Archives by date

You are browsing the site archives by date.

Congratulations to our research assistants who presented at the Ninth Annual Women’s Health Research Symposium!

Congratulations to our research assistants who presented at the Ninth Annual Women’s Health Research Symposium!

Cristina Ardelean, Megan Macfarlane, and Puloma Gupta presented posters at the 2024 Women’s Health Research Symposium held at UBC on Women’s Day! Megan presented: “Does Income Level Moderate the Association of Gender and Rumination?” “Rumination, commonly reported by women, involves repetitively dwelling on negative thoughts post-stress, leading to mental health issues like depression. This gender […]

Congrats to Dr. Zieff on his latest publication + Research Recap!

Congrats to Dr. Zieff on his latest publication + Research Recap!

Congratulations to Dr. Gabriel Zieff and collaborators for publishing their paper titled, “Ultrasound-based measurement of central adiposity: Key considerations and guidelines” in the Obesity Reviews! Check out our research recap about the paper and read the full paper here!   Abstract: “Central adiposity, which is visceral and subcutaneous adiposity in the abdominal region, is a […]

Congratulations to Ashley Battaglini for her talk at the 2024 SAS conference!

Congratulations to Ashley Battaglini for her talk at the 2024 SAS conference!

Ashley presented at the Society for Affective Science (SAS) Conference in New Orleans last weekend. Her talk was about intra- versus interpersonal emotion regulation: Associations with Affect, relationship quality, and biological markers of stress. Congrats Ashley!

Check out our latest research recap on Communication Modality in Adolescents!

Check out our latest research recap on Communication Modality in Adolescents!

Our latest research recap aims to answer the question: How do adolescents communicate their feelings and problems with friends? Does this impact mental and social well-being? Citation: Battaglini, A. M., Rnic, K., Jopling, E., Tracy, A., & LeMoult, J. (2024). Communication modality matters: Co‐rumination via in‐person versus digital modalities has different prospective associations with depression […]