



News
Graduate student Ruofan Ma received a Graduate Student Research grant from the Love Consortium to work in collaboration with Dr. Emily Impett from the University of Toronto examining the role of physiological linkage in close relationships.
We are seeking a post-baccalaureate research assistant in the Department of Psychology and Neuroscience at UNC Chapel Hill to work on a joint project with Drs. Eva Telzer and Kristen Lindquist. See more here.
Dr. Kristen Lindquist spoke to Perception Box, a collaboration of science media groups, Big Think and Unlikely Collaborators, about how emotions shape our perceptions, how we understand and experience them, and how culture matters in emotion. Watch the video here.
Graduate student Ruofan Ma received a pilot grant from the NIA-sponsored Scientific Research Network on Decision Neuroscience and Aging to examine how neurophysiological aging and social adversity impact people’s social decision-making. This pilot study will be appended to our on-going NSF-supported EPIC study, which examines how neurophysiological aging impacts emotional experiences and behaviors. Thanks to Margaret Sheridan and Kelly Giovanello for co-sponsoring!
Lab PI, Kristen Lindquist, will give the Plenary address at the annual Social Affective Neuroscience Society meeting in Toronto in April, 2024. Read more here.
Lab PI, Dr. Kristen Lindquist, gave a keynote presentation on the lab’s research at the Tilburg University conference on emotions, which occurs every four years in Tilburg, Netherlands. For more information, see here.
Dr. Kristen Lindquist spoke to Ricardo Lopes on The Dissenter podcast about her multidisciplinary work on emotions. Watch the interview here.
Rising Junior, Jennifer Fan, finalizes her Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship work on the impact of sleep quality on emotion regulation across the adult life span.
Undergraduate students London Evans and Madison Edwards were National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) summer interns in the CASL and DSN Lab at UNC. They both contributed to data collection on our on-going NIDA R01 and were able to perform their own independent research projects. Here they are presenting their findings!