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Ashley Wynne, MA Ashley’s research interests focus on serious mental illness and the effectiveness of treatment and rehabilitation, psychopathology, and health psychology. Specifically, she is interested in studying the relationship between receiving mental health services prior to age 18 and insight levels and the course of treatment after age 18. Currently, she is a research assistant for the Nebraska Concussion Study at Madonna Rehabilitation Hospital. This placement involves studying the effects of mild traumatic brain injuries on adolescent athletes throughout the state of Nebraska and how the recovery patterns compare to those of collegiate and pro athletes. Prior to this year, Ashley received her Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology from the University of Nebraska, Lincoln. During her undergraduate career she was involved in several research projects consisting of understanding how child maltreatment affects children and their non offending families, working with the Lincoln Action Program, the Early Head Start Program, the FISC lab at UNL, and helping to assess individuals with SMI at the Community Transition Program at the Lincoln Regional Center. Ashley has worked in a variety of clinical settings including working as a community living instructor and medical aide at a local group home, as an athletic trainer with UNL athletics, and administering assessments to measure achievement and rates of depression in local children and their parents. Email Ashley: awynne6@yahoo.com Publications In Progress Choi, K. H ., Liu, N. H., Kleinlein, P., Wynne, A., Kim, J.S., Lee, S.A., Kwon, J. H., & Spaulding, W.D. (2007). Culture and Contextual Cues Affect Emotion Perception: Context-dependent emotion perception among Korean controls and negative biases in emotion perception in individuals with schizophrenia. Poster presented at the 19th APS Annual Convention, Washington, DC. Choi, K. H., Liu, N. H., Kleinlein, P., Wynne, A., & Spaulding, W. D. (2006, November). Facial affect and emotional context processing in people with severe mental illness. Poster presented at the 40th ABCT Annual Convention, Chicago, IL. Wynne, A. R. (2005, April). Predicting post treatment compliance and physical aggression in a sample of adolescents with behavior disorders. Presented at the University of Nebraska UCARE Undergraduate Research Conference, Lincoln, NE and the Nebraska Psychological Association Research Poster Competition, Lincoln, NE. Wynne, A. R. (2004, November). Gender differences between past sexual and physical abuse as they relate to occurrence of criminal activity. Poster presented at the 6 th Biennial NPS/PERK Joint Psychology Convention: Kearney, NE.
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