BASP Students

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Alix Alto

Advisors: Ana Gantman, Daryl Wout

Research interests: My interest span political ideology, identity, imagination, and social cognition. Specifically, I'm interested in the relationships between group-based and ideological motivations and collective movements, with particular emphasis on left-wing politics, radical imagination, and the psychology of (anti-) capitalism.

Recent publications and presentations:

Wylie, J., Alto, A.T., Gantman, A. (in press). Imagining our moral values in the present and future. [Peer commentary on "Why Imaginary Worlds? The psychological foundations and cultural evolution of fictions with imaginary worlds" by Dubourg, E., & Baumard, N.]. Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

Alto, A.T.*, Wylie, J.*, Anderson, K.*, Flores-Robles, G.*, Satter, L., & Gantman, A. (under review). “I put liberal, but LOL”: Psychology of the American Political Left.

Alto, A.T.., & Mandalaywala, T.M. (under review). Boys and girls, men and women: Do children take stimulus age into account when expressing gender stereotypes?

Alto, A.T., & Gantman, A. (2022, July). How do Leftists and Liberals think about liberty? Investigating concepts of positive and negative liberty on the United States left. [Paper]. International Society of Political Psychology 2022 Annual Meeting, Athens, Greece.

Alto, A.T.*, Wylie, J.*, Anderson, K.*, Flores-Robles, G.*, Satter, L., & Gantman, A. (2022, July). Anti-capitalism distinguishes Leftists from Liberals in the United States. [Paper]. International Society of Political Psychology 2022 Annual Meeting, Athens, Greece.

Alto, A.T. (Chair), Utopian Thinking, Radical Imagination, and Social Change. [Symposium]. Society for Personality and Social Psychology Annual Convention 2022, San Francisco, CA.

Email: agetreu@gradcenter.cuny.edu

Website


Ellie Aronson

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Advisors: Margaret Kovera, Kelly McWilliams,

Dual Specialization in BASP and Psych and Law

Research Interests: I’m interested in exploring how social psychology can inform  attorney, eyewitness, and juror decision-making. For example, how do lineup administrators transmit subtle behavioral cues to eyewitnesses? How do prosecutors use motivated reasoning processes to justify unethical behavior (e.g., Brady Violations)? How might jurors be swayed by dramatic in-court identification procedures?

Recent publications and presentations:

Conti, K., Aronson, E., & McWilliams, K. (2022, March). Children’s ability to answer WH-questions about body movement and clothing placement. Poster presented at the annual American Psychology-Law Society Conference.

Aronson, E., Fessinger, M., McAuliff, B., & McWilliams, K. (2021, March). How do jurors react when child witnesses say “I don’t know?”: The Broader Effects of the “Don’t Know” Instruction. Poster presented at the annual American Psychology-Law Society Conference, held remotely.

Kovera, M.B., & Aronson, E. (In press). Eyewitness Identifications. In Verona, E., & Fox, B., (Eds.), Handbook of Evidence-Based Criminal Justice Practices. Routledge.


Alexa Beacham

Advisors: Sarit Golub

Research Interests: I'm interested in healthcare improvement that increases engagement in HIV prevention and treatment.

Recent publications and presentations:

Dauber, S., Beacham, A., Hammond, C., West, A., & Thrul, J. (2022). Adaptive Text Messaging for Postpartum Risky Drinking: Conceptual Model and Protocol for an Ecological Momentary Assessment Study. JMIR Research Protocols, 11(4), e36849.

O’Grady, M.A., Neighbors, C.J., Randrianarivony, R., Shapiro-Luft, D., Tempchin, J., Perez-Cubillan, Y., Collymore, D., Martin, K., Heyward, N., Wu, M., Beacham, A., & Greenfield, B. (in press). Identifying the Physical and Mental Healthcare Needs of Opioid Treatment Program Clients. Substance Use and Misuse.

O’Grady, M.A., Randrianarivony, R., Martin, K., Perez-Cubillan, Y., Collymore, D., Shapiro-Luft, D., Beacham, A., Heyward, N., & Greenfield, B., & Neighbors, C.J. (in press). Together in Care: Lessons Learned at the Intersection of Quality Improvement, Integrated Care, and Implementation Practice. Implementation Research and Practice.

Email: abeacham@gradcenter.cuny.edu


Gillian Burns

Advisors: Virginia Valian, Sarit Golub, Danielle Burke

Research interests: I am interested in exploring disability as identity, the intersectionality of disability with other stigmatized identities, and factors affecting stigma and social strength in the context of disability, particularly with respect to the autistic community. I also have an interest in how people interact with social robots and applications for robots in mental healthcare. 

Recent publications:

Kitt, E.R., Crossman, M.K., Matijczak, A., Burns, G.B., & Kazdin, A.E. (2021). Evaluating the Role of a Socially Assistive Robot in Children's Mental Health Care. Journal of Children and Family Studies, 30(7), 1722-1735. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10826-021-01977-5

Email: gburns@gradcenter.cuny.edu


Connie Chiu

Advisor: Ana Gantman

Research interests: Broadly, my research focuses on biases in moral and political cognition. I am especially interested in how various contextual and dispositional factors affect people’s moral and political judgments.

Email: pchiu@gradcenter.cuny.edu


Jihye Choi

Advisors: Daniel Rovenpor, Gabe Camacho

Research Interests: I am interested in prejudice, stereotyping, justification and victim blaming! I also became interested in health psychology and morality recently.

Recent publications and presentations:

Bass, A., Choi, J., & Dickter, C. L. (2023). Perceptions of Black and White individuals sentenced for violent and nonviolent crimes. Journal of Applied Social Psychology.

Email: jchoi6@gradcenter.cuny.edu


Nikoleta Despodova

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Advisors: Margaret Bull-Kovera, Michael Leippe

Dual Specialization in BASP and Psych and Law

Research interests: My main interest pertains to research that aims to increase our understanding of jury decision-making. More specifically, I am interested in the effects of cross-examination and witness testimony on jurors' reasoning.

Recent publications and presentations:

Despodova, N., Perillo, J., Clatch, L., Teitcher, J., & Kovera, M. (2015, March). Effects of adversarial allegiance influence on the quality of reasoning displayed in expert evaluations. Poster presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Psychology and Law Society, San Diego, CA

Perillo, J., Despodova, N., & Kovera, M. (2015, March). Attorney preferences for experts under adversarial and concurrent expert testimony conditions. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Psychology and Law Society, San Diego, CA

Email: nikoleta.despodova@jjay.cuny.edu


Jaclyn Doherty

Advisors: Claudia Brumbaugh, Cheryl Carmichael

Research interests: My interests involve interpersonal and intergroup processes in religious contexts, including the relationships and interactions between people of different religious and secular affiliations. I primarily explore romantic relationships with religious differences (affiliation, religiosity, etc.), as well as stereotype threat among religious people in scientific settings.

Recent publications and presentations:

Doherty, J. K., & Brumbaugh, C. C. (in press). Romantic love. In Al-Shawaf, L., & Shackelford, T. (Eds.) The Oxford Handbook of Evolution and the Emotions. Oxford University Press.

Hoogeveen, S., Sarafoglou, A., et al. (2022). A many analysts approach to the relation between religiosity and well-being. Religion, Brain & Behavior. https://doi.org/10.1080/2153599X.2022.2070255

Doherty, J. K., Carmichael, C. L. (2022, July). Disclosing meaningful religious experiences in close relationships. Flash talk presentation accepted for the International Association for Relationship Research Conference, Virtual.

Doherty, J. K., & Brumbaugh, C. C. (2022, February). Interfaith romantic attraction among Christian and Jewish participants. Poster presented at the Society for Personality and Social Psychology Annual Convention, San Francisco, CA, USA.

Email: jdoherty@gradcenter.cuny.edu


Grace Flores-Robles

Advisors: Ana Gantman, Virginia Valian

Research interests: My research explores the factors that make people see and challenge systemic injustice. I investigate this in several contexts, including workplace hierarchies, gender schemas, and labor organizing.

Recent publications and presentations:

Flores-Robles, G., Gantman, A.P. (forthcoming). Love vs. money: Understanding unique challenges in care workers’ labor organizing. In Matthew Lindauer (Ed.), Advances in Experimental Political Philosophy. [preprint]

Godbole, M. A., Flores‐Robles, G., Malvar, N. A., & Valian, V. V. (2022). Who do you like? Who will you vote for? Political ideology and person perception in the 2020 US presidential election. Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/asap.12292

Flores-Robles, G. (2022, May). Seeing and sanctioning system-level injustice. [Talk]. The Group for Empirical Approaches to Morality and Society (GEMS), NYC.

Email: gfloresrobles@gradcenter.cuny.edu; Twitter: @gfloresrob


Bryant Gomez

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Advisors: Gabriel Camacho, Sarit Golub

Research interests: My research broadly looks at educational inequities and perceptions of racial-ethnic identity and social support. Specifically, I am interested in how cultural norms and support affect identity, belonging, and guilt in academic environments.

Recent presentations:

Gomez, B.G. (2022). Re-evaluating Support in Honors Scholar Programs among First Generation & BIPOC College Students. New Ideas Flash Talk presented at the Six College Conference, Online session.

Email: bgomez@gradcenter.cuny.edu; Twitter: @Bryant_Gomez1


Ricky Granderson

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Advisors: Cheryl Carmichael, Danielle Berke

Research interests: Ricky’s research explores the boundaries of acceptable intimate touch behaviors within heterosexual men’s homosocial friendships—as well as the cues, rewards, and punishments driving these experiences of platonic physical touch. This work is part of Ricky’s broader research agenda, which seeks to investigate intimate homosocial friendship as a mechanism by which contemporary men (mainly heterosexual, cisgender white men) can build community and pro-socially adapt to the rapid changes in status, power, acceptable limits of behavior, and understandings of men/masculinity; changes they currently seem to be struggling to adapt to, as evidenced by concordant increases in negative psychosocial outcomes (e.g., alienation, loneliness, suicide, alcoholism, political radicalization). This emphasis on the connection between gendered behaviors and psychosocial outcomes is informed by Ricky’s experiences at the University of Michigan – Ann Arbor, where he earned his M.P.H. working alongside Dr. Gary Harper exploring the intersection of masculinity, sexual behavior, and mental health outcomes.

Recent publications and presentations:

Wong, Y. J., Granderson, R. M., Zounlome, N. O. O., McCullough, K. M., Hyman, J. E., & Schwabe, S. B. (2020). The assessment of subjective masculine norms in the United States. Psychology of Men and Masculinities. doi: https://doi.org/10.1037/men0000254

Fields, E. L., Long, A., Bademosi, K., Granderson, R., Schumacher, C. M., Chandran, A., Kingon, Y., & Jennings, J. M. (2020). Identifying Community-Informed Language to Promote HIV Pre-exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) in Black LGBTQ Communities in Baltimore. AIDS education and prevention : official publication of the International Society for AIDS Education32(2), 152–168. https://doi.org/10.1521/aeap.2020.32.2.152

Granderson, R. M., Harper, G. W., Wade, R., Odero, W., Olwango, D. P. O., & Fields, E. L. (2019). Gender role strain and the precarious manhood of sexual minority Kenyan men. Psychology of Sexual Orientation and Gender Diversityhttps://doi.org/10.1037/sgd0000340

Fields, E., Long, A., Bademosi, K., Granderson, R., Schumacher, C., Chandran, A., ... & Jennings, J. (2019). 195.# Projectpresence: highlighting racial/ethnic minority LGBTQ communities through photo exhibitions to reduce stigma. Journal of Adolescent Health64(2), S99-S100.

Harper, G. W., Jadwin-Cakmak, L. A., Popoff, E., Campbell, B. A., Granderson, R., Wesp, L. M., & Adolescent Medicine Trials Network for HIV/AIDS Interventions. (2019). Transgender and other gender-diverse youth’s progression through the HIV continuum of care: socioecological system barriers. AIDS Patient Care and STDs33(1), 32-43. 

Email: rgranderson@gradcenter.cuny.edu


Jaleel King

Advisors: Margaret Kovera, Jacqueline Katzman

Dual Specialization in BASP and Psych and Law

Research interests: My research interests focus on lineup procedures, perceived witness credibility, and Facial Recognition Technologies use by law enforcement.

Email: jaleel.king@jjay.cuny.edu


Miri Lieber

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Advisors: Margaret Kovera, Kelly McWilliams

Dual Specialization in BASP and Psych and Law

Research interests: My research interests focus on the psychological processes that underpin legal decision-making, particularly grand jury indictment decisions. More broadly, I am also interested in exploring consequentiality and external validity in psycho-legal research.

Email: miriam.lieber@jjay.cuny.edu


Annalisa Myer

Advisors: Daryl Wout, Ana Gantman

Research interests: My research examines the racial, ethnic and class-based diversification of our social networks (our neighborhoods and organizations, for instance). Broader themes include interracial interactions, intersectionality, and perceptions of Biracial people. 

Recent publications and presentations: 

Azevedo, F., Pavlović, T., Rêgo, G. G. d., Ay, F. C., Gjoneska, B., Etienne, T., Myer, A.… Sampaio, W. M. (2022). Social and moral psychology of COVID-19 across 69 countries. https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/a3562

Myer, A. (2022). On Intersectionality and Scientific Rigor: Addressing the Grand Challenges of Psychological Science. Talk accepted to the CUNY Research Day Conference.

Myer, A. (2022). Et Tu, Biracials? Examining U.S. Black-White Biracials’ Racial Neighborhood Preferences. New ideas flash talk accepted to the 6CC Conference.

Myer, A. (2022). The Politics of Identity. Talk presented at St. Norbert College.

Van Bavel, J. J., Cichocka, A., Capraro, V., Sj˚astad, H., Nezlek, J. B., Pavlovi´c, T., Alfano, M., Gelfand, M. J., ... Myer, A .....& Boggio, P. S. (2021). National identity predicts public health support during a global pandemic. Nature Communications, 13(1), 1-14. Featured in the Editors’ Highlights webpage as one of the 50 best papers recently published in Social Sciences.

Email: amyer@gradcenter.cuny.edu

Website


Madeline Nickel

Advisors: Demis Glasford, Catherine Good

Research interests: My research interests include intergroup relations with a particular focus on achieving social justice for racial groups that are discriminated against. I am also interested in studying how racial stereotypes, prejudice, and societal structures continually serve as barriers to racial equity. I am excited to work on strategies to reduce racial discrimination while fostering harmonious intergroup relations, and to explore research questions related to collective action, protests, and social movements.

Recent publications and presentations:

Nickel, M., & Glasford, D. From injustice to inaction: The role of worldview threat in dampening collective action. Data Blitz presented at: 2022 Six College Conference; 2022 May 13; Virtual.

Nickel, M., & Glasford, D. When does reading about social injustice elicit worldview threat?. Poster presented at: 2022 Annual Meeting for the Society of Personality and Social Psychology; 2022 February 16-19; San Francisco, CA.

 Nickel, M., & Glasford, D. Worldview confirmation and the dampening of collective action. Talk presented at: 2021 Annual Meeting for the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues; 2021 August 2-5; Virtual.

 Nickel, M., & Kawakami, K. The impact of perceived racial bias on face processing. Poster presented at: 2020 Annual Meeting for the Society of Personality and Social Psychology; 2020 February 27-29; New Orleans, LA.

Email: mnickel@gradcenter.cuny.edu


Kerry O'Brien

Advisor: Catherine Good

Research interests: My research interests center around gender, stereotyping, and bias. More specifically, I’m interested in exploring differential expectations across gender within marital relationships (i.e., in the home) and among young adult relationships (i.e., online dating, casual relationships).

Recent publications and presentations:

Moss-Racusin, C. A., Croft, A., Rapp, S., O’Brien, K. A., & Brown, S. (2022). Gender bias targeting men produces gender gaps in engagement with female-stereotypic domains. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied.

Moss-Racusin, C. A., Schofield, C. A., Brown, S., & O’Brien, K. A. (2020). Breast is (Viewed as) best: Demonstrating formula feeding stigma. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 44(4), 503-520.

Email: kobrien@gradcenter.cuny.edu


Andre Oliver

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Advisors: Daryl Wout, Catherine Good

Research interests: My research is broadly centered on prejudice, discrimination, and stereotyping. However, my more recent interests are in perceptions of Biracial individuals and intra-minority relationships. In the past my research has focused on Black identity, stereotype threat, and examining how racial colorblind beliefs can impact attentional processing, both behaviorally (attention paradigms) and psychophysiologically (ERPs). All of my research is driven by a strong passion for research and social justice.

Recent publications and presentations:

Oliver, A., Tracy, R. E., Young, S. G., & Wout, D. A. (2023). Black + White = prototypically Black: Visualizing Black and White people’s mental representations of Black-White Biracial people. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 1-15. https://doi.org/10.1177/01461672231164026

Oliver, A., Ghilamichael, A., King, C. R., Wallace, L., McDougal, S., Monteiro K., & Ben-Zeev, A. (2017). ‘I’m Black and I’m proud’: A majority ecological context protects affective aspects of Black identity under stereotype threat. Race and Social Problems, 9, 313-320. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12552-017-9216-y

Email: aoliver@gradcenter.cuny.edu


Haniya Rumaney

Advisors: Gabriel Camacho, Daryl Wout

Research interests: My research interests primarily revolve around investigating the antecedents and consequences of religious identity-based stigma using social identity and intersectionality frameworks. Specifically, I am interested in examining how occupying multiply stigmatized positions (e.g. religion and gender) influences perception and response to said experiences of stigma.

Recent publications and presentations:

Ghani, A., Hudson, S. T. J., Rumaney, H., & Sidanius, J. (2022). Of Christians, Jews, and Muslims: When gender is unspecified, the default is men. https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/f564s

Puthillam, A* & Rumaney, H.* (2022). Applying to Social Psych PhDs as an International student: An informal, subjective guide. https://osf.io/bxygh

Rumaney, H., & Sriram, S. (2021). Not Without My Hijab: Experiences of Veiled Muslim Women in India. Human Arenas. DOI: http://10.1007/s42087-021-00193-3

Email: hrumaney@gradcenter.cuny.edu
Website link: https://hrumaney.netlify.app/


Ryan Tracy

Advisors: Ana Gantman

Research interests: Broadly, my research explores how we make sense of our social worlds. In doing so, I employ three lines of study. First, I explore how bottom-up perceptual information (e.g., face-based trait cues) and top-down social information (e.g., group membership) interact in the service of impression formation. Second, I explore how the perceptual fluency of visual information influences the impressions we form of others. Third, I examine people’s cognitive representations of character traits in another’s face and whether these representations are moderated by the social categories into which we place others.

Recent publications and presentations:

Tracy, R. E., Zomberg, D., & Young, S. G. (2023). On the role of experience versus motivation in predicting the own-race effect. British Journal of Psychology, 1–27. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjop.12628

Tracy, R. E., Wilson, J. P., Slepian, M. L., & Young, S. G. (2020). Facial trustworthiness predicts ingroup inclusion decisions. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 91, 104047. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jesp.2020.104047

Young, S. G., Tracy, R. E., Wilson, J. P., Rydell, R. J., & Hugenberg, K. (2019). The temporal dynamics of the link between configural face processing and dehumanization. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 85, 103883. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jesp.2019.103883

Email: rtracy1@gc.cuny.edu 


Amy Wang

Advisors: Catherine Good, Daniel Rovenpor

Research interests: I'm interested in addressing race and gender-related inequities in education. 

Recent publications and presentations:

Wang, S.-Y. A. (2023, May 12). Exclusionary school discipline and mental health among system-impacted girls of color [Presentation]. NYU Applied Psychology Research Conference, New York, NY, United States.

Email: swang3@gradcenter.cuny.edu


Carly Wolfer

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Advisor: Cheryl Carmichael

Research interests: My research uses a feminist, sex-positive lens to explore the multi-level barriers and facilitators to sexual and relational wellness. Specifically, I investigate how individual (e.g. attachment style, gender identity and expression), interpersonal (e.g. communication, responsiveness, touch), and socio-cultural (e.g. sexual and romantic scripts, gender norms, stigma) factors support or stifle sexual pleasure equity, relationship functioning, and health in casual and committed relationship structures across the lifespan. Ultimately, I am passionate about developing socio-emotional and sex education programming aimed at optimizing sexual and relational well-being among diverse individuals and relationships who have been historically muted in discourses of desire. 

Recent publications and presentations:

Wolfer, C., Tilove, A., Sizemore, K.M., Rendina, H. J., Wells, B., Golub, S. (2020, November). Experimentation in emerging adulthood and alcohol expectancies regarding sexual vulnerability: Testing a three-way interaction with gender and sexual orientation. Paper presented at The Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality (SSSS) 2020 Global Sex Research Virtual Conference.

Sizemore, M., Wolfer, C., Gray, S., Talan, A., Park, H., & Rendina, H. J. (2020, April). Adapting a positive affect intervention for mobile delivery: Development of the Positively Healthy ecological momentary intervention. Paper accepted for presentation at the 41st Annual Meeting of the Society of Behavioral Medicine, San Francisco, CA.

Millar, B.M., Wolfer, C., Shalhav, O., Talan, A., Rendina, H. J. (2019, September). Sleep: Fuel for good mood, self-efficacy, and medication adherence among older men living with HIV. Poster presented at The European Health Psychology Society (EHPS) conference, Dubrovnik, Croatia.

Wolfer, C., Ake, J., English, T. (2019, November). Gender and communication as predictors of sexual health and satisfaction in the college hookup culture. Poster presented at The Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality (SSSS) Annual Meeting, Denver, CO.

Wolfer, C. (2018). "Let's Talk about Sex, Baby: Communication between Casual Sexual Partners in the College Hookup Culture". Washington University Senior Honors Thesis Abstracts: WUSHTA, Spring 2018. 138. https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/wushta_spr2018/138

Email: cwolfer@gradcenter.cuny.edu