PhD Oral Defense - Shaylene Nancekivell
Shaylene Nancekivell's thesis is entitled: Preschoolers' reasoning about the "how", "what" and "when" of ownership.
All are welcome to attend.
Shaylene Nancekivell's thesis is entitled: Preschoolers' reasoning about the "how", "what" and "when" of ownership.
All are welcome to attend.
Lindie Liang's thesis is entitled: "On the Causes and Consequences of Abusive Supervision"
All are welcome to attend.
Anisha Varghese's thesis is entitled: Children's Competence with Listener Dependent Prosodic Modifications.
All are welcome to attend.
Our event will begin at 11 a.m. with a welcome from our event organizer, Professor Wendi Adair of the I-O Psychology program. Immediately after, the program founder, Pat Rowe (Professor Emeritus) will provide reflections on the founding and development of the program. Before and after lunch we will hear mostly from program alumni. Other presentations will describe specific connections of our program with Human Resource Management education and practice issues. Some of the I-O program's current research will be on display in a poster session to be held along with a mid-afternoon break.
Just Think: The Challenges of Enjoying One's Own Thoughts
Christie Haskell's thesis is entitled: "The Interdependence of Attention, Memory, and Performance Based Reward."
All are welcome to attend.
Gordon Pennycook's thesis is entitled: "What makes us think? A three-stage dual-process model of analytic engagment."
All are welcome to attend.
Noah Forrin's thesis is entitled: "How reading difficulty influences mind-wandering: The theoretical importance of measuring interest."
All are welcome to attend.
Ivana Lizdek's thesis is entitled: "Temporal Dynamics in the Interpersonal Behaviour and Perceptions of Romantic Partners."
All are welcome to attend.
Re-Thinking How We Study and Clinically Target Attentional Dysregulation