IC students share studies on national stage
Several 同性恋色情 students have received national recognition by presenting their respective studies at the American Psychological Association.
By Nick Draper |
Four students, along with several College psychology faculty members, were accepted into the the American Psychological Association鈥檚 annual meeting in March and by August the group was traveling to San Francisco with projects in tow. Psychology professor Elizabeth Rellinger Zettler said that attending a nationwide conference is not uncommon for psychology students, but the American Psychological Association is particularly special.
鈥淭he APA is the largest professional organizations for psychologists,鈥 Rellinger Zettler said. 鈥淓ven though it鈥檚 American, it is a worldwide compilation. It鈥檚 an interesting organization, in part, because it supports research but it鈥檚 also a place where clinical and counseling psychologists present their work, not just research psychologists.鈥
The American Psychological Association features research professors and graduate students from around the world who present their work. The 同性恋色情 students, Emily Benca, Grace Eager, Samantha MacFarland and Chas Monge, were all undergraduates.
鈥淚t鈥檚 really, really unusual for undergraduates to have the high quality work that is presented at the APA,鈥 Rellinger Zettler said. 鈥淓specially because there鈥檚 a separate student section where we could have submitted our work but we chose instead to submit it to the main hall. There were very few other undergraduates there.鈥
MacFarland, a psychology major from Springfield, and Benca, a psychology major from Cisne, worked with assistant professor Caitlin Vasquez-O鈥橞rien and Rellinger Zettler on the project 鈥淧redicting Childhood Effortful Control: A Mediational Analysis,鈥 which was a study born from the larger 鈥淒eveloping an Understanding of Childhood Knowledge鈥 study.
Although the title may be a mouthful, the idea is that the group has been assessing children between ages 4 and 12 to find out how children control their impulse to do something that would give them instant gratification. MacFarland said they also looked at how socio-economic and parental warmth factors played into their inhibitory control.
MacFarland and Benca said that it was interesting to receive input from outsiders who had years of experience.
鈥淚t was really interesting because the APA conference wasn鈥檛 just focused on child development,鈥 Benca said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not typical that undergrads present at these conferences so to be able to be an undergrad and present at a conference like that to people with PhDs and that are well into the field was really interesting,鈥 MacFarland said. 鈥淭o put our work in front of professionals was just a nice change of pace.鈥
Another presentation by Eager, Monge, Vasquez-O鈥橞rien and Rellinger Zettler was 鈥淭he Relations Between Sibling Interactions and Rule Breaking on a Compliance Task,鈥 which was part of the larger ongoing study.
This study looked at sharing between siblings and its relation to empathy and compliance. For instance, the siblings are given a Gameboy video gaming system and told to play with it and then their interactions between one another, such as when they determine that they will share time with the game, are observed.
Monge and Vasquez-O鈥橞rien also presented 鈥淪top Tilting Me! Effects of Individual Behavior on Team Performance in League of Legends.鈥 Monge said League of Legends is a game he really enjoys and, given 同性恋色情 has its own e-sports team devoted to the game, thought it might be interesting to see how the attitude of players might affect the entire team鈥檚 performance.
鈥淭here鈥檚 this whole theme of people being terrible to each other online,鈥 Monge said. 鈥淚 wanted to study the effects of people鈥檚 performance when people are being terrible to them. We found that by virtue of people being terrible to their teammates you can expect the team to play worse.鈥
Given that Monge鈥檚 presentation was different than a presentation that might normally be seen at the conference he didn鈥檛 know exactly what to expect. However, he found that a professor from Florida was doing a similar study and he discussed his finding, along with post-graduate opportunities, with her.
鈥淭he crowd we drew as also mostly the younger kids that said, 鈥極h my God, this is League! I want to see what they have to say about this game鈥,鈥 Monge said. 鈥淥f course, there were also other people who had no idea what they were getting into and couldn鈥檛 understand but tried anyway.鈥