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Doctoral Students — Media Psychology

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Yikun Chi

Yikun Chi

yikunchi@stanford.edu

Chi is interested in leveraging media consumption and mobile sensing data and deep learning for the detection and prediction of mental well-being related issues.

Cid Decatur

Cid Decatur

cdecatur@stanford.edu 
CV for Cid Decatur

Decatur focuses on the cognitive impacts of social media, social networks, language, and jargon online.

Cyan DeVeaux

Cyan DeVeaux

cyanjd@stanford.edu 
CV for Cyan DeVeaux

DeVeaux is interested in augmented and virtual reality, human-computer interaction, and human-centered design.

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Eugy Han

Eugy Han

eugyoung@stanford.edu 
Eugy Han's CV

Han is interested in understanding how virtual reality environments and the embodiment of digital identities transform cognitive processes.

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Zhenchao Hu

Zhenchau Hu

zhenchao@stanford.edu

Zhenchao is interested in (intensive) longitudinal methods, social media uses and effects, interpersonal relationships, children and adolescents' identity development, sexuality, and well-being.

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Angela Lee

Angela Lee

angela8@stanford.edu 

Lee is interested in understanding the impact of media and technology on users’ health and well-being by studying psychological processes such as mindsets, particularly in the context of adolescent and parent-child relationships.

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Ryan Moore

Ryan Moore

rymoore@stanford.edu 
Ryan Moore's CV

Moore is interested in older adults’ digital media use. 

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Michelle Ng

Michelle Ng

michelleng@stanford.edu 
Michelle Ng's CV

Ng examines how individuals act upon dynamic risk communication to protect their well-being during extreme weather events. By leveraging intensive longitudinal methods and collaborating with government and community partners, she aims to develop risk communication theory while building resilience to extreme weather in practice.

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Rinseo Park

Rinseo Park

rinseo@stanford.edu
Rinseo Park's CV

Park is interested in understanding how individual decision-making diverges from policy actors’ (e.g., political elites or scientific experts) views and the underlying cognitive processes.

Katherine Roehrick

Katie Roehrick

kroehr@stanford.edu 
Katherine Roehrick's CV

Roehrick uses computational and linguistic analyses to study human-computer interaction and digital media. She is a Stanford Graduate Fellow.

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Monique Santoso

Monique Santoso

mtsantoso@stanford.edu 
Monique Santoso's CV

Santoso is interested in the social, psychological, and behavioral implications of virtual reality, particularly in the context of climate and sustainability. 

Serena Soh

Serena Soh

sjsoh@stanford.edu

Soh is interested in understanding how identity development unfolds in the digital context, particularly in terms of how digital interventions can be designed to promote positive identity development. 

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Noah Vinoya

Noah Vinoya

avhoah@stanford.edu
Noah Vinoya's CV

Vinoya is interested in how digital media can be leveraged as a tool to understand human behavior in a more natural context. Particularly, media habits can be captured to help unveil aspects of personality expression, well-being, and life outcomes.

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