Elizabeth works for the Emotion and Wellness study currently with primary responsibilities in data collection during in-person study visits, undergraduate student supervision, and data processing and checking. Other tasks include readying data for sharing to the NIMH data archive per data sharing agreements, and contributing to group conversations surrounding process improvements and development of measures for our longitudinal work.
She is interested how to relay science and our findings in a lay fashion both to engage research participants as well as cultivate their trust. Our research could not happen without subjects giving of their time and energy, and we owe it to them to foster a mutually beneficial partnership however short term the actual study participation lasts.
Education
BA Journalism - Indiana University
What does well-being mean to me?
“Being resourced with enough physical energy and emotional wherewithal to feel a calm centeredness - social network, connectedness with nature, some practice in self-acceptance, and love from my cat helps in this maintenance."
Related Studies
How do people experience emotions over a period of time and what does that say about their resilience and well-being?
Midlife Development in the United States
Our scientists examine how individual differences in emotional reactivity and recovery to emotional stimuli, brain structure and patterns of brain activity are related to life experiences, personality, behavior, health and well-being across the adult lifespan in a large national longitudinal sample.
Understanding the Mechanisms of Well-Being Training in Adults with and without Asthma
Center scientists and collaborators examine the impact of well-being training.