
Catch 5 - or -type Pokémon
Catch 5 - or -type Pokémon
Defeat 2

Dark Flames tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Dark Flames .

Task Possible rewards
5 -type  
 
Catch 5 -type Pokémon  
 
Win a in under 60 seconds  
 
Win 3 raids  

7th Anniversary Party tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of the 7th Anniversary Party .

Task Possible rewards
Spin 7 or  
 
 
Use 7 to help  
 
 
Take 7 of wild Pokémon  
 
 
Earn 7 hearts with your  
 
 
Make 7 Curveball Throws  
 
 
Send 7 and add a sticker to each  
 
Catch 7 different species of Pokémon

Catch 7 Pokémon

Make 7 Nice Throws




Blaze New Trails tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Blaze New Trails .

Task Possible rewards
5
Hatch an
Spin 5
Spin 10 PokéStops  
Spin 5 PokéStops you haven't visited before
Walk 1 km
Walk 3 km

Riolu Hatch Day tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Riolu Hatch Day .

Task Possible rewards
Spin 5 or

Earn a exploring with your

Adventure Week tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Adventure Week 2023 .

Task Possible rewards
15 -type  
 
Catch 50 Rock-type Pokémon
Spin 10  
 
Spin 30 PokéStops
Hatch an  
 
Hatch 5 Eggs
Walk 2 km  
 
Walk 7 km

Glittering Garden tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Glittering Garden .

Task Possible rewards
5

Catch 5 different species of Pokémon  
Catch 10 -type Pokémon  
 
 
Earn 3 exploring with your

Pokémon World Championships tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of 2023 Pokémon World Championships .

Task Possible rewards
7  
Pokémon 5 times  
 
 
Power up Pokémon 10 times
 
a Pokémon
Battle in the

Noxious Swamp tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Noxious Swamp .

Task Possible rewards
3 -type  
 
 
Catch 3 -type Pokémon  
 
Defeat 2


Defeat 3 Team GO Rocket Grunts

Pokémon GO Fest 2023: Global tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Pokémon GO Fest 2023: Global .

Task Possible rewards
10  


Spin 10 or  

Quartz Terrarium

Task Possible rewards
Catch 5 -type Pokémon  

Hatch an  
5 Normal-type Pokémon  
Earn 1000  

Pyrite Sands

Task Possible rewards
Catch 5 -type Pokémon  

Hatch an Egg  
Power up 5 Ground-type Pokémon  
Earn 1000 Stardust  

Malachite Wilderness

Task Possible rewards
Catch 5 -type Pokémon  

Hatch an Egg  
Power up 5 Grass-type Pokémon  
Earn 1000 Stardust  

Aquamarine Shores

Task Possible rewards
Catch 5 -type Pokémon  

Hatch an Egg  
Power up 5 Water-type Pokémon  
Earn 1000 Stardust  
Task Possible rewards
Catch 10 Pokémon  


Catch 10 different species of Pokémon
Spin 10 PokéStops or Gyms  


Battle in a


Battle in 3 raids
Use 3 supereffective Charged
Hatch an Egg  
 
 
 
Hatch 3 Eggs
a Pokémon
Complete 3 Field Research tasks

A Paldean Adventure tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of A Paldean Adventure .

Task Possible rewards
3  
Catch 9 Pokémon

Hatch an

Ultra Unlock: Paldea tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Ultra Unlock: Paldea .

Task Possible rewards
5
Catch 5
Catch 20 Nymble

Oddish Research Day tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Oddish Research Day .

Task Possible rewards
a -type
Catch 3 -type Pokémon
Use 3 to help catch Pokémon
Use 3 Pinap Berries while catching Pokémon
Make 3 Nice Throws in a row
Make 3 Great Throws
Make a Great Curveball Throw
Make 3 Curveball Throws
Make 3 Curveball Throws in a row
Battle in a
3 Grass-type Pokémon
Transfer 5 Pokémon
Spin 2 or Gyms
Earn a exploring with your
Take a of a wild Grass-type Pokémon
Take a snapshot of a wild Poison-type Pokémon
 

Psychic Spectacular tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Psychic Spectacular 2023 .

Task Possible rewards
5 -type  


Make 10 Curveball Throws  
 
 
Make an Excellent Curveball Throw

 
Spin 5 or  

Win a


Out to Play tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Out to Play .

Task Possible rewards
Hatch an
Hatch 3 Eggs  
Walk 1 km
Walk 5 km  

Azurill Hatch Day tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Azurill Hatch Day .

Task Possible rewards
Spin 5

Hatch an

Walk 1 km

Detective Pikachu Returns Event tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Detective Pikachu Returns Event .

Task Possible rewards
a -type  
Catch a -type Pokémon  
Catch a -type Pokémon
Catch a -type Pokémon
Catch a Pokémon with Boost  
Take a of wild Water-type Pokémon  

Harvest Festival tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Harvest Festival .

Task Possible rewards
15
Catch 30 Pokémon
 
 
 
 
Catch 10 -type Pokémon  
 
 
Use 5 to help catch Pokémon

Halloween Part 1 tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Halloween 2023 Part 1.

Task Possible rewards
Make 5 Great Throws  
Spin 5 or  
a -type  
Transfer 5 Pokémon
Take 3 of wild Ghost-type Pokémon

Incense Day: Skorupi tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Incense Day: Skorupi . They would rotate each hour based on the type of that hour.

Task Possible rewards
5 -type  



Catch 5 -type Pokémon  



Halloween Part 2 tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Halloween 2023 Part 2.

Task Possible rewards
Make 7 Great Throws
Pokémon 3 times
a -type  
Walk 1 km  
Defeat 2

Día de Muertos tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Día de Muertos 2023 .

Task Possible rewards
Make a Nice Curveball Throw  
 
Make a Great Throw  
Make 3 Great Curveball Throws in a row  
Win a battle  

Festival of Lights tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Festival of Lights 2023 .

Task Possible rewards
5


Spin 10  
Explore 1 km  
Hatch 2
Send a with a  

Fashion Week tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Fashion Week 2023 .

Task Possible rewards
5  
Catch 10 Pokémon  
 
Catch 15 Pokémon  
Take a of your  
Take snapshots of 7 different wild Pokémon  
Take a snapshot of or in the wild

Party Up! tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Party Up! .

Task Possible rewards
10
Win a  
Pokémon 5 times
Power up Pokémon 10 times  
 
 
a Pokémon  
 
Explore 1 km
Spin 5
Spin 10 PokéStops

Along the Routes tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Along the Routes .

Task Possible rewards
Hatch an
a  
Send a to a
Send 3 Gifts and add a sticker to each  
Earn a walking with your

Catch Mastery: Ice tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Catch Mastery: Ice .

Adamant Time tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Adamant Time .

Task Possible rewards
3  
 
 
Catch 5 Pokémon  
 
 
 
Catch 10 Pokémon  
 
 
 
a Pokémon  
 
Walk 2 km  
 

Holiday Part 1 tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Holiday 2023 Part 1.

Task Possible rewards
5 -type


Catch 7 Ice-type Pokémon  
 
Catch 5 different species of Pokémon  
 
Catch 10 different species of Pokémon  
 
Win a  
 
Send 3 and add a sticker to each

Open 5 Gifts  
 

Holiday Part 2 tasks [ ]

Following is the list of research tasks exclusively available only for the time of Holiday 2023 Part 2.

Task Possible rewards
5 -type


Catch 7 Ice-type Pokémon  
 
 
Catch 5 different species of Pokémon  
 
Catch 10 different species of Pokémon  
 
Win a  
 
Send 3 and add a sticker to each

Open 5 Gifts  
 
  • The task "Take snapshots of 3 different wild X-type Pokémon" in Adventures Abound was missing "different" in the description. This was later fixed.

References [ ]

  • ↑ Welcome to Pokémon GO: Hidden Gems . Pokémon GO Live . Retrieved on 2023-05-30.
  • 1 Lucky Pokémon
  • 2 Mega Evolution
  • August 2024 infographic
  • Ditto Disguises
  • Promo Codes
  • PokeStop Showcase
  • GO Spotlight Hour
  • Pokemon News

Pokemon GO Searching for Gold Research Day: All Field and Timed Research tasks and rewards

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The Searching for Gold Research Day is slowly coming online around the world for Pokemon GO trainers to dive into. This iteration of the Research Day will run for a meager three hours, offering wild encounters, featured Pokemon upon completing Field Research and Timed Research tasks, and plenty more. This marks the first event of the new season of Hidden Gems.

Season 11 Hidden Gems began on Thursday, June 1, 2023, at 10 am local time and will come to its end on Friday, September 1, at 10 am local time. The next event on the schedule is Water Festival: Beach Week, which is due to start early next week.

What Field Research and Timed Research tasks are available in Pokemon GO during Searching for Gold Research Day?

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Check out the dates for upcoming season's Pokemon GO Community Day

The Searching for Gold Research Day event is scheduled to be held on Saturday, June 3, 2023, starting from 2 pm local time and continuing till 5 pm local time in Pokemon GO. The available Field Research tasks can be collected from spinning Photo Discs at PokeStops and are as follows:

  • Catch 5 Pokemon
  • Use 3 Pinap Berries to help catch Pokemon
  • Use 3 Berries to help catch Pokemon
  • Make 3 Nice Throws in a row
  • Make 3 Nice Curveball Throws
  • Make 3 Great Throws
  • Make a Great Curveball Throw
  • Make 5 Curveball Throws
  • Make 3 Curveball Throws in a row
  • Battle in a Gym
  • Use a Super Effective Charged Attack
  • Power up Pokemon 3 times
  • Spin 2 PokeStops or Gyms
  • Earn a Candy exploring with your Buddy
  • Earn 3 hearts with your Buddy
  • Open 5 Gifts
  • Send 3 Gifts and add a sticker to each

The possible reward encounters for completing any one of the aforementioned event-themed Field Research tasks in Pokemon GO are as follows:

  • Caterpie [shiny encounter available]
  • Magikarp [shiny encounter available]
  • Nosepass [shiny encounter available]
  • Sableye [shiny encounter available]
  • Barboach [shiny encounter available]

The event-exclusive Timed Research is available for $1 from the in-game shop. It allows players to complete Field Research tasks and meet their chosen Pokemon. The Timed Research tasks and their possible rewards are as follows:

Pokemon GO: Searching for Gold Research Day - Step 1 of 2

  • Complete a Field Research task - Nosepass [shiny encounter available]
  • Complete a Field Research task - Barboach [shiny encounter available]
  • Complete a Field Research task - Sableye [shiny encounter available]
  • Complete a Field Research task - Caterpie [shiny encounter available]
  • Complete a Field Research task - Magikarp [shiny encounter available]
  • Rewards: 1000x Stardust, 2500 XP

Step 2 of this Timed Research is branched. Players will get to choose between Caterpie, Magikarp, Nosepass, Sableye, and Barboach. Whichever Pocket Monster they choose, they will only encounter the same by completing Field Research tasks.

Pokemon GO: Searching for Gold Research Day - Step 2 of 2

  • Complete a Field Research task - Caterpie, Magikarp, Nosepass, Sableye, or Barboach [shiny encounter available]
  • Complete 2 Field Research tasks - Caterpie, Magikarp, Nosepass, Sableye, or Barboach [shiny encounter available]
  • Complete 3 Field Research tasks - Caterpie, Magikarp, Nosepass, Sableye, or Barboach [shiny encounter available]
  • Complete 4 Field Research tasks - Caterpie, Magikarp, Nosepass, Sableye, or Barboach. [shiny encounter available]
  • Complete 5 Field Research tasks - Caterpie, Magikarp, Nosepass, Sableye, or Barboach [shiny encounter available]
  • Complete 6 Field Research tasks - Caterpie, Magikarp, Nosepass, Sableye, or Barboach [shiny encounter available]
  • Complete 7 Field Research tasks - Caterpie, Magikarp, Nosepass, Sableye, or Barboach [shiny encounter available]
  • Complete 8 Field Research tasks - Caterpie, Magikarp, Nosepass, Sableye, or Barboach [shiny encounter available]
  • Complete 9 Field Research tasks - Caterpie, Magikarp, Nosepass, Sableye, or Barboach [shiny encounter available]
  • Complete 10 Field Research tasks - Caterpie, Magikarp, Nosepass, Sableye, or Barboach [shiny encounter available]
  • Rewards: Caterpie, Magikarp, Nosepass, Sableye, or Barboach [shiny encounter available]

What is the Pokemon GO June 2023 schedule?

As usual, Niantic has already shared this month's content roadmap with players. The event schedule is as follows:

  • Searching for Gold Research Day - June 3
  • Water Festival: Beach Week - June 6 to June 12
  • Water Festival: Beach Week Spotlight Hour - June 6
  • June Community Day - June 10
  • Solstice Horizons + TGR Takeover - June 16 to June 25
  • Dark Flames - June 29 to July 2

A quick look at the schedule will reveal that one of the Mega Raid Bosses is yet to be announced. If recent leaks are to be believed , Sableye will reportedly receive its mega evolved version in Pokemon GO during latter half of this month.

research tasks june 2023

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research tasks june 2023

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research tasks june 2023

Pokémon Go Water Festival: Beach Week – All Timed Research Tasks & Rewards

Image of Zack Palm

The limited-time Water Festival: Beach Week event has arrived to Pokémon Go. There are going to be plenty of Water-type and Beach-themed Pokémon appearing throughout the event, and this offers the debut for Sandygast and Palossand, who will be appearing throughout the week.

During the event, there’s a paid Timed Research ticket for anyone to grab who want to earn a variety of exclusive rewards, such as appearance items for their Pokémon Go character. This guide covers every Timed Research task and reward for Pokémon Go’s Water Festival: Beach Week event, giving you an idea of the items you have the chance to grab.

Every Water Festival: Beach Week Timed Research Task & Reward in Pokémon Go

The Pokémon Go Water Festival: Beach Week event will be starting on June 6, 2023, at 10 AM and ends on June 12, 2023, at 8 PM in your local area. The Timed Research will be available for everyone to purchase and participate in while the event is in effect. However, all rewards and tasks do disappear when the event wraps up.

Oceans of fun await during Water Festival: Beach Week! The Water Festival returns June 6 through June 12, 2023—with a sandy(gast) debut! 📝 https://t.co/dHGsF3wvRv #HiddenGems pic.twitter.com/pZhLBIk9C8 — Pokémon GO (@PokemonGoApp) May 30, 2023

We’ve found that purchasing Timed Research tickets like this as soon as they become available make sure to wrap up each task. Some of these tasks are relatively straightforward, but it can be tricky to get everything done in a timely fashion.

We can confirm the final rewards in this Timed Research do give you a Sandygast encounter . It’s a Pokémon that might be one of the more difficult Pokémon to find during the Water Festival: Beach Week event because it can only appear in Field Research tasks and one-star raids.

These are all of the tasks and the rewards you can earn for completing Pokémon Go’s Water Festival: Beach Week Timed Research.

  • Catch 10 Water-type Pokémon – 1,000 Stardust
  • Make Five Nice Throws – 10 Poké Balls
  • Transfer Five Pokémon – Five Great Balls
  • Use Five Berries to Help Catch Pokémon – 10 Razz Berries

All Completed Rewards for Task 1 in Pokémon Go: 1,000 Stadust, 1,000 XP, and a Clauncher Encounter

  • Catch 15 Water-type Pokémon – 1,000 Stardust
  • Make Five Great Throws – 15 Poké Balls
  • Transfer 10 Pokémon – 10 Great Balls
  • Use 10 Berries to Help Catch Pokémon – Five Pinap Berries

All Completed Rewards for Task 2 in Pokémon Go: The Surfer Avatar Pose, and a Sandygast Encounter

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Pokemon GO June 2023 Event Guide

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Pokémon GO June 2023 events schedule is here! From a new shiny Legendary raid boss, to new events, a research day, an event themed Spotlight Hour featuring multiple Pokémon, and more, it looks to be an exciting month.

June marks the start of Pokémon GO Season 11: Hidden Gems! Hidden Gems lasts from June 1, 2023, at 10:00 a.m. until September 1, 2023, at 10:00 a.m.

GO Battle League Season 15 (Hidden Gems) also runs alongside the Season of Hidden Gems, bringing new GBL Cups, new moves for select Pokémon, and new rank up rewards. Read more about GO Battle League Season 15 here.

June 2023 Events

Event

June 3, 2023 2pm to 5pm local time

June 6, 2023 from 6pm to 7pm local time

June 6, 2023 10:00am to June 12, 2023 8pm local time

June 10, 2023 from 2pm to 5pm local time

Sunday, June 11, 2023, from 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. local time
 
June 16, 2023 from 10am to June 25, 2023, 8pm local time

June 21, 2023 at 12:00am to June 25, 2023
at 11:59pm local time
June 29, 2023 10:00am to July 2, 2023 8:00pm local time

Infographic

Pokémon GO June 2023 Events

Five Star Raids

During June Azelf, Mesprit, Uxie, Nihilego and Heatran will be available during different time periods. During weekends from 10th June, Shadow Articuno will be available in raids.

Pokémon Dates
Uxie Azelf Mesprit From June 1 to June 15 , and will appear in five-star raids in their respective regions. They can be shiny.

Nihilego From June 15 to June 29 will appear in five-star raids and be available as shiny for the first time!
Heatran From June 29 to July 6 will appear in five-star raids and it can be shiny.
Articuno (Shadow) Starting June 10, Shadow Articuno will be available in raids on weekends in June, and available as shiny for the first time.

During June Mega Swampert, Mega Sceptile, and a Mystery Mega raid boss will be available in Pokémon GO’s Mega Raids at different times.

Pokémon Dates
Swampert (Mega) From June 1 to June 15  will appear in Mega Raids.
Sceptile (Mega) From June 15 to June 29 will appear in Mega Raids.
??? From June 29 to July 6 a mystery Mega Pokémon will make their debut in Mega Raids.

From 6:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. local time , the following Pokémon will be featured in increased numbers in Five Star Raids during these dates in June:

Featured Boss Date
Uxie Azelf Mesprit June 7, 2023, 6:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. local time
Uxie Azelf Mesprit June 14, 2023, 6:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. local time
Nihilego June 21, 2023, 6:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. local time
Nihilego June 28, 2023, 6:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. local time

Pokémon Spotlight Hours

Pokémon Spotlight Hour

From 6:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. local time , the following Pokémon will be featured during these dates in June:

Date Pokémon Bonus
June 6, 2023 Krabby Kabuto Corphish Clauncher Crabrawler 3× XP for catching Pokémon
June 13, 2023 Binacle 2× Candy for catching Pokémon
June 20, 2023 Sunkern 2× Candy for transferring Pokémon
June 27, 2023 Doduo 2× XP for evolving Pokémon

June 2023 Research Breakthrough

Field Research

  • From June 1, 2022, at 1:00 p.m. PDT (GMT -7) to September 1, 2023, at 1:00 p.m. PDT (GMT -7)
  • Complete Field Research tasks during the whole season to earn an encounter from a pool of Pokémon, including Sableye, Beldum, Audino, Furfrou, Noibat and Goomy.

research tasks june 2023

You can find the full list of tasks here:  Pokémon GO Field Research Tasks and Rewards (June 2023)

Events overview

Searching for gold research day.

Searching for gold research day

On June 3, 2023 2pm to 5pm local time the Searching for Gold Research Day takes place. Pokémon with gold shinies are featured, and if you are lucky you might spot a golden Pokéstop!

Water Festival: Beach Week Spotlight Hour

research tasks june 2023

On June 6, 2023 from 6pm to 7pm local time a special Water Festival: Beach Week themed spotlight hour takes place, with 3x XP for catching Pokémon! Multiple Pokémon will appear, with Clauncher being shiny for the first time.

Water Festival: Beach Week

research tasks june 2023

From June 6, 2023 10:00am to June 12, 2023 8pm local time the Water Festival: Beach Week takes place. Sandygast debuts, along with shiny Clauncher!

Axew Community Day

research tasks june 2023

On June 10, 2023 from 2pm to 5pm local time June Community Day occurs, with Axew as the featured Pokémon! Axew will spawn more frequently in the wild, and evolving Fraxure into Haxorus during event hours will give it the exclusive Dragon type Charged Move Breaking Swipe.

Solstice Horizons & Team GO Rocket Takeover

Pokémon GO Solstice Event 2023

From June 16, 2023 from 10am to June 25, 2023, 8pm local time the Solstice Horizons event happens , and Team GO Rocket takeover ! 

Solstice Horizons event returns to Pokémon GO, running from Friday, June 16 at 10:00 a.m. to Sunday, June 25 at 8:00 p.m. local time, giving Trainers a unique opportunity to catch Pokémon associated to day and night. Shiny Fomantis makes its Pokémon GO Debut.

Starting on June 21, 2023, Giovanni is back , this time with Shadow Regirock under his wing. Giovanni is not the only TGR member with new Shadow Pokémon – Grunts and Leaders will also be using new Shadow Pokémon. And that’s not all… new Shadow Pokémon will be available in 12 KM Eggs, in Grunt encounters, and Shiny Pancham will be making it’s Pokémon GO debut!

Dark Flames

research tasks june 2023

From June 29, 2023 10:00am to July 2, 2023 8:00pm local time the brand new Dark Flames event will take place.

Author & tags

kittypokemonsalot

The Dashing Design of The Lake Trio

Priom

Dark Flames Event Guide

Datamining report: raid ready button, 5 signature moves, squirtle community day texts and more.

Glawhantojar

Dark Flames Timed Research Guide: Tasks, Rewards, Collection Challenge

Zeroghan

This Week in Pokemon GO: 12-18 June 2023

Giovanni lineup and counters (august 2024), arlo lineup and counters (august 2024), cliff lineup and counters (august 2024), sierra lineup and counters (august 2024), pokémon go august 2024 events guide, grunt lineups and counters (august 2024).

3kkoIogy

Lileep Spotlight Hour (August 2024): Last Minute Guide

phrixu

Best Cores in the Great League

avrip

Who will win the Pokémon GO World Championships 2024?

Pokémon sleep: announcement about data download for the next update, pokémon to look forward to while watching the pokémon go world championships 2024, get codes for exclusive timed research during 2024 pokémon go world championships twitch broadcast, buy go hub merch.

Pokémon GO Hub is the biggest Pokémon GO news site, publishing several informative guides, analysis, and news articles every month. Dedicated, focused and loving Pokémon GO.

© 2016 – 2024 Pokémon GO Hub | ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Pokémon and Pokémon GO are copyright of The Pokémon Company, Niantic, Inc., and Nintendo. All trademarked images and names are property of their respective owners, and any such material is used on this site for educational purposes only. Solver d.o.o. has no affiliation with The Pokémon Company, Niantic, Inc., or Nintendo.

research tasks june 2023

Team GO Rocket Takeover

Pokémon aren’t the only ones active during the Solstice… Keep your eyes peeled for Team GO Rocket during the Solstice Horizons event!

We have intel indicating a Team GO Rocket Takeover is set from June 21, at 10:00 am local time to June 25, at 8:00 pm local time.

research tasks june 2023

* Team GO Rocket Balloons are appearing every 3 hours during this event.

Save Shadow Regirock!

Rock out with a new Special Research story leading to a showdown with Giovanni and his Shadow Regirock.

You can claim this Special Research until the end of Pokémon GO: Hidden gems on September 1, 2023, at 10:00 a.m. local time.

research tasks june 2023

Team GO Rocket Grunts—as well as their leaders Sierra, Cliff, and Arlo—are using different Shadow Pokémon. Help Spark, Blanche, and Candela overcome their adversaries and rescue the Shadow Pokémon! If you’re lucky, you may even encounter different Shiny Shadow Pokémon than normal!

In addition, Team GO Rocket has also turned the following Pokémon into Shadow Pokémon. Defeat Team GO Rocket Grunts to save them!

research tasks june 2023

Grunt Lineups

This will be a basic text list of the current lineups from Team GO Rocket Grunts. Pokémon in bold are encounterable. Pokémon with asterisks (*) can be shiny.

Male Grunt - Normal-type “Normal does not mean weak.”

  • Meowth* , Glameow
  • Rattata, Raticate, Purugly
  • Raticate, Ursaring, Bibarel

Female Grunt - Fire-type “Do you know how hot Pokémon fire breath can get?”

  • Vulpix, Torchic, Numel
  • Magmar, Quilava
  • Ninetales, Typhlosion, Camerupt

Male Grunt - Water-type “These waters are treacherous!”

  • Magikarp, Gyarados

Female Grunt - Water-type “These waters are treacherous!”

  • Psyduck, Mudkip, Wailmer
  • Golduck, Croconaw
  • Golduck, Feraligatr, Wailord

Female Grunt - Electric-type “Get ready to be shocked!”

  • Mareep, Shinx, Blitzle
  • Alolan Geodude, Voltorb
  • Ampharos, Luxray, Zebstrika

Male Grunt - Grass-type “Don’t tangle with us!”

  • Oddish, Treecko, Cacnea
  • Gloom, Bayleef
  • Meganium, Cacturne, Amoonguss

Female Grunt - Ice-type “You’re gonna be frozen in your tracks.”

  • Alolan Sandshrew, Alolan Vulpix, Swinub
  • Alolan Sandslash, Alolan Ninetales, Snover
  • Cloyster, Lapras, Abomasnow

Female Graunt - Fighting-type “This buff physique isn’t just for show.”

  • Hitmonlee, Hitmonchan, Hitmontop

Female Grunt - Poison-type “Coiled and ready to strike!”

  • Grimer*, Foongus
  • Nidorina, Nidorino
  • Grimer, Weezing

Male Grunt - Ground-type “You’ll be defeated into the ground!”

  • Wooper, Phanpy
  • Donphan, Hippopotas
  • Quagsire, Hippowdon

Female Grunt - Flying-type “Battle against my Flying-type Pokémon”

  • Zubat, Natu, Ducklett
  • Golbat, Zatu, Staravia
  • Gyarados, Dragonite, Crobat

Male Grunt - Psychic-type “Are you scared of psychics that use unseen power?”

  • Abra, Natu, Spoink
  • Girafarig, Ralts
  • Alakazam, Hypno, Metang

Male Grunt - Bug-type “Go, my super bug Pokémon!”

  • Ledyba, Pineco*, Joltik
  • Weedle, Kakuna, Beedrill
  • Beedrill, Forretress, Scizor

Male Grunt - Rock-type “Let’s rock and roll!”

  • Geodude, Lileep, Anorith
  • Graveler, Lileep, Anorith
  • Golem, Alolan Golem

Male Grunt - Ghost-type “Ke…ke…ke…ke…ke…ke!”

  • Shuppet, Duskull, Drifloon
  • Banette, Dusclops, Golett
  • Banette, Dusknoir, Golurk

Female Grunt - Dragon-type “ROAR! …How’d that sound?”

  • Alolan Exeggutor, Gible
  • Alolan Exeggutor, Dragonair
  • Dragonair, Dragonite, Gabite

Female Grunt - Dark-type “Wherever there is light, there is also shadow.”

  • Alolan Rattata, Alolan Grimer
  • Alolan Raticate, Muk

Male Grunt - Steel-type “You’re no match for my iron will!”

  • Alolan Sandshrew, Alolan Diglett, Aron
  • Alolan Sandshrew, Lairon, Metang
  • Scizor, Aggron

Female Grunt - Fairy-type “Check out my cute Pokémon”

  • Snubbull, Ralts, Mawile*
  • Snubbull, Granbull, Kirlia
  • Snubbull, Kirlia

Male Grunt - ??? “Winning is for winners.”

  • Bulbasaur*, Charmander*, Squirtle*
  • Bayleef, Quilava, Croconaw
  • Sceptile, Blaziken, Swampert

Female Grunt - ??? “Winning is for winners.”

  • Poliwrath, Snorlax, Gardevoir
  • Gyarados, Snorlax, Dragonite

Female Grunt - Decoy “In the name of the boss, I’ll destroy you!”

  • Raticate, Weepinbell
  • Raticate, Snorlax

Arlo’s Team

Arlo’s Team will consist of these Shadow Pokémon. The row corresponds to the slot on their team.

research tasks june 2023

Cliff’s Team

Cliff’s Team will consist of these Shadow Pokémon. The row corresponds to the slot on their team.

research tasks june 2023

Sierra’s Team

Sierra’s Team will consist of these Shadow Pokémon. The row corresponds to the slot on their team.

research tasks june 2023

Giovanni’s Team

Giovanni’s Team will consist of these Shadow Pokémon. The row corresponds to the slot on their team.

research tasks june 2023

In 12 km Eggs

The following Pokémon will hatch from 12 km Eggs.Trainers can earn 12 km Eggs by defeating Team GO Rocket leaders.

For the first time in Pokémon GO, you’ll be able to encounter Shiny Pancham!

research tasks june 2023

Field Research Tasks

A Field Research task awarding a Mysterious Component will be available.

research tasks june 2023

The event-exclusive Field Research for the Solstice event will also be still available.

A Shadowy Disturbance

Season-exclusive Special Research

Special Research centered on Giovanni will be available. Complete it to earn Super Rocket Radar!

Leek Note : The Special Research is still not available at 10 am local time. Waiting for updates.

research tasks june 2023

Shiny Pancham Family

Shiny Pancham will be released with the start of the Team GO Rocket takeover.

research tasks june 2023

Hey, I'm LeekDuck. I create Pokémon GO graphics, resources and report Pokémon GO news. You can find them on my Twitter, Instagram, or Facebook Page. You can also find me on Twitch and YouTube!

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research tasks june 2023

All Pokémon Go Field Research Tasks, Rewards, & Encounters

Image of Nicholas Fries

In Pokémon Go , Field Research tasks are regularly cycled out for events and seasons, which makes it hard to keep up on what tasks are available, and what rewards you might get from them. Below, we have provided the lineup and most recent changes to the Field Research task list, as well as what rewards and encounters you can receive from them.

Event Tasks & Rewards

These tasks are exclusive to any events that are currently running. If no events are running, you'll want to look at the Encounter Tasks and the Item Tasks below.

Catch 5 Electric-type PokémonSpinarak | Helioptile | Electrike
Make 3 Curveball throwsMagnemite | Voltorb
Walk 1 kmHelioptile
Walk 2 kmAlolan Grimer | Trubbish
Walk 4 kmEmolga
Take 2 Snapshots of Wild Electric-type PokémonAmpharos | Manectric

Encounter Tasks

A cancel icon.

Catching and Throwing Tasks

TaskEncounters
Catch a Dragon-type Pokémon.Dratini | Bagon
Catch 5 different species of Pokémon.Burmy (Plant | Sandy | Trash)
Catch 5 Pokémon.Rhyhorn
Catch 5 Pokémon with Weather Boost.Poliwag | Vulpix | Hippopotas | Snover
Catch 7 Pokémon.Magikarp
Make 3 Great Throws.Lileep | Anorith | Snubbull
Make 3 Great Throws in a row.Onix
Make 3 Excellent Throws in a row.Gible
Make 5 Curveball Throws in a row.Pineco
Make 5 Nice Throws.Dunsparce
Make 5 Great Curveball Throws in a row.Spinda
Use 5 Berries to help catch Pokémon.Wurmple

Buddy & Adventure Tasks

TaskEncounters
Earn 2 Candies walking with your Buddy.Bunnelby
Earn 3 Candies walking with your Buddy.Stunfisk
Earn 5 Hearts with your buddy.Eevee
Evolve a PokémonEevee
Hatch an Egg.Mantinee
Hatch 2 Eggs.Beldum
Hatch 3 Eggs.Chansey
Open 5 gifts. Slakoth
Spin 3 PokéStops or Gyms.Sudowoodo
Spin 5 PokéStops or Gyms.Ralts
Take a Snapshot of a wild Pokémon.Murkrow | Yanma | Hoppip
Take 2 Snapshots of wild Ice-type PokémonSpheal
Trade a Pokémon.Bidoof
Walk 2 km.Shellder

Battle & Advancement Tasks

TaskEncounters
Battle in the GO Battle League 2 timesStunfisk
Defeat a Team Go Rocket LeaderLapras
Power up Pokémon 3 times.Bulbasaur | Charmander | Squirtle
Power up Pokémon 5 times.Chikorita | Cyndaquil | Totodile
Power up Pokémon 7 times.Treecko | Torchic | Mudkip
Evolve a Pokémon.Eevee
Win 2 raids.Snorlax
Win a level 3 or higher Raid.Omanyte | Kabuto
Win 5 Raids.Aerodactyl
Related: Fighting Pokémon Weaknesses & Counters in Pokémon Go

Reward Tasks

Completing the tasks below will reward you with items, Balls, Berries, or Stardust.

TaskRewards
Catch 5 Pokémon with Weather Boost.200
Catch 10 Pokémon with Weather Boost.500
Catch 10 Pokémon.200
Catch 10 Fire-type Pokémon.10
Catch 10 Grass-type Pokémon.10
Catch 10 Normal-type Pokémon.10
Catch 10 Water-type Pokémon.10
Catch a Ditto.1500
Catch a Dragon-type Pokémon.1500
Make 5 Curveball Throws in a row.500
Make 3 Great Throws.200
Make 3 Great Throws in a row.1000
Make 3 Great Curveball Throws.1000
Make 3 Great Curveball Throws in a row.1500
Make 5 Nice Throws.200
Make 2 Nice Curveball Throws in a row.200
Make 3 Nice Throws in a row.500
Make an Excellent Throw.500
Use 5 Berries to help catch Pokémon.500
TaskEncounters
Spin 3 PokéStops or Gyms. 500
Spin 10 PokéStops or Gyms.200
Power Up Pokémon 5 times.10
Power Up Pokémon 5 times.10
Take a Snapshot of a wild Pokémon.1
AR Mapping.10
Sponsored: Send 3 Gifts to Friends.1000
Sponsored: Catch 8 Pokémon.1000

That's everything we can expect for Field Research tasks for now! Be sure to check out our Pokémon Go homepage for more great content and guides!

Did you know we cover the best weaknesses and counters for each type of Pokémon? Check out our guides to Fairy Pokémon Weaknesses & Counters and Electric Pokémon Weaknesses & Counters !

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The Center for Global Mental Health Research Webinar Series 2023: Real-World Opportunities and Challenges: Using NIMH's Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) Framework in Global Mental Health Research

September 20, 2023

LEONARDO CUBILLOS : Good morning, good afternoon, and good evening to all of you joining this exciting webinar. We appreciate you taking the time to participate and learn along with us. Welcome to today’s webinar. The title of the webinar is Real World Opportunities and Challenges: Using NIMH’s Research Domain Criteria, RDOC, Framework in Global Mental Health Research.

My name is Leonardo Cubillos, and I am the Director of the Center for Global Mental Health Research. Today’s webinar is the third of the 2023 webinar series in the Center for Global Mental Health Research, and will be the last we will host this year.

And today we will discuss what is RDOC, what is that thing called the Research Domain Criteria Framework, and how can we use that to advance diagnosis, prevention, intervention, and cures in global mental health research, and potentially in global mental health services, real world services.

We will hear from our NIMH RDOC team that I will be introducing in a second. And you will also hear from different researchers who are working in using RDOC in different parts of the world. So we will hear the concept and the framework, and we will also learn from the applications in different parts of the world.

As mentioned at the beginning, this webinar is recorded and will be archived and made available on our website. You will find the website where you can find them at the end of today’s webinar.

Without further ado I would like to welcome my NIMH colleagues who are leading the RDOC framework, the RDOC team. There are a number of them here joining us. I will not introduce all of them, because my Colleague Rebecca Berman will be taking the lead in presenting both the concept of RDOC as well as very importantly the team members who have conceptualized and led this effort. So colleagues from NIMH and colleagues in the research arena who are joining here today, thank you for your time. Thank you. Over to you.

REBECCA BERMAN : Thanks, Leo. We really appreciate this chance to talk about the RDOC framework and be part of this conversation. Let me share my screen. This is going to take another minute I think. And I’m not great at multitasking. But maybe the rest of the RDOC team, while I’m doing this, can just come on and give a brief hello. Bruce Cuthbert, Sarah Morris, Jenni Pacheco and Syed Rizvi.

SARAH MORRIS : Good morning everybody. I’m so glad to have everyone joining the webinar today. We’ve had a great time planning this, and are really happy to see it come to fruition. I’m Sarah Morris, and I’m the Deputy Director of the RDOC Unit here at NIMH, and also a Branch Chief in the Division of Translational Research.

BRUCE CUTHBERT : Hello everyone. I am Bruce Cuthbert, I am Head of the RDOC Unit, and have been leading this effort since I rejoined NIMH in 2009.

JENNI PACHECO: I am Jenni Pacheco, I’m a Scientific Program Manager with the RDoC Unit, and also a program officer in the Division of Translational Research.

SYED RIZVI : Hi, I am Syed Rizvi, the RDoC administrator.

REBECCA BERMAN : And I am Rebecca Berman, I’m a Scientific Program Manager, I joined the RDoC team last year. And hopefully this slide is now visible. So today’s webinar will have four main parts. I will give a brief introduction to the Research Domain Criteria or RDoC framework. Then we are really excited to have with us two groups of researchers that can speak directly to the experience of trying to integrate RDoC principles in global mental health research.

First we’ll hear from Drs. Stein, Wootton and Majara about their work in South Africa, and that will be followed by a presentation from Drs. Patel and Bhavnani on their work in India. And we hope to have time at the end for your questions, as Jeremy mentioned earlier you can put those into the chat.

So here is my title, an introduction to the framework, and I will offer some potential synergies. I want to acknowledge the RDoC team. You had a chance to just meet them now. And I have no disclosures to report.

So what is the Research Domain Criteria initiative? Put in some really simple terms, this is a framework for doing research that explores new ways of classifying and understanding mental disorders. Critically it is not limited to diagnostic categories. And instead, it is based in functional systems that we can measure. And in this introduction I hope to convey the why, the what and the how of RDOC. So why was this framework developed, I’ll tell you more about what it involves, and I will give you some examples about how researchers can use RDoC in their studies.

So, why RDoC? This initiative was launched in 2010 to help address some of the limitations to using diagnostic approaches in research. And so you may be familiar with the DSM, the Diagnostic Statistical Manual, or the ICD, International Classification of Diseases. These are established standards, and really valuable for a range of purposes, but they can have limitations in some contexts, including for research. So I will highlight three of the challenges that can be present in using these diagnostic approaches.

One is that these current diagnostic systems remain based on clinical symptoms and signs, what a patient can report or a clinician can notice. And often this gives an incomplete picture of what is going on with an individual, particularly because these things may happen only within say a single visit. So offering some limited information.

Second, these diagnostic systems encourage us to think about disorders as distinct categories. Healthy versus sick. Whereas we know that many mental health issues exist along a continuum, from normal to abnormal.

And lastly, I think it is well recognized that these diagnostic categories represent relatively broad syndromes. So this introduces problems both with comorbidity, which is having more than one diagnosis. So an individual may have for example a diagnosis of both depression and anxiety.

And on the flipside, there can be issues with heterogeneity, having a lot of variability within a diagnostic category. And I just want to offer one brief concrete example of this heterogeneity, which comes from the criteria for major depressive disorder. So these are simplified phrasings of the nine criteria for depression diagnosis. To receive that diagnosis one has to have five of these nine criteria.

So you can see that you can get a diagnosis of depression with these five, and another person may have these other five symptoms. So almost entirely non-overlapping. So you can have relatively different symptomatology but have that same label. You can imagine if you’re doing research to understand what’s going on in depression, or how you might want to intervene for a given individual, this can be a real barrier.

So together these challenges with the diagnostic systems make it hard to both discover the causes of psychopathology and to predict individual outcomes and find effective interventions. RDoC was introduced as a way to help address some of these problems from a research perspective.

So that’s the why of RDoC, and now turning to what it is. This graphic is representing the four components of the RDoC framework. It is a diagnosis agnostic approach to mental health research. It’s based in, as we see in this light blue color, functional domains that have their foundations in basic biobehavioral science. I’ll go into this in more detail on the next slide, but the idea is that these are functions that you can measure across a range of disorders, and also in the general population.

A second component is that RDOC encourages the use of multiple integrative measures. Those are shown and called these units of analysis. So it can range from genetics, brain function, behavior, environmental measures, and including self-report.

Third, RDoC emphasizes that there is an important role in understanding development across the lifespan. Not just early development, as a real opportunity for things like early intervention and prevention, but understanding changes over time and in relation to aging.

And fourth, RDoC recognizes that all this happens within the context of environment, so there is an important need to understand environmental influences, including both the physical and cultural environment, and things like social determinants of health.

So on the next slide I am going to explain a little bit more about these functional domains. The domains are shown here in the center. At the moment there are six functional domains that have been proposed. And on the outside in these boxes are different examples of sub-processes, or more specific functions, for each of the domains. These are called constructs. These domains and constructs were proposed in a series of consensus workshops that took place after RDoC was launched in 2010.

And the idea again is that they are meant to represent basic functions. So we have things like social processes, cognition, sensory motor function. Up at the top we have systems related to how the body regulates itself, so things like sleep and arousal. And then over on the left you see what are called the valence systems, which have to do with affect and emotion. So on the positive side we have things like how we respond to reward, and on the negative things like fear and anxiety.

So how could we use these domains and constructs to study mental health and psychopathology? So now we’re moving into the how part. And shown on the next slide, these are some examples of using domains and constructs to measure psychopathology. There is kind of a lot here, so I am just going to focus on this top part, this top example from cognitive systems, and really just on this first concept or construct of working memory.

So working memory is something that we know can be impaired in multiple disorders in mental health. For example, it’s prominent in schizophrenia, but it can also be prominent in depression. And it’s also true that people who have a diagnosis of either depression or schizophrenia may not have working memory impairment. So by studying working memory we may have an opportunity to get more insight into the nature of these disorders, and also have a chance at understanding ways to have more tailored intervention.

So another part of this slide emphasizes that for example in the construct of memory impairment you could measure this in multiple different ways. And so this graphic in the top right represents what we call the units of analysis, different modalities that you could use to measure memory impairment.

For example, you can use a working memory task. You might look at genetics or brain function related to working memory performance. You can ask patients to self-report on their perceived difficulties with memory or ask a caregiver to make an assessment as well.

And by bringing these different measures together the idea is that we can get a more complete picture of what an individual is experiencing and how we might tailor an intervention. So it is similar to other areas of medicine where we can integrate multiple measures to improve both assessment and care.

So on the next slide I’m going to give an example of a research study that illustrates these RDoC principles in practice. This comes from a study called the Bipolar-Schizophrenia Network on Intermediate Phenotypes. It’s called B-SNIP for short. And in this study they looked at patients who had diagnoses of schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, and psychotic bipolar disorder.

But rather than looking at each of these diagnostic categories separately, they combined them into one group, because all of these individuals experience psychosis. And then they asked can we understand or classify these patients in a different way, by combining multiple measures to assess them.

And what they found is that by using a combination of cognitive and sensory motor measures, they were able to cluster these patients into three new groups, that’s shown in the upper corner, with the red, green, and blue. And they define these as biotypes.

And what they found was that these clusters were validated using another set of independent measures that they collected on the same subject, having to do with brain function and structure and genetic heritability. And they’ve since replicated this finding in a new set of individuals.

And in addition, they’re now running a clinical trial to ask whether these biotypes can predict responsiveness to the antipsychotic drug clozapine. And in addition to this clinical trial they are also doing some studies asking whether the biotypes can predict how well a given patient may respond to coordinated specialty care in a community setting. So really a nice example from this group of taking multiple measures and looking across diagnostic boundaries to ask if there are ways we can better understand and offer some interventions.

So for the sake of time I’m going to not walk through this example, but I just want to point out that this is another way to use RDoC principles, looking at variability within a disorder, in this case ADHD. And this one is also a nice example because it uses relatively simple measures, asking about temperament and cognition.

So to distill out some of these ways that you can use RDoC principles in research, as I’ve described one way is to use new research designs or sampling methods that go beyond just patient and control, whether that’s looking across diagnoses or at variability within a category. You can also be looking at expanded control groups, like family members or less healthy controls, or sub-threshold symptomology.

Another principle is to consider this range of functionality, looking at a continuum rather than just the categories. To integrate multiple measures, as we have given some examples of. And lastly to consider this in the context of neurobehavioral processes or functions. And for more details and examples, I recommend this paper that the RDoC group published last year: Revisiting the Seven Pillars of RDoC. It’s a great resource.

So I’ll close with a few benefits and challenges. These are not specific to global mental health research, but that can be relevant. One is that RDoC offers a flexible research framework. So because it’s not limited to the traditional disease categories, researchers can pursue the ideas that are most relevant for the communities they’re working with.

And secondly, it is an opportunity to develop or bring together meaningful measures. Again, the idea of using different measures and modalities as a way of helping to understand different patient populations and who might benefit from particular interventions. So really moving toward more personalized medicine.

Potential challenges. There are potential limitations of a neurobehavioral model. So these currently defined functions and constructs are a work in progress. They may not be valid in all settings. So it’s important to take that into account and be flexible.

And secondly I think there is an expectation that RDOC studies have to be resource intensive, and many historically have involved complex or costly measures. It’s not a requirement, for example neural measures are not needed, you don’t need to get EEG or Magnetic Resonance Imaging or something costly. However, I think resources are still going to be a factor, and this is an important place for conversation and discussion.

So to close with some potential synergies, bringing back of the framework. Areas of mutual interest and benefit include the role of development in lifespan, early detection and prevention are things where the global community has deep and broad expertise, and I think there is real potential here in this space. And similarly, with environmental influences, whether it’s physical or cultural environment or social determinants, this is another area for potential synergy that can have an impact not just in the global space but also domestically.

And finally, the idea that together we can arrive at expanded views of fundamental functions and measures that are really clinically meaningful for the people we are serving. So with that I thank you for your attention, thanks to the RDoC Unit. And I think we may have time for a few questions for clarification on the concept. And if we don’t get a chance to address them here you are always welcome to email us at [email protected] . I’m going to stop sharing my slides, although I do want to show a slide later to introduce our speakers.

LEONARDO CUBILLOS: Thank you. At the moment we have not yet received questions. To all participants around the world, please remember that you can type your questions in the Q&A box. Some of them we can answer live, some of them we will write the responses. But at the moment, we just received one. Jared says are the slides available. The reporting of the slides will be made available. Are the slides themselves available?

REBECCA BERMAN : Yes. We can share the slides. I believe so. I will probably have to run it by clearance, but it will be fine.

LEONARDO CUBILLOS: John asks what has the level of adoption across the world been. And then kind of a related vein Jared who asks do you have studies in Africa.

REBECCA BERMAN : You will be hearing from our speakers in just a moment on work in South Africa. I think, in terms of the adoption of RDoC principles, this is something we found difficult to quantify even for studies funded by NIMH. But I think it is, I would speculate that it is safe to say that we have more to do in the global setting, which is partly why we are so excited to be part of the webinar today and have the guests with us today that we do.

LEONARDO CUBILLOS : I will add to that response, Becky, that those of us working specifically in global mental health research believe that RDoC has a tremendous untapped potential to advance as I said earlier prevention, intervention, and there’s a link here. So we welcome this webinar tremendously. Ritha asks do you have data on lessons learned by using this framework. That I would argue Ritha we’ll be hearing more from our presenters. Scanning through the question, Rama Krishnan(ph.) asks where can we find the entire series reporting? And I am going to type for everyone’s benefit a URL where you can find them. I just pasted it for everyone. Michael Goodwin asks are there any ways you imagine the RDoC framework being deployed differently in the global setting US based settings (inaudible).

REBECCA BERMAN : I think that is a great question. I think that would be better addressed in our later Q&A with all of our speakers who can likely speak to that with a much clearer and direct sense. And given the time, unless there is something that would help clarify on the framework, I think we could go ahead and introduce the speakers.

LEONARDO CUBILLOS : I will ask just one additional question. David Batenkiber(ph.) asks are there specific grant opportunities related to RDoC.

REBECCA BERMAN : I believe there are at present, someone can correct me, we have some related to computational methods. Those can be found on the RDoC website. And Syed, thank you for putting that in the chat. There is a link within that website for current funding opportunities. We had one that just closed recently but I think if we have an opportunity to talk more about later, is really moving in the direction of trying to find more scalable and low burden assessments that use behavior in combination with clinical records data. That’s called Impact MH. We may be able to get a link up about the Director’s Blog on that project.

LEONARDO CUBILLOS :  And to query for additional or new information in RDoC, you can always email the RDoC team. Over to you, Becky.

REBECCA BERMAN : I want to now introduce our speakers. I hope you can see this slide. We are again really honored to have with us today these two groups. I’m going to introduce right now, and go into more detail on the speakers for this first presentation, and then I will come back in, probably without a slide, and just introduce the second set.

So in this first set, we have Dan Stein. Dr. Stein is a professor and Chair of the Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health at the University of Cape Town, and Director of the South African Medical Research Council’s Unit on Risk and Resilience in Mental Disorders. He is interested in research on anxiety and related disorders, in building mental health research capacity in the African context, and in work at the intersection of philosophy and psychiatry.

Also in this group we have Dr. Olivia Wootton. She is a medical doctor and PhD candidate at University of Cape Town, and her research focuses on the contribution of common genetic variants to cognitive function, both in the general population and in those living with schizophrenia. She is especially interested in the clinical relevance of neurogenetic research and on prognostic and diagnostic assessments, as well as treatment strategies.

And we’ll also hear from Dr. Lerato Majara, who is a postdoctoral research fellow on the Neuropsychiatric Genetics in African Populations, called NeuroGAP project. And she’s a member of the Global Initiative Of Neuropsychiatric Genetics Education and Research or the GINGER Program at the Harvard School of Public Health. And her expertise is in the genetics of psychiatric disorders and polygenic risk across and within different African populations. So at this point I will turn this over to Dan. Thank you very much.

DAN STEIN : Thanks for that introduction and for the invitation to be here. It is a fascinating topic. So what I’ll do for this talk is address some of the conceptual issues, actually very much in line with what Rebecca has talked about, one or two practical exemplars, then Olivia and Lerato will speak to their work.

I think one can easily contrast global mental health with what Tom Insel has called Clinical neuroscience. They have quite different perspectives and principles and contrasting approaches to diagnosis, etiology, and treatment.

Global mental health would emphasize that mental disorders are a major contributor to the burden of disease worldwide, and that there is a large treatment gap, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. There is a need for more research on how to provide, and importantly to scale up services in these settings, as well as under-resourced settings in general.

Clinical neuroscience on the other hand says that psychiatry can be thought of in terms of a focus on brain disorders, and that if we understand the biobehavioral underlying functional systems that Rebecca referred to, we will have new approaches to understanding assessment, new approaches to understanding etiology and intervention. And importantly there is a key need for more translational research, moving from bench to bed.

So one you could argue is founded in individual biology. The other is focused on public mental health. One emphasizes basic research. The other implementation research. And one is funded by tens of thousands of dollars, the other by tens of millions. And in a sense they are quite opposing.

On the other hand, there are important synergies, as Rebecca mentioned. Both have a long history, and an important role. And it’s interesting that consensus views emphasize the need for both. So this particular article which came out a few years ago which Vikram was involved in and I was involved in, led by Pamela, really emphasized the importance of both public mental health and clinical neuroscience.

And we can see that if we think about diagnosis, because of course there is a potential contrast between ICD-11 and the RDoC approach to assessment. But at the current stage there does seem a need to employ both approaches. And in this article my colleagues and I emphasize that we need to be careful about talking about paradigm shifts in psychiatry research. What we need is, we would argue, incremental integration.

Similarly, when it comes to etiology, there is potentially a contrast between biological mechanisms and social determinants. But the reality is, I think we can all agree that the causes of mental disorder are complex and multi-level. I love the work of Ken Kendler in particular, who writes beautifully about pluralism.

And then finally, in terms of intervention, I have contrasted discovery and implementation science, but of course both are important, as this article emphasizes.

In the South African setting, one practical example that I would like to speak to briefly is the Drakenstein Child Health Study. This is a birth cohort study in a peri-urban area that is representative of many under-resourced communities in the Global South, and perhaps also some under-resourced communities elsewhere.

And we think that it is important to assess a range of biological and psychosocial factors, very much in line with the principles of RDoC as Rebecca mentioned them. And this range of factors contributes to various dimensions of neurodevelopment and psychopathology. Again, Rebecca’s slide comes to mind where she talks about multiple integrated measures, the importance of development across the lifespan, and the importance of looking at environmental and social determinants.

And so the papers that have come out of this birth cohort I would propose to you sort of exemplify this kind of integrative approach, addressing both biology and social determinants, looking at things across the lifespan, and using a range of different measures.

Another study that we’ve been involved with is one of the neurocircuitry of obsessive-compulsive disorder.  These are both NIH funded, I should mention. The Drakenstein is NIH funded, and this is NIH funded. In five different countries, including three in the global south. And again, our emphasis is a range of biological and psychosocial factors which we think contribute to variability in brain circuitry and neuropsychological dimensions.

The question was raised how do you do this kind of work in the global south? And it’s not easy, I think. We worked incredibly hard to ensure harmonization of multiple measures, both measures of social determinants as well as biological measures require harmonization across the different sites. And in this slide, you’ll see some of the papers on that.

We will focus the rest of our talk on schizophrenia in the Xhosa population of South Africa, the Neuro-Gap Study, which again is NIH funded. And this looks at the genetics of severe mental disorders, ranging across schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. And here while genetics is a key focus, we also assess environmental factors, and neuropsychological assessment starts to include an RDoC approach.

There are actually two studies. The one is a Neuro-Gap Study, but Dr. Wootton will actually be talking to the SAX Study, both are NIH funded. So it turns out that much of what I’ve been saying comes from an article that Vikram and I wrote a while ago now, which addressed this issue of global mental health and neuroscience. And we argued that the Global South is well placed to address the synergy between global mental health and clinical neuroscience. We love it when Cape Town is right there at the top of the world.

So, in conclusion, global mental health and clinical neuroscience have certainly advanced, but a huge amount of more progress is needed. And there are wonderful opportunities for synergy. I’m now going to hand over to Olivia, who will talk about the SAX study, Schizophrenia and Xhosa, looking at cognitive systems and psychoses, and as Rebecca mentioned she is on the MD PhD track. Over to you, Olivia.

OLIVIA WOOTTON : Thanks very much Dan. Good afternoon, everyone. I will be continuing this talk by focusing in on cognitive systems and psychosis research in the South African context. So, cognition is one of the major domains of functioning defined by the RDoC framework.

And cognitive impairment is a feature of schizophrenia and major determinant of functional outcomes in the disorder. We know that environmental and genetic factors contribute towards cognitive impairment in the disorder. However, understanding how these factors interact, as well as when these factors exert their effects, remains limited.

And over the past couple years there has been increasing interest in identifying potentially modifiable risk factors for cognitive impairment in order to improve functional outcomes and mitigate disability associated with schizophrenia.

Now, when it comes to low- and middle-income countries, two things come to mind which are important within the context of global mental health and RDoC. The first is that there is a lack of regionally representative data, which means that not only is it difficult to assess the disability caused by cognitive impairment in the disorder, but there is also a lack of data with which to inform early interventions and preventative strategies.

So there’s a need to improve the availability and the utility of cognitive assessments, and this includes steps such as the gathering of normative data, as well as training and capacity development, and establishing the psychometric properties of known cognitive assessments in different contexts.

So as Dan alluded to earlier, the Genomics of Schizophrenia in the South African Xhosa People Study, or the SAX study, provided a great opportunity to collect neuropsychological data while also investigating the genetic basis of schizophrenia in the Xhosa population of South Africa.

So not only was genetic data collected during the study, but we also collected data on cognitive function as well as the social determinants of health. So this study recruited participants from two regions in South Africa, the western and the eastern cape, and it’s run in two phases.

The first phase ran from 2013 to 2018, during which just under 3000 participants were recruited. And the second phase is currently ongoing and started in 2018. And we’re planning to enroll an additional 2500 participants. And cases for this study are defined as individuals with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder.

So a neuropsychological assessment that we’re administering as part of the SAX study is the University of Pennsylvania Computerized Neurocognitive Battery, which is a web-based tool that provides a reliable, efficient battery of cognitive assessments. And this computerized neurocognitive battery was designed to assess the cognitive domains and their underlying brain networks through the application of neurobehavioral probes that have been validated with functional neuroimaging.

So the PennCNB has a core battery which consist of 17 tests across six neurobehavioral domains that correspond to certain RDoC constructs. And this core battery has demonstrated adequate psychometric properties in multiple studies in Western settings. But over the past few years there have been efforts to validate this battery and adapt it for use in other contexts. And one of these adapted batteries is the Xhosa CNB, which consists of 10 tests across five domains that are known to be associated with schizophrenia.

So the process of adapting and validating the PennCNB for use in the SAX study is described in this paper by Jacob Scott and colleagues, and it started with the translation and adaptation of the battery, which included steps such as running the battery past our Community Advisory Board to ensure acceptability. Translating the tests following the WHO translation guidelines. And adaptation of the tests based on feedback from our administrators as well as a select group of participants. And this included steps such as increasing the number of practice trials as well as modifying instructions to improve understanding amongst participants.

The next step was to assess the feasibility of administering a computerized cognitive battery in the South African healthcare setting. And this included ensuring that there are resources available to facilitate the standardized administration of the test, as well as assessing tolerability and completion rates.

And lastly, the validity of the adaptive battery was assessed. And this included factor analysis to test for structural validity, as well as assessing construct validity by testing whether or not known predictors of CNB performance remain significant within the SAX sample.

So as I mentioned, this is the paper by Jacob Scott and colleagues. But to summarize, most tests were well tolerated within the South African setting and were administered successfully to over 90 percent of participants. Factor analysis confirmed the psychometric validity of the battery, with most tests loading on the expected cognitive domain. And lastly, there was evidence of concurrent validity with sex, age, and diagnostic group differences in the SAX sample being consistent with those that have been observed in other studies.

So lastly, the collection of neuropsychological data as part of the SAX study has provided an opportunity for multiple further investigations that are in various stages. So some are in manuscript and preparation, and others have been published already. But the studies focus on two main areas. This is the relationship between cognitive functions and environmental factors, which we know is one of the focuses of RDoC.

So we’ve got groups looking at the relationship between early childhood adversity and cognitive function. Another group of researchers looking at the relationship between early childhood adversity, social cognition and aggression in schizophrenia. And lastly, for my PhD I was able to look at the relationship between demographic and clinical predictors of impaired cognitive performance in schizophrenia in the SAX sample.

So all of this research has been able to add to this vast body of literature on neuropsychological function in schizophrenia in a low- and middle-income setting, and ultimately can hopefully be used to help inform health policy and prevention strategies.

The second set of research studies involve the integration of multiple units of analysis. So we have opportunities to integrate the genomic data with the behavioral data, which can provide insight into the biological underpinnings of cognitive dysfunction in schizophrenia, and we can take a more dimensional approach to examining the biology of schizophrenia.

So as Rebecca alluded to earlier, instead of looking at schizophrenia as a group we can look at possibly participants with intact cognitive function versus those with impaired cognitive function. And there are efforts underway to explore the genetic basis of these different groups, and to better understand the biology.

And the last thing I would like to mention is that we now have the opportunity to compare and integrate the data that was collected in the SAX study with cognitive data from other genetic studies. So as part of the Ancestral Populations Network, which is funded by the NIMH, we’re now looking to take a transdiagnostic approach to studying the genetic basis of cognitive function across different phenotypes.

So we’re looking at cognitive function in schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, MDD, et cetera. And it’s going to be very interesting to see where that takes us. So the last thing left to do is to say thank you to the research team, the collaborators and steering committee, as well as the research participants. And I’ll now be handing over to Dr. Majara to continue the presentation. Thanks.

LERATO MAJARA : Good morning. I’m going to be talking about uncovering the genetic diversity and variation in the genomes of South African populations, a project called GNOMSA. And I should say up front that as far as the RDoC framework goes, my presentation will be focused on genetics as a unit of analysis. And some of the work that I’m going to be showing here hasn’t been published yet, and is part of a manuscript that is in preparation.

So by and large African populations have been excluded from genetic studies. And as is shown here in this figure on the left, showing the number of participants in GWAS studies by the millions on the Y axis, and over time on the X axis, and populations are color coded, and the African populations are coded in this purple color. And as you can see, up until recent years, the number of African populations and I guess other underrepresented populations is very slowly rising. So the purple here you can see is a very small sliver of the total number of participants.

Things are starting to change a little bit, with ongoing efforts such as studies that Olivia and Dan have spoken about being the SAX study, (inaudible) Child Health Study as well as NeuroGAP. I just wanted to emphasize the NeuroGAP study here. It is the largest study of its kind on the continent, having recruited over 32,000 individuals across Ethiopia, Uganda, Kenya, and South Africa. And in it several phenotypes have been assessed and environmental risk factors assessed as well. So the scale in terms of participant numbers and phenotypes provides an opportunity for the implementation of the RDoC framework in this study.

So these are my acknowledgments. I would like to acknowledge my lab mates, the Neurosciences Institute, the Gabriel Grants that has provided the funding for this project, and study participants in general. Thank you very much.

REBECCA BERMAN : Thank you. That was fantastic. Thank you all three of you for those really excellent presentations. And a reminder to the audience, if you have questions for these presenters, please put them in the Q&A function, and we hope to have time to address those at the end.

I want to turn now to quickly introduce our next set of speakers, Dr. Vikram Patel who is the Pershing Square Professor of Global Health at Harvard, where he chairs the Department of Global Health and Social Medicine. He leads the Mental Health for All Lab, which focuses on the social determinants of mental health problems and using community resources to prevent and treat them. He is a cofounder of Sangath, an award-winning Indian NGO which has pioneered approaches to mental health equity. And he is also a fellow of the United Kingdom’s Academy of Medical Sciences and a member of the US National Academy of Medicine.

And following his opening remarks here we’ll hear from Dr. Supriya Bhavnani, who is a coprincipal investigator in the child development group at Sangath India. She leads a translational neuroscience research program using a whole range of tools to assess development. And her research also investigates the determinants of development, with a focus on psychosocial adversities. She has been a recipient of the INSPIRE Faculty Award and Innovative Young Biotechnologist Award from the Government of India. We are so excited to have both of you with us. Go ahead, thank you.

VIKRAM PATEL : Thank you Rebecca. I’m just going to give some introductory remarks, and Supriya is going to do the presentation of our work. Let me just start by amplifying what the previous presentations have spoken about, which is the very important role of adversities in early childhood, and mental health across the life course.

The question is really how is this association mediated? And there is now very robust evidence that much of this effect is mediated through impaired early life brain development, particularly cognitive and social development. We have very good evidence from the Global South that not only are adversities in childhood related to poverty extremely common, but also that learning loss, which is a very important proxy for early life brain development, is very prevalent, particularly for example in South Asia, where the work that you hear about has been conducted.

In a recent review paper in Nature Medicine, led by Sophie Bhutan including Supriya and myself, we document the various pathways through which adversities in early childhood lead to poorer health and mental health in particular across the life course. And I think it really reflects a very good example of how these old divisions between social and biological can be dissolved when we think about these different pathways.

So how do we actually interrupt this pathway? Obviously, from a primary prevention perspective, we want to really make sure every child grows up in a nurturing environment. But that is of course something that we cannot guarantee. So while a large proportion of children grow up in adversity, we need to figure out when their development is faltering so we can intervene early.

The problem has been that we only identify a child who is having difficulties with their development when they wind up in school and start failing in school for one reason or the other, or when they develop mental or behavioral problems. Even then the actual assessment of these problems is extremely time consuming, it requires very expensive, often proprietary cognitive assessment tests, and requires highly skilled personnel to do this, which means the overwhelming majority of children who have faltering development or emerging disorders go unrecognized.

This is the background to the work you’re going to hear about now, which was really driven by the need to develop a dimensional assessment for early life cognitive development that was scalable and that could help us both in identifying children whose development was faltering so that we could institute early interventions, but also to identify phenotypic disorders that are associated with child development and mental health.

I’m now going to hand over to Supriya. And suffice to say the entire program has been led by Sangath(ph.) but has involved as she will describe to us, a collaboration between very many diverse disciplines working in institutions around the world. Supriya, over to you.

SUPRIYA BHAVNANI : Thanks, Vikram. The title of our presentation is Assessing Domains of Neurodevelopment in Early Childhood using Digital Tools. The design, delivery, and evaluation of the DEEP and START tools in India. And with the introduction that Vikram has given I should be able to go quite quickly through some of my first few slides.

So Vikram alluded to the importance of brain development and how it impacts lifelong health, and has also introduced to you the idea that a large number of the children, particularly in low- and middle-income countries, face adversities in their growing years, in the years which are crucial to determine how they will do as they grow older both in their education, through their professional life.

And oftentimes faltering in early development leads to the perpetuation of a vicious cycle of disadvantage, where children who grew up in disadvantage end up not being able to provide for their own children. This is a sort of self-perpetuating cycle. So the need to disrupt this cycle and really identify children whose development needs further support has led us to our research program, which I will tell you a bit more about.

So I will skip through this slide, it is really reiterating the same points that Vikram has made and I’ve just made. But just to say that we do acknowledge that a large number of these different processes in the body contribute to this impact of adversities on physical and mental health. And the one that we focus on is the developing brain.

So, Vikram alluded as well to this detection gap. So we know that there are a number of children that are faltering in their development, but we struggle to find these children in the population. And it’s important to say that one of the reasons that happens is because currently our assessment of child development depends on specialists that are administering typically proprietary tools that are very costly, and in settings such as ours in India, this is not a scalable model. These specialists are few and far between, and they’re also often located mostly in urban settings. And so the children that can benefit from early interventions are not identified on time, if at all.

So the guiding principles of the research program that we’ve been doing for the past few years really align with the RDoC framework in a few ways which I will illustrate now. So this is just an image that you’ve seen earlier from Becky’s presentation. And what I have tried to do here is circle in orange how this speaks to the work that we do.

So we focus on development across the lifespan, without limiting ourselves to the first thousand days of childhood. In fact, we don’t even limit ourselves to early childhood. An example of that is the fact that one of the cohorts that this work is based in has actually been with us since 2015, and we have been following up these children from birth up until now, when they’re eight years old, and we’re hoping to continue to go back to them as they become young adults.

So we really look at development across the lifespan, but not just development, but also the environment. So what is the psychosocial environment in the household that this child is growing up in. And we collect a rich adversity data particularly on the happenings of these households.

The tools that I will discuss with you specifically measure the sensory, motor, cognitive and social processes domains that the RDoC has laid out. And while I won’t get into too much detail of some of our other units of analysis, I would like to mention that the work that we do looks at molecular, at behavioral, at neurophysiological and parent report in the case of young children as units of analysis.

So maybe an example of that is that in this same cohort that I just mentioned, which is in a rural part of north India, we have data as diverse as the adversities experienced by these children, the levels of cortisol, which is a marker of stress physiology, and we have measures of development in these children which I will describe in a minute.

The second guiding principle is that of scalability. So given the detection gap that we want to close is largely due to the lack of available tools that have been normed, that have been shown to have evidence of scalability in these populations of the Global South, our aim was to develop tools that can be used by trained non-specialist workers, they don’t need to have training in child development or in mental health.

They are administered within households. So what you’re seeing here is an example of a tool which is being administered in a child’s house in a rural setting. Importantly we also harness digital technology. I think one of the questions had referred to the harnessing of digital technology. So that is one of the guiding principles for our work, because we really feel it is critical to move to scale. And they are also directly measuring child performance.

So we look at measuring children from two and a half to six years. Importantly this is before the age at which they enter school years. These tools can all be administered offline. They’re using low-cost Android devices. And they have no written instructions for the child. The assessor, the non-specialist worker is the one who is guiding the child on how to engage with these tools.

And for each tool the assessor gives the instructions to the child while demonstrating the tool to them. And once the child has understood what to do, we move ahead. So the data itself is getting recorded by the device. And that is an important point, because we don’t depend on the non-specialist judgment of the child’s performance, we let the data be captured by the device and then analyze it. And I’ll tell you a bit more about that as well.

Another guiding principle, it sort of alludes to some of the presentations we heard earlier, is that we need to move away from clinical categories and start to think about curves of development. This is particularly important in early childhood, where the disorders that we are currently leaving children with are heterogeneous, they’re comorbid.

And if we begin to think of development of cognitive, social processes, and sensory motor processes as a continuum, then we can start to imagine drawing curves for development that are quite analogous to growth monitoring, which is routinely done across the world.

I’ll tell you now a bit more about our tools and their components. As I mentioned, the target age range is two and a half to six-year-olds, and the two tools that I will be describing to you today are called the DEEP tool, which is the Developmental Assessment on an E Platform, and the START tool, which is Screening Tools for Autism Risk Using Technology.

These tools are comprised of different components. I would say the units of measurement in this case for us are parent-child interaction, eye tracking, and gamified neuropsychological tests. I will get into each of these a bit more when I describe each tool to you.

So I would first like to tell you a little bit about our process. So embarking on a journey of trying to make scalable assessments of child development in these very crucial and rather challenging years of two and a half to six was one that we took on with a variety of experts. And what I mean by that is from the beginning of this project, from the inception of this program we have had clinicians, neuroscientists, public health experts and computer scientists as well as game developers inform the products that we have made. So they’ve informed the DEEP tool and the START tool.

What we decided to do was to adapt methods that have been used in early child development in laboratory settings for decades, and that have actually got a very large and wide base of evidence for picking up these processes, and starting to think about how we can use those in the community.

So what we then did was we created some tool prototypes. We went into communities in India and did some formative work. We used child performance, we used parent feedback of the engagement of the child with our tools, and we used non-specialist worker feedback.

So the person who is actually administering the tool to iteratively inform the development of our tools. And once our tools were developed we went ahead and tested the acceptability, feasibility, and validity of our tools. And I won’t repeat, but really thinking about how these can be done eventually at scale. And today we’re at a place where we are keen to validate these tools in a diverse population.

So, about the DEEP tool. The DEEP tool comprises of 14 games. They are woven together into a narrative in which the index child, along with the moon, which is really popular amongst these little kids, is the protagonist of the story.

And we found that the DEEP tool is very engaging for children. In a population-based study, 98.7 percent of our children attempted all of the games, and it took them on average 25 minutes to complete these games. But that can vary depending on how a child plays, all the way from three minutes to 50 minutes. The reason for that is each of these games has different levels of difficulty.

So if a child is able to successfully complete one difficulty level, they go on to the next, and the next. And if they don’t, they go on to the next game. And we feel that these games are tapping into a range of cognitive constructs of the type that you heard described with the RDOC framework. All games of course require comprehension, they require attention, but some for example specifically target memory or reasoning.

The example that we’ve given here is something we call Grow Your Garden. In this, a child is instructed to touch the apple and not the owl. And what we are recording at the back end is the correct clicks, the incorrect clicks that the child makes, and also the background clicks. And through these variables we are able to for example compute how many levels a child played across our tools, what their accuracy was, what their latency was, which was how long did they take to make their first click.

And for example, how long they took to complete a game level. And you can hopefully see how nuanced the data from a cognitive assessment like this is, as opposed to some of the more traditional assessments, which mark kids really with just a one or a zero for having completed an item.

The method that we chose to evaluate this tool has been to benchmark it against a gold standard called the BSID, which is a clinical assessment for children under three and a half years. And we used a machine learning approach. So you can imagine we get a lot of metrics from our tools, and we really went agnostic to these metrics, and just wanted to see which metrics can best predict cognition, as measured by the DALYs(?).

And with this we had moderate coordination between the DEEP score and the BSID score, and something we alluded to earlier, which is children with more adversities, which you can see in the bottom graph here, actually had a lower DEEP score than children who had a lower amount of adversities in the first year of their life.

But we are acutely aware that we don’t want to limit our analyses to gold standards. They come with their own set of limitations, particularly that of scalability, which we are trying to overcome. So the approach we’re using now is to really see how the data, how the metrics themselves can be used to derive a score, and how those correlate with age.

So this is not yet published, but we are really hopeful, because we can start to see a trajectory coming up here from children between two and a half to six. So you can see as children are growing older their score on this cognitive tool is increasing.

I’ll move now to the START tool. The START tool again comprises gamified assessments. We are looking at a very innovative way of tracking how a child’s visual response to cues is. So this is traditionally done in lab settings with very expensive equipment, using eye trackers.

But what we do is we use the camera of the tablet to take a video of the child while they are looking at our stimuli, and we are then able to use computer vision to see where the child was looking. It’s one of our big examples of innovation of taking lab-based science into households. I’ll talk a bit more about that on the next slide.

So some of the other tasks we have, I won’t go through all of these in the interest of time, but for example you can see pop the bubble, which is really looking at a child simply popping bubbles, but the data is recording the force with which they interacted with the tablet.

And there is published evidence to show that children with autism actually press harder on these tablets than those who are typically developing. And in the preferential looking task, it’s known that children with autism for example tend to look more at non-social images and videos than typically developing children.

So the design that we used to validate the study was a case control design. We had children with autism, intellectual disability, and typically developing children. And really what I would like to focus here on is the images you see on the left, which are showing you the challenges that are overcome to be able to do for example eye tracking in households. You can see the different types of settings in which we’ve had to use it. We’ve had to use a table, a bed, even just a step in a house, depending on the space that was available to us.

And what you’re seeing on the right is that our tools have had pretty high completion rates. The graphs where you don’t have 100 percent in TD are typically where the app has malfunctioned. But the ones in which you are seeing real reductions of completion are the children that have developmental challenges.

And I’m not going to go through this in great detail, but I would just like to say that we have found group differences in the cases of these tasks, in the metrics that we’ve derived from them. This paper is published, so anyone that is interested can go in and see more.

But it’s important to highlight here and bring this back to the RDoC framework, that while we were able to get group differences between typically developing children and children with developmental disorders, we were actually not, each task did not differentiate between ASD and ID. So really also one of the reasons was that we found a lot of comorbidity in this population. So really reminding us that these diagnostic categories that we have focused a lot of our work on might need to be rethought.

And that is what we are doing through the study that these tools are being used on today. So we have integrated these tools in a study called the STREAM study, which is Scalable Transdiagnostic Assessment of Mental Health. It’s an MRC funded project for five years. And the aim of this study is really to generate normative data.

And I think Olivia alluded as well to the lack of normative data, particularly from underrepresented countries such as ours, on domains of cognition, social, and fine motor development. We’re doing this currently through two diverse low resource settings, which is in India and Malawi.

And we also aim to provide evidence of their clinical utility. And importantly we are collecting the environmental determinants of child development, and we are looking at how these tools are sensitive to the impact of these risk factors. So this is a study being done on 4000 children, all the way from zero to six years of age.

Just in conclusion I wanted to just mention the innovations that we’ve made through this research program. We’ve used decades of knowledge from psychology, from neuroscience, and we’ve used child performance-based assessments of these domains and not recorder observations, which is typically done in this age range.

Our delivery is particularly innovative. We’ve used non-specialist workers, we work offline, we go to routine settings like households, and we use tablet computers, particularly Android, which is low cost. And the validity has used two approaches. One is in a population based level as well as against clinical diagnoses.

Finally, where we want to go with this program of work is to continue to validate these tools. I think particular importance is thinking about how these tools are able to predict performance in later childhood. So when children enter school, do assessments in this age range predict a child that might be faltering in school later?

We also have a vision to go to scale. An important part of that is to get collaborations and get global data. We have had some successful collaborations with a team in Nepal, with Malawi. We’ve also had interest in using our tools in the UK. And we of course need to go through the health system to achieve scale in our countries.

But we also envisioned this as tools that can potentially be implemented directly through parents. So really empowering them to measure development in their own children. And finally, we would like to impact outcomes. And one of the ways we would do that would be to link child performance on our tools to targeted interventions.

So this is just an image of what I’ve just described to you, which is a vision for these tools. And finally I would like to acknowledge as Vikram said this is an effort by a very large group of collaborators, and I would like to acknowledge them. I would like to acknowledge our funders. And of course to all of our participating families. Thank you.

LEONARDO CUBILLOS : Thank you very much for these wonderful presentations, one from South Africa, the other from India. Becky, do you want to come back on camera?

REBECCA BERMAN : Sure. And I think at this point we can invite all our speakers to come on camera. Thank you all again. Incredible, inspiring presentations.

LEONARDO CUBILLOS: So we have a few questions that are in the Q&A box. Do you see them, Becky? We may not have enough time to cover all of them. Are there any that you want to prioritize? By the way, I would also like to invite the RDoC team to also join on camera.

REBECCA BERMAN : Certainly. One I think we might want to cover, maybe not exactly this question, but the idea it gets to, a question from Dr. Yared Alemu(ph.) on how some of the researchers are overcoming the lack of digital health technology in low resourced countries. I think really Supriya in your talk you gave some great examples of where it sounds like you’re finding methods to make this very scalable and accessible, and working really in a setting that empowers, as you said has the potential to empower parents directly, and families.

But I would love to hear I think from the speakers thoughts on the potential for these technologies. It’s something that I think has broad interest, but also different considerations, whether it’s around things like what the patient privacy concerns might be, or other issues just in bringing these to scale. I would love to hear from any speakers who would like to address that.

VIKRAM PATEL : I think I will go first. I think privacy is a universal concern with all personal data. So I think that is kind of a given. I feel that that has to be seen as a background topic that has to be a starting point for any conversation on digital data. But I don’t think we should let that question interrupt our efforts to actually use digital data. I think as Supriya has described, the work we have been doing in India is entirely designed to be used offline.

And so the idea behind the internet, access to the internet being a barrier, I think is addressed by engineering, so you actually have as much of the data stored on a device until you are able to connect with the internet, and then let the data be uploaded.

That being said, my last remark is that the level of internet coverage and access to smartphones, at least in South Asia, has absolutely catapulted in the last five years. And in large part that has to do with the fact that all financial services have moved onto the internet.

So almost 80 percent now of all cash transactions in India happen on your phone. This is a monumental shift over the last five years, but what it has therefore meant is that data access has now become almost universal. I won’t say it's fully universal, but nearing universality. And I think that trend will continue very rapidly in the coming years. So it’s a real opportunity for actually using technology enabled methods for the research that we do.

REBECCA BERMAN : Thank you. That is a really important set of points and lessons there. Another question, I think we’ll open this up for any of the speakers, are there ways, this comes from Michael Goodman, are there any ways you imagine the RDoC framework being deployed differently in the global setting versus US-based settings?

DAN STEIN : I guess I can go first there. I think Rebecca you alluded to this in your talk when you were sort of saying RDoC doesn’t have to rely necessarily on brain imaging. But I think there is, obviously in highly resourced places you can rely on those sorts of things, and that is one wonderful opportunity. In low resourced settings we necessarily have to use less expensive methodologies and measures.

And you alluded to that for example in the ADHD study, and the Indian team have demonstrated that that is entirely possible. I think also sort of exciting is the development of for example portable MRI scans, which might allow you to do brain imaging in low resourced settings at relatively inexpensive rates. I see that Supriya is actually a coauthor on an article about the ethics of these kinds of devices.

So once again there are pros and minuses of these kinds of things, and certainly the issue of the scientific value at a population level needs then to be determined. But again maybe creating a whole range of new scientific opportunities. And of course I think always with applicability to the global north as well, rural areas and so forth and so on.

VIKRAM PATEL : Let me just add to what Dan just said, which I completely agree with, is also the use of portable EEG. Although we didn’t describe that, but I think in terms of a very underutilized tool, in large part because of the complexity of assessment of reading EEGs, and a challenge which is now being addressed through automated methods to actually read EEGs.

And of course, the huge technology leap of portable EEG. We have been using portable EEG with thousands of very young children, which you do at their home, and you do it while they’re doing the DEEP game, so you can get them distracted as it were so they don’t tear the leads off. But that’s another really huge potential.

I wanted to also just say one brief remark about the US versus the low-income world. Because most people – this is going to be a provocative and speculative statement. Because most people in low income countries don’t ever get a chance to be diagnosed, because diagnostic, algorithmic skills are actually very rarely accessible in most parts of the world, in fact you might find that this more dimensional approach of characterizing human mental health might have far more likelihood of being taken up, because there is not a huge existing infrastructural edifice of diagnosis driven care that dominates the US landscape. I think paradoxically some of these ideas are more likely to be embraced in the Global South than they are in the Global North. But that is my speculation.

LEONARDO CUBILLOS : I just want to rescue one question that Lina Matsumoto(ph.) asked earlier, that Supriya answered in writing. Lina Masumoto asks where can the participants learn more from the work that you guys are doing in India and South Africa. Supriya, you wrote in the chat box the website to Sungath.in. I’m asking Dan or your team if there is any resource that also participants can go to to learn more of what you are doing.

REBECCA BERMAN : I think we have another question about what type of studies are valued more. Is that something, Sarah, that you can speak to?

SARAH MORRIS: Sure, I can weigh in on that. And then perhaps Leo has some thoughts about that specifically from the global mental health perspective. I would say the short answer is reach out to an NIMH program officer, we can always help you determine whether your research idea or grant application is in alignment with NIMH research priorities. And those research priorities are available on the NIMH website. It’s always good to keep an eye on the funding opportunities that NIMH publishes to get a sense of what ideas and topics are considered high priority. The NIMH Director’s Blog is also a good source of some insights into what NIMH is thinking about. Leo, I don’t know if you want to weigh in on that all.

LEONARDO CUBILLOS : Just two additional points. One is we in the global mental health space are looking for studies that are significant to the context where they are done, not only in the way of addressing access gaps or diagnostics gaps, which was presented by some of our presenters earlier, but that also address and take into account the capacity of those local settings to bring those potential innovations to scale. There are of course many other things we would be happy to meet with potential applicants on.

REBECCA BERMAN : I would just add that this idea of bringing things to scale echoes back to the earlier question about US-based versus more global settings. And I think there is really strong interest in that scalability component, recognizing that there are, as Dan alluded to as well, plenty of places within the US where resources are limited. And so really finding ways to reach more of the population where they’re at, whether that’s using cellphones and some of these digital technologies, or other, more accessible methods, is of great interest within the RDoC framework too.

LEONARDO CUBILLOS : I think we are now at the hour. Thank you Becky and colleagues, from the RDoC team. Dan, Olivia, and Majara, thank you so much for sharing that vital knowledge coming from South Africa and other countries we know are doing a great job. Vikram and Supriya, thank you for presenting what you are doing in India.

Thank you everyone who joined around the world, wherever you are. Have a wonderful rest of the morning, afternoon, or evening. Again, this concludes the 2023 Center for Global Mental Health Research Webinar Series. We will be preparing and launching the 2024 series over the coming months. Have a wonderful rest of your day.

Task Search

Pokemon go world championships 2024 event.

The Pokemon Go World Championships 2024 event is nearly here, bringing with it a new Pokemon debut, Field and Timed Research, unique Raids, event bonuses, and more!

This page acts as a comprehensive breakdown of the Pokemon Go World Championships 2024 event, including its runtime .

WC2024 Header.jpg

World Championships 2024 Runtime

The Pokemon Go World Championships 2024 event will be live in-game from Friday, August 16th, at 10:00AM to Tuesday, August 20th, 2024, at 8:00PM local time.

Pokemon Debut

The World Championships 2024 Pikachu costumed version will appear during this event!

Wild Encounters

The following Pokemon will appear more frequently in the wild during this event:

Pokemon Image
Mankey
Lickitung
Marill
Paldean Wooper
Swablu
Fletchling
Carbink
Grubbin
Mareanie
Skarmory

World Championships Field Research

You'll be able to encounter the following Pokemon by completing Field Research tasks:

  • World Championships 2024 Pikachu

World Championships Paid Timed Research

For US$5.00 (or the equivalent pricing tier in your local currency), you’ll have access to Timed Research tasks, which eventually provide the following rewards:

  • 1x Premium Battle Pass
  • 25,000 Stardust
  • Encounters with Azumarill, Cresselia, Vigoroth, and more

World Championships Raids

The following Pokemon will appear in their respective raids:

One-Star Raids
World Championships 2024 Pikachu Mienfoo
Three-Star Raids
Lickitung Galarian Stunfisk Diggersby

World Championships Shadow Raids

The following Pokemon will appear in their respective Shadow Raids during the event:

  • Shadow Magnemite
  • Shadow Dratini
  • Shadow Wooper
  • Shadow Gligar
  • Shadow Wobbuffet
  • Shadow Kirlia
  • Shadow Sableye

World Championships Featured Attacks

The following Pokemon will know these respective featured attacks as you encounter/evolve them during this event:

  • Charged Attack - Body Slam
  • Charged Attack - High Jump Kick
  • Evolve Wooper during the event to get a Quagsire that knows the Charged Attack - Aqua Tail
  • Evolve Swablu during the event to get a Altaria that knows the Charged Attack - Moonblast
  • Evolve Grubbin during the event to get a Charjabug that knows the Charged Attack - Volt Switch
  • Evolve Fletchinder during the event to get a Talonflame that knows the Fast Attack - Incinerate

World Championships Event Bonuses

The following bonuses will be in effect during this event:

  • Up to five Special Trades can be made each day
  • You can use a Charged TM to help a Shadow Pokemon forget the Charged Attack Frustration

World Championships Avatar Items

Screenshot (716).png

The following items will be available starting from August 16th, 2024:

  • 2024 Worlds Ukulele Pose
  • 2024 Worlds Bucket Hat
  • 2024 Worlds Aloha Shirt

GO Battle Week: Shared Skies

From Friday, August 16th, at 12:00AM to Tuesday, August 20th, 2024, at 11:59PM local time, you'll have access to the following bonuses:

  • 4× Stardust from win rewards
  • The maximum number of sets you can play per day will increase from five to 20 (for a total of 100 battles) from 12:00AM to 11:59PM local time
  • Free battle-themed Timed Research will be available. Rewards include a wig avatar item inspired by Lana
  • Pokemon encountered via GO Battle League rewards will have a wider variance of Attack, Defense, and HP

Additionally, the following leagues will be active during this Battle Week:

  • Great League
  • Ultra League
  • Master League
  • Catch Cup: Great League Edition

Up Next: Pokemon Go Adventure Week: Taken Over

Top guide sections.

  • List of Pokemon (Pokedex)
  • Rediscover Pokemon Go
  • Pokemon Go Fusion Details
  • Upcoming and Current Events in Pokemon Go

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In this guide.

Pokemon Go

IMAGES

  1. Research Methodology JUNE 2023

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  2. Clippings FOR JUNE 30 2023

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  3. Pokémon GO: Field research in June 2023

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  4. Download 60 Days CSIR NET Life Science Study Planner For June 2023 Exam

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  5. 2023

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  6. Planning & Self-Study Release Notes for June 5, 2023

    research tasks june 2023

COMMENTS

  1. Pokémon GO Field Research List (August 2024)

    A complete guide to Pokémon GO's currently available Field Research tasks, rewards, and encounters. Includes Pokémon encounters, Mega Energy rewards, and Research Breakthrough available during the whole Pokémon GO Shared Skies Season. Field Research listed in this article will be available during the Season of World of Wonders: 📅 Starts June 1, 2024, at 10:00 […]

  2. Pokemon Go Field Research June 2023

    updated Jun 5, 2023. Field Research tasks provide a consistent way of acquiring new missions, and therefore new rewards, within Pokemon Go. Check out the page below for a comprehensive breakdown ...

  3. Pokemon Go Field Research tasks & rewards for August 2024

    Here are all of the Pokemon Go Field Research tasks in August 2024, including Research Breakthrough rewards and rare Pokemon. ... June 2023: Audino / Beldum / Furfrou / Goomy / Noibat / Sableye:

  4. Pokémon Go August Field Research tasks and their rewards explained

    All August Field Research tasks in Pokémon Go explained, plus how Special Research and Research Breakthrough rewards work. ... June, July and August 2023: Sableye, Beldum, Audino, Furfrou, Goomy ...

  5. Pokemon Go Solstice Horizons Event and Starry Skies Research Tasks

    The Solstice Horizons event within Pokemon Go will run from Friday, June 16th, 2023, at 10:00AM to Sunday, June 25th, 2023, ... Solstice Horizons-themed Field Research tasks are available!

  6. Current Field Research

    Current Field Research. Updated on June 13, 2023. These are the available Research Tasks with Pokémon encounters for the current Season, Hidden Gems. Completing a Research Breakthrough this season will lead to an encounter with one of the following Pokémon: Sableye, Beldum, Audino, Furfrou, Goomy, or Noibat. The current Spinda pattern is #3.

  7. "A Shadowy Disturbance" Team GO Rocket Special Research Tasks and

    A Shadowy Disturbance is a Team GO Rocket Special Research quest line that became available during the Team GO Rocket Takeover: June 2023 event, bringing Shadow Regirock, Shadow Gible, and Shadow Geodude to the world of Pokémon GO. On this page, you can find all of the tasks and rewards for completing this Special Research quest line.

  8. Pokémon Go 'A Shadowy Disturbance' quest steps, rewards

    "A Shadowy Disturbance" is the latest Giovanni research quest in Pokémon Go. Making its debut in late June 2023 as part of the "Solstice Horizons" event, it ends with an encounter and ...

  9. Pokemon GO Dark Flames (June 2023): All Timed Research tasks and rewards

    The Dark Flames event is scheduled to begin on Thursday, June 29, 2023, at 10 AM local time and will continue until Sunday, July 2, 2023, at 8 PM local time. Dark- and Fire-type pocket monsters ...

  10. Pokemon Go Sustainability Week 2023 Research and Event Guide

    The Sustainability Week 2023 will feature tons of new wild Pokemon encounters and Raids plus the debut of Bounsweet to Pokemon Go. On this page of IGN's Pokemon GO wiki guide, you can discover a ...

  11. Starry Skies Special Research Guide

    It is available from Friday, June 16, 2023, at 10:00 a.m. until Sunday, June 25, 2023, at 8:00 p.m. local time. ... The paid research is identical to the free research. Starry Skies Special Research Tasks & Rewards. Starry Skies (1/4) Task Reward; Explore 2KM: Solosis: Catch 2 Psychic-Type Pokémon . Abra:

  12. List of Field Research tasks and rewards/2023

    Please, note that there are always only either: specific amount of Stardust, or XP, or just one kind of item, or a particular Pokémon encounter for a single task completed, which means only one of following possible rewards is rewarded for single Field Research task completed not all of them! Shiny Dedenne was available since Jan 10. Shiny Stunfisk was available since Apr 23. Starting this ...

  13. Pokemon GO Axew Community Day June 2023: All Special Research tasks and

    Apart from that, players will also be able to enjoy a Special Research questline, filled with a variety of tasks and rewards. The June 2023 Community Day is scheduled to take place on Saturday ...

  14. What's June 2023's Pokémon GO Research Breakthrough?

    June 2023's Research Breakthrough encounter features the following pool of Pokémon: Sableye, Beldum, Audino, Furfrou, Goomy, and Noibat. You will get one of the six Pokémon listed randomly ...

  15. All Pokemon Go Searching for Gold Research Tasks

    Pokemon Go Searching for Gold Research Day Event Field Research Tasks. During the event window on June 3rd, from 2 PM to 5 PM Local Time, you can spin Photo Discs at PokeStops to collect these ...

  16. Pokemon GO Searching for Gold Research Day: All Field and Timed

    The Searching for Gold Research Day event is scheduled to be held on Saturday, June 3, 2023, starting from 2 pm local time and continuing till 5 pm local time in Pokemon GO. The available Field ...

  17. All Timed Research Tasks & Rewards

    Every Water Festival: Beach Week Timed Research Task & Reward in Pokémon Go. The Pokémon Go Water Festival: Beach Week event will be starting on June 6, 2023, at 10 AM and ends on June 12, 2023 ...

  18. Pokemon GO June 2023 Event Guide

    Pokémon GO June 2023 events schedule is here! From a new shiny Legendary raid boss, to new events, a research day, an event themed Spotlight Hour featuring multiple Pokémon, and more, it looks to be an exciting month. June marks the start of Pokémon GO Season 11: Hidden Gems! Hidden Gems lasts from June 1, […]

  19. Team GO Rocket Takeover

    Wednesday, June 21, 2023, at 12:00 AM Local Time. Ends: Sunday, June 25, 2023, at 11:59 PM Local Time. Pokémon aren't the only ones active during the Solstice…. Keep your eyes peeled for Team GO Rocket during the Solstice Horizons event! We have intel indicating a Team GO Rocket Takeover is set from June 21, at 10:00 am local time to June ...

  20. All Pokémon Go Field Research Tasks, Rewards, & Encounters

    In Pokémon Go, Field Research tasks are regularly cycled out for events and seasons, which makes it hard to keep up on what tasks are available, and what rewards you might get from them. Below, we have provided the lineup and most recent changes to the Field Research task list, as well as what rewards and encounters you can receive from them.

  21. Pokémon Go: all Field Research Tasks in December 2023

    Pokémon Go: Research Breakthrough rewards in December 2023. Completing seven Field Research Tasks on seven different days - it does not have to be a consecutive streak - will grant you access ...

  22. Pokemon Go Beach Week Event

    Pokemon Go's Beach Week event starts on June 6, 2023 at 10 AM (Local Time) and ends on June 12, 2023 ... Complete the Timed Research tasks to unlock the Surfer Avatar Pose and encounters with ...

  23. Tackling Money Laundering in Croatia: Conference Report

    At a workshop in June 2023, investigative journalists and representatives of civil society organisations discussed Croatia's grey-listing by the Financial Action Task Force. ... As an independent institution, we produce evidence-based research, publications and events on defence, security and international affairs to help build a safer UK and a ...

  24. Pokemon Go Field Research April 2023

    updated Apr 4, 2023. Field Research tasks provide a consistent way of acquiring new missions, and therefore new rewards, within Pokemon Go. Check out the page below for a comprehensive breakdown ...

  25. The Center for Global Mental Health Research Webinar Series 2023 ...

    This webinar discussed the National Institute of Mental Health's Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) initiative and its potential to inform (and be informed by) global mental health research. RDoC is a research framework that encourages the investigation of mental disorders from a perspective of basic functional dimensions (e.g., cognitive control), using many types of information - from ...

  26. Pokemon Go World Championships 2024 Event

    The Pokemon Go World Championships 2024 event is nearly here, bringing with it a new Pokemon debut, Field and Timed Research, unique Raids, event bonuses, and more!. This page acts as a ...