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Dr. Jeremy Jamieson

Dr. Jeremy Jamieson's research focuses on social stress and decision making, emotion regulation, and risk and uncertainty. 

 

His work seeks to understand how stress impacts decisions, emotions, and performance. He is particularly interested in using physiological indices of bodily and mental states to delve into the mechanisms underlying the effects of stress on downstream outcomes. Dr. Jamieson is also interested in studying emotion regulation. His research in this area demonstrates that altering appraisals of stress and anxiety can go a long ways towards improving physiological and cognitive outcomes.

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University of Rochester - Assistant Professor of Psychology

jeremy.jamieson@rochester.edu

Dr. Nickola Overall

Dr. Overall's research examines how emotional, attachment and relationship difficulties can be overcome to build healthy relationships.

 

She investigates the relative success of different communication strategies used when couples are trying to resolve relationship problems or support each other, including identifying what strategies help couples maintain healthy relationships versus those that lead to dissatisfaction and relationship dissolution.

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University of Auckland - Associate Professor of Psychology

n.overall@auckland.ac.nz

Dr. Harry Reis

Dr. Reis studies the factors that influence the quantity and closeness of social interaction, and the consequences of different patterns of socializing for health and psychological well-being. In his research, subjects keep detailed records on their on-going social interaction. 

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University of Rochester - Professor of Psychology

harry.reis@rochester.edu

Dr. Jennifer Roche

Dr. Roche's research interest include communication in a social context. She is specifically interested in cognitive mechanisms that drive communication (successful and unsuccessful). She views communication as being richly affected by linguistic, psycholinguistic and social properties that dynamically interact with and influence adaptation to complex and novel conversational situations.

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Kent State University - Assistant Professor of Speech Pathology and Audiology

jroche3@kent.edu

Dr. Glenn Roisman

Dr. Roisman's research focuses on the childhood antecedents of adaptation within the developmentally salient contexts of adolescence and adulthood. 

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In spanning multiple levels of a developmental analysis of individual and dyadic trajectories, his laboratory's goal is to provide insight into the childhood experiences and resources that scaffold healthy adjustment in the years of maturity, with a particular focus on prospective assessment of individuals’ experiences within the normative range as well as atypical early care.

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University of Minnesota - Professor of Psychology

roism001@umn.edu

Dr. Jeff Simpson

Dr. Simpson's research investigates close relationships and interpersonal processes from different theoretical models and perspectives. Most of his current work focuses on six areas: attachment processes, human mating and decision-making, empathic accuracy, idealization in relationships, social influence in relationships, and relationships, social development, and health outcomes.

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University of Minnesota - Professor of Psychology

simps108@umn.edu

Dr. Jennifer Tomlinson

Dr. Tomlinson's research program is designed to understand the ways in which relationship partners can encourage one another to seek out opportunities for personal growth, and how this can benefit relationships and health.

 

She seeks to understand how partners can maintain healthy relationships by communicating positive regard and finding optimal levels of idealization (when one perceives a partner to view oneself slightly more positively than one sees oneself). 

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Colgate University - Assistant Professor of Psychology

jtomlinson@colgate.edu

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© 2016 by Brett J. Peters 

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