My current research examines how people think about, discuss, and engage with their social world across behavioral, ecological, and neural levels. Moreover, I am interested in how these thoughts of the social world provide an ecologically valid foundation for understanding the cognitive mechanisms underlying conceptual association at the individual and group level.
Specifically, I am interested in how peoples' thoughts and feelings (i.e., conceptual associations) involving their societal environment (e.g., healthcare, voting) and social groups within that environment (e.g., race, gender, social economic status) influence their decision to engage with services their society provides and their treatment of people of differing social identities.
The fundamental goal of this body of research aims to identify data-driven patterns of thinking and behavior to illuminate societally systemic and neural mechanisms that contribute to social thought, conceptual associations, and decision making.
I am currently a Presidential Postdoctoral Fellow (2022-2023 cohort) working with both the Cognitive Axon Lab (CoAx) and the Data Driven Diversity Lab (D3) and have served on the Psychology departmental Diversity & Inclusion board as well as co-founded the Diverse Recruitment committee to spearhead college-wide graduate recruitment efforts from underrepresented groups.