ANIMAL BEHAVIOR/LEARNING - IU



SEQ CHAPTER \h \r 1FACULTY RESEARCH LISTThe following document lists all of the research labs in the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences at Indiana University. These labs often need undergraduate research assistants who may be working in the lab for credit via PSY-P493, PSY-P494, PSY-P495, or PSY-P499 or as a volunteer. Each description contains the professor in charge of the lab, the name of the lab with a link to a website (if available), a description of the professor’s research interests, and contact information. Click on the research topic you find most interesting to jump directly to the professors who work in that area.Research Topics: REF _Ref196300953 \h Animal Behavior & Learning REF _Ref196300414 \h Biology & Behavior/Behavioral Neuroscience REF _Ref196300417 \h Clinical Science REF _Ref196300419 \h Cognitive Psychology REF _Ref196300421 \h Cognitive Neuroscience REF _Ref196300422 \h Developmental Pscyhology REF _Ref196300423 \h Neuroscience REF _Ref196300424 \h Sensory Psychology REF _Ref196300426 \h Social PsychologyNote: Not all faculty are listed. Only the faculty with research labs have been listed. For a complete list of faculty (who may or may not be available for P495) please visit BEHAVIOR/LEARNING Jeffrey R. Alberts: Animal Behavior LabDevelopmental psychobiology, ontogeny of species-typical behavior, maturation of sensory and physiological processes; development of learning and memory. Office: Room 326; Phone: 855-3309. alberts@indiana.eduJonathon Crystal: Comparative Cognition LaboratoryComparative Cognition, episodic memory, metacognition, time perception, circadian rhythms, learning and memory, disorders of memory (e.g., Alzheimer's). Office: MSBII 224; Phone: 856-2246. jcrystal@indiana.eduJoseph Farley: No Lab WebsiteSensory transduction, mechanisms of neural plasticity, especially molecular basis of associative learning in invertebrates (Hermissenda crassicornis) and LTP in hippocampus. Office: MSBII 218; Phone: 855-6828. farleyj@indiana.eduWilliam Timberlake: Behavioral Systems and Learning LabEcological and systems of analysis of learning and behavior, learning, regulation, and timing in ingestion, circadian bases of behavior, and behavior theory. Office: Room 324; Phone: 855-4042. timberla@indiana.eduMeredith West: Animal Behavior FarmDevelopment of behavior in animals and humans with a particular interest in how learning and species-typical experience affect ontogenetic and/or phylogenetic processes. Specific topics of interest include the development of communication and social behavior in the young and the development of parental behavior. Office: Room 348; Phone: 855-9597. mewest@indiana.eduBIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR/BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCEHeather Bradshaw: Bradshaw Lab of Reproductive NeuroscienceEndogenous cannabinoids in uterine and vaginal neurophysiology; role of hormones in neural response; reproductive pain. Office: Room MSBII 116; Phone: 856-1559. hbbradsh@indiana.eduJoseph Farley: No Lab WebsiteSensory transduction, mechanisms of neural plasticity, especially molecular basis of associative learning in invertebrates (Hermissenda crassicornis) and LTP in hippocampus. Office: MSBII 218; Phone: 855-6828. farleyj@indiana.eduPreston E. Garraghty: No Lab WebsiteNeurobiology of plasticity in adult mammalian brain, physiological and anatomical development of visual and somatosensory systems. Office: Room 320; Phone: 855-9679. pgarragh@indiana.eduAndrea G. Hohmann: No Lab WebsiteFunctional roles of the brain’s own cannabis-like (endocannabinoid) system in the nervous system; mechanisms of pain and analgesia; mechanisms of action of drugs of abuse; novel therapeutics. Office: Room MSBII 220; Phone: 856-0672. hohmanna@indiana.eduCary Lai: No Lab WebsiteDevelopmental neurobiology, the use of transgenic mouse models to study nervous system function. Office: Room MSBII 122; Phone: 856-4998. carylai@indiana.eduKen Mackie: No Lab WebsiteRegulation of CB1 cannabinoid receptor signaling; regulation of endocannabinoid production; Role of endocannabinoids in synaptic plasticity; novel cannabinoid receptors. Office: Room 363; Phone: 855-2042. kmackie@indiana.eduAnne L. Prieto.: Cellular Molecular Neuroscience LabResearch program in general area of developmental and molecular neuroscience. Research topics include the role that growth factors and their receptors have in the proliferation and differentiation and survival of neurons and glia in the cerebellum hippocampus and cortex. For these studies we use cellular models as well as animal models in which the genes of interest have been genetically inactivated. Office: Room MSBII 124; Phone: 855-4642. aprieto@indiana.eduGeorge V. Rebec: Preclinical Pharmacology LabMechanisms of action of drugs of abuse, neuropharmacology, biochemical and electrophysiological correlates of behavior, neurobiology of ascorbic acid. Office: Room 361; Phone: 855-4832. rebec@indiana.eduDale Sengelaub: Sengelabs: Montoneuron plasticity, therapeutics, and developmentDevelopmental neurobiology, comparative neuroanatomy, neuroethology. Office: Room 372: Phone: 855-9149. sengelau@indiana.eduAlex Straiker: Cannabinoid Physiology LabPhysiology of cannabinoid receptors in neurons, cannabinoids in synaptic transmission, cannabinoids in ocular health. Office: MSBII 110; Phone: (206) 850-2400. straiker@indiana.edu Cara Wellman: Wellman LabAdjunct Assistant Professor, Ph.D., Indiana University at Bloomington, 1993. Age-related changes in neural plasticity and their relationship to cognition; neurochemical and morphological correlates of uncontrollable and controllable stress; biology and behavior. Office: Room MSBII 202; Phone: 855-4922. wellmanc@indiana.eduCLINICAL SCIENCEJohn E. Bates: Social Development LabOrigins of children’s behavior problem vs. social competencies, parent-child relationships, behavior therapy and family therapy. Office: Room 146; Phone: 855-8693. batesj@indiana.eduJoshua Brown: Cognitive Control LabDevelop computational models of brain circuitry involved in cognitive control; test computational model predictions with fMRI; investigate the neural bases of cognitive impairment in psychopathology, especially schizophrenia, using fMRI and computational modeling. Office: Room 336; Phone: 855-9282. jwmbrown@indiana.eduBrian D’Onofrio: Developmental Psychopathology LabDevelopmental Psychopathology; behavior genetics; family systems, children’s intellectual abilities. Office: Room 134; Phone: 856-0843. bmdonofr@indiana.eduPeter Finn: Biobehavioral Alcohol Research LabRisk for alcoholism personality, psychophysiological approaches to cognition. Office: Room 156; Phone: 855-9548. finnp@indiana.eduJulia R. Heiman: Sexual Psychophysiology Lab (Kinsey Institute)Human sexuality, psychophysiological approaches to understanding sexual behavior and sexual response. Office: Morrison Hall 313; Phone: 856-7216. jheiman@indiana.eduWilliam Hetrick: Psychopathology and Neuropsychometry LabHis major research interests are describing brain-behavior relationships that underlie perceptual and attentional anomalies associated with schizophrenia using human brain recording techniques. Office: Room 154; Phone: 855-0298. whetrick@indiana.eduAmy Holtzworth-Munroe: No Lab WebsiteMarital violence, marital distress, and marital therapy. Office: Room 148; Phone: 855-8159. holtzwor@indiana.eduCara C. Lewis: Psychosocial Intervention and Implementation Sciences LabCognitive behavioral therapy; adolescent and adult depression; comorbidity; treatment outcome; predictors, moderators, and mediators of outcome; efficacy and effectiveness research; dissemination and implementation science; methods and measurement of implementation research. ?Office: Room 162; Phone: 855-6952.?lewiscc@indiana.eduBrian O’Donnell: No Lab WebsiteAssistant Professor, Ph.D., SUNY at Stony Brook, 1984. Event-related potential abnormalities in schizophrenia and related disorders; disturbances of early stage vision in schizophrenia and affective disorders; psychophysiological correlates of emotional and cognitive processes. Office: Room 150: Phone: 855-4164. bodonnel@indiana.eduRichard Viken: No Lab WebsiteBehavioral medicine, aggression and anti-social behavior, developmental psychopathology, and observational methods. Office: Room 152; Phone: 855-1697. viken@indiana.eduCOGNITIVE PSCYHOLOGYBennett I. Bertenthal: Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience LabOrigins and early development of perception, action, and representation; Multimodal communication; Prospective control and prediction of actions; Change blindness; Connectionist modeling; Eye tracking; Electroencephalography (EEG).?Office:?Room 371; Phone:?856-0958. bbertent@indiana.eduGeoffrey Bingham: Perception/Action LabHuman visual and haptic perception, motor control, dynamical systems models, ecological psychology, event perception, perception/action coupling. Office: Room 322; Phone: 855-4322. gbingham@indiana.eduJoshua Brown: Cognitive Control LabDevelop computational models of brain circuitry involved in cognitive control; test computational model predictions with fMRI; investigate the neural bases of cognitive impairment in psychopathology, especially schizophrenia, using fMRI and compuational modeling. Office: Room 336; Phone: 855-9282. jwmbrown@indiana.eduJerome Busemeyer: Decision Research LaboratoryDynamic, emotional, and cognitive models of judgement and decision making; neural network models of function learning, interpolation, extrapolation; methodology for comparing and testing complex models of behavior; measurement theory with error contaminated data. Office: Room 328; Phone: 855-4882. jbusemey@indiana.eduThomas Busey: Visual Perception and Electrophysiological LabShort-term visual information processing, picture memory, stereopsis, and stochastic modeling of cognition and perception. Office: Room 330; Phone: 855-4261. HYPERLINK "mailto:busey@indiana.edu" busey@indiana.eduJonathon Crystal: Comparative Cognition Laboratory (no website)Comparative Cognition, episodic memory, metacognition, time perception, circadian rhythms, learning and memory, disorders of memory (e.g., Alzheimer's). Office: MSBII 224; Phone: 856-2246. jcrystal@indiana.eduRobert L. Goldstone: Percepts and Concepts LaboratoryConcept formation, analogical reasoning, learning, computational models of mental processes, pattern recognition, and decision making and judgement. Office: Room 338; Phone: 855-4853. rgoldsto@indiana.eduKarin James: Cognition and Action Neuroimaging LabNeural mechanisms underlying visual-motor interactions, expertise acquisition, objectand letter recognition in adults and children. Uses psychophysical experimentation aswell as functional Magnetic Reasonance Imaging (fMRI) to explore research questions. Office: Room 368; Phone: 856-0659. khjames@indiana.eduThomas W. James: Perception and Neuroimaging LabResearch involves discovering the neural mechanisms underlying human objectrecognition and representation using a combination of experimental techniques, including functional MRI and psychophysics to explore these questions. Exploration of human perception through both the visual and tactile sensory systems. Office: Room 158; Phone: 856-0841. thwjames@indiana.eduMichael N. Jones: Cognitive Computing LaboratoryLanguage acquisition and statistical learning, computational models of memory and language, categorization and concept formation, attention in reading and visual navigation, automated learning technologies, application of cognitive models to search problems, artificial intelligence—specifically swarm intelligence. Office: Room 370; Phone: 856-1490. jonesmn@indiana.eduJohn Kruschke: Personal WebsiteCognitive and perceptual psychology; connectionist models; categorization. Office: Room 336; Phone: 855-3192. kruschke@indiana.eduSharlene Newman: Cognitive Neuroimaging LabfMRI of language processes, problem-solving and planning. Office: Room 362; Phone: 856-0839. sdnewman@indiana.eduRobert Nosofsky: Categorization and Memory Lab (Personal Webpage)Categorization, similarity, mathematical psychology. Office: Room 342; Phone: 855-2534. nosofsky@indiana.eduDavid P. Pisoni: Speech Research Laboratory (link to: Speech Research LaboratoryCognitive psychology, psycholinguistics, speech perception, production, synthesis and analysis, perceptual development, reading, word recognition and lexical access, spoken language comprehension, voice technology, communication aids for the handicapped, human factors, human-computer interaction. Office: Room 366; Phone: 855-1155. pisoni@indiana.eduAina Puce: Social Neuroscience LabSocial Cognition; Non-verbal communication; Multisensory processing; Functional MRI; Electroencephalography (EEG); Eye tracking; Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation.Office: Room 144; Phone: 856-0417. ainapuce@indiana.eduRichard M. Shiffrin: Memory and Perception LabMemory and information processing, mathematical models, attention and automatism, forgetting and perception. Office: Room 350; Phone: 855-4972. shiffrin@indiana.eduLinda B. Smith: Cognitive Development LabClassification and categorization in children and adults, children’s understanding of relations and acquisitions of relational language. Office: Room 122; Phone: 855-3991. smith4@indiana.eduOlaf Sporns: Computational Cognitive Neuroscience LabFocuses on utilizing biologically based computational models of the nervous systems to better understand the relationships between neural and cognitive/behavioral states. Another line of research involves attempts to link computer simulations of the nervous systems to actual real world devices (robots) and study their autonomous behavior. Office: Room 360; Phone: 855-2772. osporns@indiana.edu Peter Todd: Adaptive Behavior and Cognition LabSimple heuristics for decision making, and how they capitalize on the structure of information in environments; evolution of behavior (experimental approaches to evolutionary psychology and computer simulations of simple organisms adapting to different environmental structures, both physical and social); emergence of environment structure through interactions of populations of agents following simple behavioral rules; how people and other animals search for resources in time and space, from sequential search for mates or jobs to foraging for prey or parking spaces; artificial life approaches to music; making decisions about food and eating, and cognition of consumption. Office: Room 369; Phone: 855-3914. pmtodd@indiana.eduJames Townsend: Mathematical Psychology LabDevelopment of general mathematical approaches to, and experimentation in, human information processing, cognitive psychology including visual pattern recognition, memory scanning, decision theory and human factors. Office: Room 334; Phone: 855-9598. jtownsen@indiana.eduStanley Wasserman: Personal WebsiteQuantitative Psychology: Research focuses on applied statistics (especially to the social and behavioral sciences), with particular attention to network processes. Office: 349; Phone: 856-0195. stanwass@indiana.eduChen Yu: Computational Cognition and Learning LabLanguage learning in children and adults, cognitive and computational models of language and perceptual learning, grounding social interaction in multimodal sensorimotor interaction (eye gaze, body movement and prosody in speech, etc.), machine intelligence, human-computer interaction, virtual reality. Office: Room 346; Phone: 855-0838. Chenyu@indiana.eduCOGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCEBennett I. Bertenthal: Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience LabOrigins and early development of perception, action, and representation; Multimodal communication; Prospective control and prediction of actions; Change blindness; Connectionist modeling; Eye tracking; Electroencephalography (EEG).?Office:?Room 371; Phone:?856-0958. bbertent@indiana.eduJoshua Brown: Cognitive Control LabDevelop computational models of brain circuitry involved in cognitive control; test computational model predictions with fMRI; investigate the neural bases of cognitive impairment in psychopathology, especially schizophrenia, using fMRI and compuational modeling. Office: Room 336; Phone: 855-9282. jwmbrown@indiana.eduKarin James: Cognition and Action Neuroimaging LabNeural mechanisms underlying visual-motor interactions, expertise acquisition, objectand letter recognition in adults and children. Uses psychophysical experimentation aswell as functional Magnetic Reasonance Imaging (fMRI) to explore research questions. Office: Room 368; Phone: 856-0659. khjames@indiana.eduThomas W. James: Perception and Neuroimaging LabResearch involves discovering the neural mechanisms underlying human objectrecognition and representation using a combination of experimental techniques, including functional MRI and psychophysics to explore these questions. Exploration of human perception through both the visual and tactile sensory systems. Office: Room 158; Phone: 856-0841. thwjames@indiana.eduSharlene Newman: Cognitive Neuroimaging LabfMRI of language processes, problem-solving and planning. Office: Room 362; Phone: 856-0839. sdnewman@indiana.eduAina Puce: Social Neuroscience LabSocial Cognition; Non-verbal communication; Multisensory processing; Functional MRI; Electroencephalography (EEG); Eye tracking; Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation.Office: Room 144; Phone: 856-0417. ainapuce@indiana.eduOlaf Sporns: Computational Cognitive Neuroscience LabFocuses on utilizing biologically based computational models of the nervous systems to better understand the relationships between neural and cognitive/behavioral states. Another line of research involves attempts to link computer simulations of the nervous systems to actual real world devices (robots) and study their autonomous behavior. Office: Room 360; Phone: 855-2772. osporns@indiana.edu DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGYJohn E. Bates: Social Development LabOrigins of children’s behavior problem vs. social competencies, parent-child relationships, behavior therapy and family therapy. Office: Room 146; Phone: 855-8693. batesj@indiana.eduBennett I. Bertenthal: Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience LabOrigins and early development of perception, action, and representation; Multimodal communication; Prospective control and prediction of actions; Change blindness; Connectionist modeling; Eye tracking; Electroencephalography (EEG).?Office:?Room 371; Phone:?856-0958. bbertent@indiana.eduBrian D’Onofrio: Developmental Psychopathology LabDevelopmental Psychopathology; behavior genetics; family systems, children’s intellectual abilities. Office: Room 134; Phone: 856-0843. bmdonofr@indiana.eduKarin James: Cognition and Action Neuroimaging LabNeural mechanisms underlying visual-motor interactions, expertise acquisition, objectand letter recognition in adults and children. Uses psychophysical experimentation aswell as functional Magnetic Reasonance Imaging (fMRI) to explore research questions. Office: Room 368; Phone: 856-0659. khjames@indiana.eduSusan S. Jones: Infant Communication LabSocial and emotional development in infancy, facial expressions, biological bases of human social behavior. Office: Room 344; Phone: 855-8182. jones1@indiana.eduLinda B. Smith: Cognitive Development LabClassification and categorization in children and adults, children’s understanding of relations and acquisitions of relational language. Office: Room 122; Phone: 855-3991. smith4@indiana.eduChen Yu: Computational Cognition and Learning LabLanguage learning in children and adults, cognitive and computational models of language and perceptual learning, grounding social interaction in multimodal sensorimotor interaction (eye gaze, body movement and prosody in speech, etc.), machine intelligence, human-computer interaction, virtual reality. Office: Room 346; Phone: 855-0838. Chenyu@indiana.eduNEUROIMAGINGEEGBennett I. Bertenthal: Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience LabOrigins and early development of perception, action, and representation; Multimodal communication; Prospective control and prediction of actions; Change blindness; Connectionist modeling; Eye tracking; Electroencephalography (EEG).?Office:?Room 371; Phone:?856-0958. bbertent@indiana.eduThomas Busey: Visual Perception and Electrophysiological LabShort-term visual information processing, picture memory, stereopsis, and stochastic modeling of cognition and perception. Office: Room 330; Phone: 855-4261. HYPERLINK "mailto:busey@indiana.edu" busey@indiana.eduThomas W. James: Perception and Neuroimaging LabResearch involves discovering the neural mechanisms underlying human objectrecognition and representation using a combination of experimental techniques, including functional MRI and psychophysics to explore these questions. Exploration of human perception through both the visual and tactile sensory systems. Office: Room 158; Phone: 856-0841. thwjames@indiana.eduAina Puce: Social Neuroscience LabSocial Cognition; Non-verbal communication; Multisensory processing; Functional MRI; Electroencephalography (EEG); Eye tracking; Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation.Office: Room 144; Phone: 856-0417. ainapuce@indiana.edufMRIJoshua Brown: Cognitive Control LabDevelop computational models of brain circuitry involved in cognitive control; test computational model predictions with fMRI; investigate the neural bases of cognitive impairment in psychopathology, especially schizophrenia, using fMRI and computational modeling. Office: Room 336; Phone: 855-9282. jwmbrown@indiana.eduKarin James: Cognition and Action Neuroimaging LabNeural mechanisms underlying visual-motor interactions, expertise acquisition, objectand letter recognition in adults and children. Uses psychophysical experimentation aswell as functional Magnetic Reasonance Imaging (fMRI) to explore research questions. Office: Room 368; Phone: 856-0659. khjames@indiana.eduThomas W. James: Perception and Neuroimaging LabResearch involves discovering the neural mechanisms underlying human objectrecognition and representation using a combination of experimental techniques, including functional MRI and psychophysics to explore these questions. Exploration of human perception through both the visual and tactile sensory systems. Office: Room 158; Phone: 856-0841. thwjames@indiana.eduSharlene Newman: Cognitive Neuroimaging LabfMRI of language processes, problem-solving and planning. Office: Room 362; Phone: 856-0839. sdnewman@indiana.eduAina Puce: Social Neuroscience LabSocial Cognition; Non-verbal communication; Multisensory processing; Functional MRI; Electroencephalography (EEG); Eye tracking; Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation.Office: Room 144; Phone: 856-0417. ainapuce@indiana.eduTMSThomas W. James: Perception and Neuroimaging LabResearch involves discovering the neural mechanisms underlying human objectrecognition and representation using a combination of experimental techniques, including functional MRI and psychophysics to explore these questions. Exploration of human perception through both the visual and tactile sensory systems. Office: Room 158; Phone: 856-0841. thwjames@indiana.eduAina Puce: Social Neuroscience LabSocial Cognition; Non-verbal communication; Multisensory processing; Functional MRI; Electroencephalography (EEG); Eye tracking; Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation.Office: Room 144; Phone: 856-0417. ainapuce@indiana.eduERPBrian O’Donnell: No Lab WebsiteAssistant Professor, Ph.D., SUNY at Stony Brook, 1984. Event-related potential abnormalities in schizophrenia and related disorders; disturbances of early stage vision in schizophrenia and affective disorders; psychophysiological correlates of emotional and cognitive processes. Office: Room 150: Phone: 855-4164. bodonnel@indiana.eduAina Puce: Social Neuroscience LabSocial Cognition; Non-verbal communication; Multisensory processing; Functional MRI; Electroencephalography (EEG); Eye tracking; Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation.Office: Room 144; Phone: 856-0417. ainapuce@indiana.eduSENSORY PSYCHOLOGYGeoffrey Bingham: Perception/Action LabHuman visual and haptic perception, motor control, dynamical systems models, ecological psychology, event perception, perception/action coupling. Office: Room 322; Phone: 855-4322. gbingham@indiana.eduRowen T. Candy: Visual Development Lab (School of Optometry)Her research involves studies of normal and abnormal visual development in human infants. She is developing an infant clinic at the School of Optometry where she supervises optometry students as they learn to work with infant patients. Phone: 855-9340. rcandy@indiana.eduJason Gold: Vision LabExperimental psychology, specifically visual psychophysics, research interests include:pattern identification, perceptual grouping & completion, encoding efficiency and information use, ideal observer theory, & visual attention. Office: Room 352; Phone: 855-9596. jgold@indiana.eduSOCIAL PSYCHOLOGYEdward R. Hirt: Hirttlab: Social Psychology of Motivation and Performance Affect and cognition interface; cognitive heuristics; decision making under uncertainty; eyewitness testimony; human judgement processes; hypothesis testing and information seeking; mood effects; reconstructive memory; self-enhancement and self protective processes, particularly self-handicapping; social cognition; sports psychology. Office: Room 340; Phone: 855-4815. ehirt@indiana.eduAlan Roberts: No Lab WebsiteRisk factors for the development of eating disorders and body dissatisfaction; personality, ethnicity, and interpersonal processes. Office: Room A300C; Phone: 855-9782. alarober@indiana.eduB. J. Rydell: Social Cognition LabSocial Cognition; Attitude Formation, Representation, and Change; Impression Formation; Stereotype Threat. Office: Room 351; Phone: 855-7608. rjrydell@indiana.eduSteven J. Sherman: Sherman Social Cognition Research Laboratory (no lab website)Social psychology, especially attitude formation and change, social cognition and adolescent smoking initiation. Office: Room 358; Phone: 855-8163. sherman@indiana.eduEliot R. Smith: Socially Situated Cognition LabSocial cognition; person perception and stereotyping; prejudice and intergroup relations, especially the role of emotions; implications of embodiment for social cognition. Office: Room 354; Phone: 856-0196. esmith4@indiana.eduPeter Todd: Adaptive Behavior & Cognition LabSimple heuristics for decision making, and how they capitalize on the structure of information in environments; evolution of behavior (experimental approaches to evolutionary psychology and computer simulations of simple organisms adapting to different environmental structures, both physical and social); emergence of environment structure through interactions of populations of agents following simple behavioral rules; how people and other animals search for resources in time and space, from sequential search for mates or jobs to foraging for prey or parking spaces; artificial life approaches to music; making decisions about food and eating, and cognition of consumption. Office: Room 369; Phone: 855-3914. pmtodd@indiana.eduStanley Wasserman: Personal WebsiteQuantitative Psychology: Research focuses on applied statistics (especially to the social and behavioral sciences), with particular attention to network processes. Office: 349; Phone: 856-0195. stanwass@indiana.edu ................
................

In order to avoid copyright disputes, this page is only a partial summary.

Google Online Preview   Download