Charlotte is a sixth-year doctoral student in the Clinical Psychology Program. She received a B.A. in Psychology from Colorado College and a M.A. in Psychology in Education from Teachers College, Columbia, University. Her research interests focus on facilitating psychosocial adjustment following potential traumatic events through the study of emotion regulation, regulatory flexibility, and identification of factors that predict resilient outcomes.
Shuquan Chen is a fifth-year graduate student in the Clinical Psychology Ph.D. program. He is interested in cognitive and emotional processes underlying stress-related disorders. His current research examines emotion regulation flexibility in depression and anxiety and how culture shapes the function of emotional processes. He has an additional strong interest in leveraging computational psychiatry (e.g., machine learning) to conceptualize and predict long-term psychological dysfunction and resilience. Email: sc4173@tc.columbia.edu; Twitter: @shuquan_chen
Roland Hart is a fourth-year student in the Clinical Psychology PhD program. He received his B.S. in Psychology and B.A. in Music from Drake University, and an M.A. in Psychology in Education from Teachers College, Columbia University. Roland’s primary research interests focus on studying the relationship between cognitive control, regulatory flexibility, and psychopathology among people experiencing major life transitions (e.g. veteran tranisition stress, adjustment following major medical events and diagnosis, etc.). Clinically, he is interested in neuropsychology and assessment.
Email: rph2119tc.columbia.edu; Reddit: u/VetFlex
Ann-Christin Haag is a postdoctoral researcher. She received her Ph.D. from the University of Zurich, Switzerland, investigating acute stress reactions in children after trauma. She conducted a study on the evaluation of an early intervention to prevent posttraumatic stress symptoms in accidently injured children and their parents at the University Children‘s Hospital Zurich.
Her research interests center on the adjustment of children, adolescents and parents in the aftermath of potentially traumatic events. Thereby, she is interested in mapping trajectories of dysfunction and resilience as well as studying their predictors. Further, her interests include the study of how regulatory flexibility is tied to the onset, severity, and persistence of posttraumatic outcomes in children and adolescents.
email: ah3784@tc.columbia.edu



