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Social Psychology

Core Faculty

Dr. Kristin Mickelson - Effects of stressors on social support, socioeconomic status and social support, and gender attitudes.

Dr. Mary Ann Stephens - Coping, social support and psychological adjustment in response to chronic stress.  

Dr. John Updegraff - Health communication and health behavior; Cognitive and emotional processes involved in well-being and adjustment to stress.  

Dr. Manfred van Dulmen - Adolescent and young adult romantic relationships, aggression, suicide, developmental methodology.

 

About the Social Psychology Program

The social psychology program at Kent State University is an active and vibrant group of faculty and students who use social psychological theory and state-of-the-art research methods to understand real-world issues, especially those with implications for physical health.  Each faculty member has a distinctive research program, but they share a common interest in understanding how people’s personality and social environments shape their adjustment to stress and influence their mental and physical health.  The research labs in the social program have particular strengths in topics such as social support and stress, coping with chronic illness, socioeconomic status, gender attitudes, emotions, well-being, health communication and health behavior.

NEWS: Our social psychology program was recently ranked as one of the top social psychology programs in terms of research impact (Nosek et al., Sept 2010, Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin).

Research Training in Social Psychology

The social psychology program is designed to train students in conducting and communicating high-quality psychological research.  As a graduate student in the social psychology program, you will have the opportunity to collaborate closely with one or more faculty members in ongoing research projects, from conception to publication.  In the first year, students begin a research project under the supervision of one of the faculty.  Often, this first year research project broadens into the topic of a masters’ thesis.  As students progress through the graduate program, they are encouraged to pursue additional collaborative and independent research projects, culminating in a dissertation project that reflects the students’ unique interests and expertise. 

In their first two years, graduate students take a number of graduate courses and seminars that cover current research in social and health psychology, research methods, and advanced statistical methods.  Graduate students learn how to use observational, survey, and experimental methods to conduct research in both the field and laboratory.  Many students in the social program also elect to gain additional training by pursuing minors in health and/or quantitative psychology.

Faculty and students in the social program also meet once a month for the “social brownbag”.  In the brownbag, students and faculty present research ideas, learn about current research trends, review journal articles, and discuss issues relevant to professional and career development.

Graduate Courses in Social Psychology

  • Social Psychology
  • Personality
  • Psychosocial Aspects of Health Psychology
  • Social Psychological Perspectives on Well-Being
  • Gender and Social Class
  • Psychobiological Aspects of Health Psychology

Social Postdocs and Graduate Students

  • Susanne Biehle (5th year, Mickelson lab)
  • Shannon Claxton (2nd year, van Dulmen lab)
  • Alexandra Chong (1st year, Mickelson lab)
  • Brian Don (2nd year, Mickelson lab)
  • Amber Emanuel (5th year, Updegraff lab)
  • Kristel Gallagher (5th year, Updegraff lab)
  • Rachel Hemphill (4th year, Stephens lab)
  • Scout McCully (1st year, Updegraff lab)
  • Sean Rife (3rd year, Mickelson lab)

Recent Social Ph.D.'s

Our social program has been particularly successful in placing our graduates in postdoctoral training programs and professorships. 
Here’s what some of our recent grads are doing now.

  • Nate Deichert, Ph.D., Faculty, Mount Olive College
  • Erin Fekete, Ph.D., Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Miami
  • Cynthia Khan, Ph.D., Postdoctoral Fellow, University of California at Santa Barbara
  • Jason Seacat, Ph.D., Assistant Professor at Western New England College
  • Stacey Williams, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, East Tennessee State University
  • Sharon Claffey, Ph.D., Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Georgia
  • Tina Norton, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Clarkson College
  • Melanie Tabak, Ph.D. Assistant Professor, William Penn University

Faculty with Related Interests

  • Dr. Joel Hughes (Clinical Health) studies how psychosocial factors such as hostility and depression increase cardiovascular risk.
  • Dr. Karin Coifman (Adult Psychpathology) studies emotion processing and emotion regulatory strategies in the development and persistence of psychopathology in acutely stressed populations.