Completed Dissertations

  1. Alicia Klanecky (2011). Child/Adolescent sexual abuse and alcohol: Proposed pathways to problematic drinking    in college via PTSD symptoms, emotion dysregulation and dissociative tendencies. 
  2. Krista Highland (2011). Reassessing the architecture of the health beliefs model in low-income diverse families. 
  3. Maria Herrera (2012). Depression and diabetes comorbidity: Psychotherapy treatment preferences among a    predominantly Mexican sample of primary care patients with diabetes. 
  4. Laura (Herschl) Wahlstrom (2012). Feedback-related negativity, decision-making and college binge drinking. 
  5. Silvina Salvi (2015). The role of stress in understanding behavioral and attentional mechanisms underlying  comorbid smoking and excess weight.  
  6. Andrew Oakland (2015). Avoidance as an explanatory mechanism for poor outcomes in treatment for substance  use disorders. 
  7. Sarah King (2015). A comparison between telehealth and face-to-face brief alcohol interventions for college  students. 
  8. Antover Tuliao (2017). Subjective expected utility and sexual coercive behaviors: Examining the role of decision  

    processes, alcohol consumption, and rape-supportive attitudes among college males. 

  9. Steve Edwards (2018). A brief values-based intervention to reduce alcohol-related harm among college students. 
  10. Jessica Tibbs (2021).  Alcohol use and history of traumatic brain injury in college students: An analysis of  

    neuropsychological and behavioral factors. 

  11. Taylor English (2021). Cognitive effects of alcohol use and sleep disruption in college students. 
  12.  Joseph Kennedy (2022). Sexual assault on college campuses: Adapting and updating protective behavioral strategies. 
  13. Tim Little (2022). Substance use, stress and mental health: Burnout factors in health care personnel trainees. 
  14.  Kailey Richner (2024). Examining theoretically derived mechanisms underlying the relationships between sexual arousal, alcohol use history, and sexual aggression.