Carolyn is interested in how positive family experiences and the family impact adult development, specifically in understanding the nature, definition, and measurement of psychological well-being and how experiences of meaning in life pertain to being a parent.
Alexa is interested in the short- and long-term health impact of the social (e.g., race, gender, class, ethnicity, immigrant generation, etc.) and contextual (e.g., neighborhood, education, household) determinants of physical and mental health.
Penina is interested in child emotional wellbeing in the parenting context, particularly parent-child dyadic emotion regulation, its association with parent and child characteristics, and its impact on healthy child development.
Hannah is interested in treatment and recovery from substance use disorders for women, especially pregnant and parenting women, the mother-child dyad in the context of treatment and recovery, and the intersection between reproductive health and addiction across the life span.
Aarti focuses on recessionary impacts, particularly housing insecurity, among midlife and older adults; how stress around such events contributes to biological and epigenetic changes; and the biopsychosocial pathways by which recession stress is connected to those changes.
Avery is focused on peer relationships across childhood and adolescence, specifically peer influence on prosocial and delinquent behaviors, as well as the application of developmental quantitative methods (social network techniques, intensive longitudinal data analysis).
Xinyuan is interested in how early life experiences can influence individuals' future development, especially through parenting. She is focused on parenting experiences in infancy, which serves as a foundation for social-emotional development.
Young Won is interested in modeling intensive longitudinal data with approaches that address changes over time, including identifying events or behaviors that improve relationship qualities or reduce relational conflicts.
Christopher focuses on developing and applying quantitative methods for modeling intensive longitudinal data, specifically methods that bridge nomothetic and idiographic paradigms, focusing on approaches for deriving group-level estimates from person-specific time series.
Marci is interested in child maltreatment and related public policy to prevent it, including child welfare and foster care placement, as well as maternal substance use and the implications for child welfare actions, including reunification following child removal from care.
Jose studies individual differences in creativity and how to support creative ability across the lifespan; sleep and changes in neural activation that lead to cognitive decline; and the use of technology to improve quality of life for those suffering from dementias.
Emily’s research focuses on physiological and psychological outcomes following child maltreatment and mechanisms in the intergenerational continuity of child maltreatment, with a focus on leveraging findings to develop and enhance prevention and treatment programs.
Shixin is interested in closed relationships within sexual- and gender-diverse families, such as couple dynamics and coparenting relationships, and how general as well as sexuality-related stressors will further impact the well-being of these families.
Ruiqi is interested in studying parent-child relationships, attachment and parental practices, and how these contribute to or compromise children’s functioning and socioemotional development.
Vani is interested in taking a neurocognitive approach to mindfulness during parenting and infancy, its connection with curiosity and empathy during childhood, and how it can help build stress resilience and flourishing within the cultural and social context.
Chloe's primary research interest lies in understanding the influence of parents and families on children’s social-emotional development and well-being.
Katherine's research interests lie in the neural and psychological mechanisms of well-being during pregnancy and the postpartum period, with a particular interest in stress and emotion regulation during the transition to parenthood.
Yan is interested in social relationships, health, and their age-related changes in middle-aged and older adults. Her current focus is on the impacts of loneliness and its trajectories on older adults' health.
Abigail focuses on child development and interventions in educational contexts. Her current research explores educational support programs for refugee children in humanitarian settings.
Ethan is interested in applying and developing novel methods to improve our ability to research topics of substance misuse and recovery, as well as how individual and environmental factors influence recovery outcomes.
Sharon is interested in Bayesian modeling and developing computational methods for modeling individual changes in cognition and emotion processes across multi-timescales integrated with biopsychosocial contexts.
Adelaide is interested in the socio-emotional development of children, as well as attachment, parenting, and parent education. She also focuses on translating research into policy and practice through prevention and intervention strategies.
Ann's research focuses on the use of large administrative datasets to assess the effects of child maltreatment, as well as child welfare and foster care system involvement on foster youths' life trajectories and biopsychosocial outcomes.
Joseph’s research aims to inform interventions for substance use disorders using intensive longitudinal methods. He studies intraindividual change in the recovery process, such as detecting lapse risk in daily life.
Sun Ah's research interests are in the intersections between healthy aging, daily experiences, and methodology, including examining psychosocial and health-behavioral factors of physical health outcomes in later life, as well as biological pathways under this relationship.
Jeesun focuses on identifying the elements of a couple's dynamic that affect their psychological well-being and romantic relationships among couples coping with contextual stress. She is also interested in how couple functioning affects child and adolescent mental health.
Yanling's research lies in the development and application of methods for studying inter-individual differences in intra-individual changes to address questions related to substance use, as well as software tools to facilitate the dissemination of statistical methods.
Yan focuses on adolescent close relationships; adolescent-parent relationships in cross-cultural and long-distance contexts; challenges faced by East Asian international students in the U.S.; queer East Asian adolescents and families; and prevention and intervention research.
Kathleen is interested in the development of mood disorders and impulse-control disorders during adolescence, particularly within the context of neurobiological changes as analyzed via fMRI data, specifically resting-state data analyses.
Sara is generally interested in substance use in midlife and older adulthood, in particular, family and interpersonal factors predicting substance use in later life.
Rachel's focus is intervention and prevention plans regarding emotional competence, aiming to develop methods that enhance caregivers ability to be aware and regulate their emotions in creating positive and developmentally friendly environments for children.
Ms. Ngigi focuses on adolescent development (social-emotional), psychological risk and positive well-being, family context, parent-adolescent relationships, and family-centered prevention and intervention research for adolescent emotional and behavioral problems.
Patrick's research investigates how to prevent childhood adversities and their long-term impacts, intersecting public policy, social science, and prevention science. He is evaluating approaches for improving child and family wellbeing via research-policy relationships.
Jeongmin's research focuses on daily stress in work-family dynamics, stress spillover, and health outcomes in midlife and aging adults, as well as family demography and population aging.
Priyanka is focused on applying quantitative methods like dynamical systems, time series, and feature selection to understand socio-emotional competency and flourishing from a lifespan and neurobiological perspective, where nomothetic and idiographic approaches are considered.
Daniel is interested in using intensive longitudinal modeling to characterize the neural circuitry that contribute to the transition from goal-directed to habitual behavior, which can provide a deeper understanding of the neurobiological etiology and dynamics of substance use.
Oluwaseyi's research focuses on substance use among vulnerable populations (adolescents and women), and the application of preventive interventions to enhance their overall wellbeing.
Wen's research interest is in studying intraindividual differences in substance abuse recovery and how that may be predicted by characteristics in adolescence, as well as gaining a better understanding of the impacts of substance use on adolescent development.
Danielle is interested in the influences of social, behavioral, and psychophysiological processes in childhood, particularly in the context of stress. She is interested in applying these processes to preventions and interventions for children at risk of maladjustment.
Rinanda is interested in studying how digital technology affects human cognition and emotions, examining the complexities of its impact, from skill enhancement to potential drawbacks like distraction and addiction.
Emma's research focuses on policymaking related to prevention and intervention, including designing preventive programs, analyzing costs and benefits, advocating for implementation, and exploring factors that drive lawmakers to translate prevention science into policy.
Riki is interested in a biopsychosocial approach to cognitive aging, as well as how various risk factors for Alzheimer's disease and cardiovascular disease influence cognitive aging and cognitive decline.
Emma is interested in how the resiliency strategies of nonbinary and gender-expansive families impact health outcomes, and how these strategies are influenced by geographic location and legislation.
Kento's research interests lie in exploring the effects of mindfulness-based interventions on the well-being of caregivers and their immediate environment during the perinatal period, particularly focusing on those caring for premature infants.
Sarah is interested in the effects of early adversity on children's emotional development and behavior problems, such as aggression and oppositionality, as well as the mechanisms through which adversity affects developmental processes.
Junyan's research interests focus on cognitive functions in older adults, such as working memory and visual processing, as well as interventions that can improve older adults' daily functions and driving safety.
Sabrina's research interests focus on the transition to parenthood and early childhood development with particular emphasis on coparenting at bedtime and nighttime parenting practices as they influence infant sleep regulation over time.
Ruoxuan focuses on the intersection of couple relationships and mental health, specifically the dyadic and contextual predictors of mental health outcomes within couples, as well as their dyadic coping strategies when facing physical or psychological challenges.
Lindy explores adult relationships, both platonic and romantic, to gain a better understanding of the variation of personal experiences, including factors that determine mate selection and that are predictive of relationship outcomes and feelings of happiness or love.
Kylee is interested in child and adolescent decision-making through the lens of psychopathology, with a particular focus on internalizing disorders such as obsessive-compulsive and related disorders, anxiety, and stress-related disorders.