Recent Social Health Psychology Graduates
Our social-health 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.
Our social-health 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.
Dr. Sarah Black - Developmental psychopathology, with particular interest in risk for mood disorders during childhood and adolescence. Currently, investigating how parenting behaviors and parental psychopathology may influence the development of emotional regulation abilities during middle childhood and adolescence. Research also considers how the normative hormonal, social, and environmental events of childhood and adolescence can be disrupted and lead to increased risk for emotional dysregulation.
Dr. Kathleen Casto - Hormone, brain, behavior mechanisms underlying social competition and motivation with implications for mental health conditions associated with hormonal transitions (e.g., premenstrual dysphoria).
The social-health psychology program is designed to train students in conducting and communicating high-quality psychological research. As a graduate student in the social-health psychology program, you will have the opportunity to collaborate closely with one or more faculty members in ongoing research projects, from conception to publication. Our program uses a mentorship model in which a graduate student works closely with one of the faculty members.
Ashley Abraham, Assistant Professor, Southern Illinois University
Heather Bailey, Assistant professor, Kansas State University
Michael Baranski, Assistant Professor, California University of Pennsylvania
Blair Braun, Assistant Professor, University of Wisconsin, Platteville
Stephen Brusnighan, Psychometrician at Measurement Incorporated
Angela C. Canda, Associate Professor, John Carroll University
Nola Daley, Research Scientist, ACT
Dr. John Dunlosky - Cognitive aging, metacognition, and education. Linking theory to applications aimed at improving student learning and achievement.
Dr. William Merriman - Children's language, memory, and thought.
Dr. Katherine Rawson - Text comprehension, how reading processes become automatic, how to improve student learning, and metacognition.
Dr. John Gunstad (Assessment) uses neuropsychological tests to study factors that limit test validity and the effects of age and disease on cognition.
Dr. John Updegraff (Social-Health) studies cognitive and emotional processes involved in well-being and adjustment to stress; how to present health information in ways that effectively promotes health behavior change.
Dr. Jill Folk - Skilled reading and spelling, reading and spelling disability, and cognitive neuropsychology.
Dr. Phillip Hamrick - Language, learning, memory, consciousness, and computational modeling.
Dr. Clarissa Thompson - Mathematics education interventions, representational change, development of learning and memory.