Yellow Lab Seniors’ Research 2011

Martine Seiden ’11 completed her thesis research in the lab, and Anima Acheampong ’11, Rachel Santiago ’12, Shipra Kanjlia ’12, Mattie Liskow ’11, and Martine Seiden ’11 presented their work at the 2011 Psychology Department Poster Session.

2011 Thesis Projects

Julia Leonard ’11, pictured below, completed her senior thesis entitled “The effects of touch on compliance in preschool-age children” and presented her work at the NSM poster session on April 19. Christian Hoyos ’11 also completed work on his senior thesis entitled “Children’s use of landmark information in maps” and Lauren Feld ’11 completed her … Read more

Blue Lab @ SRCD 2011

Christian Hoyos ’11 and Anna Shusterman’s work on landmark use in a disorientation task was presented at the Society for Research on Child Development Biennial Meeting, held in Montreal, QC, Canada from March 31 – April 2. Anna Shusterman and Emily Slusser, along with collaborators Justin Halberda and Darko Odic from JHU, also presented work on … Read more

Yellow Lab @ SRCD 2011

Undergraduates Anima Acheampong ’11, Rachel Santiago ’12, and Shipra Kanjlia ’12, lab alum Kyle MacDonald ’10, and lab coordinator Jennifer Garcia ’10 co-authored poster presentations at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Research in Child Development (SRCD) held in Montreal. Kyle MacDonald ’10 presented his thesis research at the SRCD conference. Current postdoc Emily Slusser, former postdoc Mariah Schug, and lab director Hilary Barth presented work at SRCD as well.

Lab Alum, Jess Sullivan, Published

Jess Sullivan ’08 is the author (with co-authors Barbara Juhasz, Tim Slattery, and Hilary Barth) of an article entitled “Adults’ number-line estimation strategies: evidence from eye movements” published in the journal Psychonomic Bulletin & Review.

Barth & Paladino Published

Annie Paladino ’09 is the co-author (with Hilary Barth) of a new journal article based on her Hughes program research fellowship. The article is called “The development of numerical estimation: Evidence against a representational shift,” and it appears in the journal Developmental Science.

Barth & Paladino Published

Annie Paladino ’09 is the co-author (with Hilary Barth) of a new journal article based on her Hughes program research fellowship. The article is called “The development of numerical estimation: Evidence against a representational shift,” and it appears in the journal Developmental Science.