![]() Our mission is to advance gender equality, social justice, and human wellbeing through high quality research, theory, and action programs. Because early childhood is a time of increased family stress when rates of PCV peak and children are most likely to be involved in episodes of IPV, participants will include 200 couples (i.e., 400 individuals) with a child age 3-5 years enrolled in urban or semi-rural Head Start programs or with similar demographics. The Wellesley Centers for Women is a premier women- and gender-focused, social-change oriented research-and-action institute at Wellesley College. ![]() This work is designed to help reconcile empirical literatures that disagree regarding the conditions under which trauma and biased threat perception promote or inhibit violent behavior. A transdiagnostic sleep and circadian intervention for adolescents: six-month follow-up of a randomized controlled trial. We are also testing whether individual differences in threat perception and trauma exposure predict different patterns of how violence unfolds. The Department of Psychology at Penn States University Park campus is part of the College of the Liberal Arts. Given extensive overlap between trauma exposure and family violence perpetration, we focus on diverse forms of trauma-related perceived threat (e.g., rejection, dominance) and theoretically related contextual factors as immediate, incident-level precipitants of the occurrence, persistence, and trajectories of acceleration/deceleration of the severity of violence within the course of incidents of parent to child violence (PCV), intimate partner violence (IPV), and within-incident co-occurrence (or “spillover”) of PCV and IPV. We are identifying factors that immediately precede violent behavior and promote its persistence or desistence within incidents of violence as well as individual differences in how such factors operate. Notsu, Haruka: 359 Moore Building (814) 863-1149: : O'Donnell, Ryan: 140 Moore Building (814) 865-9514: : Oswald, Flora: 527 Moore. To develop methods to effectively prevent or intervene in this major public health problem, more specific and nuanced information is needed about incidents of family violence. Afterwards, she worked as an intern and then short-term staff on a hospital’s psychiatric unit in Japan. Join Facebook to connect with Haruka Nots and others you may know. in Psychology with honors from Wellesley College in 2015. View the profiles of people named Haruka Nots. She was born in Japan and grew up in Shanghai, China. Violence within families of young children has considerable adverse psychiatric, psychosocial, cognitive, and physical health consequences for child and adult victims. Haruka is a third-year graduate student in the Clinical Psychology Program. Administered in: College of the Liberal Arts
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