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Head of the Class
May 15, 2013

USC valedictorian Katherine Fu and salutatorians Alexander Fullman and Julia Sabo Mangione — all in USC Dornsife — will…

The Fabulous Fulbrights
May 10, 2013

Congratulations to the ten USC Dornsife students who were awarded 2013 Fulbright Scholarships. The award will take them to…

Preventing Another Darfur
April 23, 2013

For the 13th consecutive year, professor Steven Lamy, vice dean for academic programs in USC Dornsife, led the Center for…

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Wall of Scholars
May 21, 2013

The names of top USC Dornsife students will adorn the wall of Leavey Library in an honor celebrating university-wide students…

Catholic Studies Institute Receives $1 Million
May 21, 2013

The gift creates the Steven and Kathryn Sample Endowment for Ecumenism to support research centered on the foundational…

Scientist and Filmmaker
May 17, 2013

Howard Wayne Harris proves his 9th grade teacher wrong. Earning his Ph.D. at the USC Dornsife hooding ceremony May 16, he was…

You Did It!
May 17, 2013

USC Dornsife issued more than 2,500 degrees during Commencement 2013: 1,959 bachelor’s, 326 master's, 81 graduate…

Amazing Adventures in Undergrad Research
May 15, 2013

USC Dornsife students win top prizes at the 15th Annual Undergraduate Symposium for Scholarly and Creative Work. In…

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Michelle Christine Ramos

Lecturer

Contact Information
E-mail: michellr@dornsife.usc.edu
Phone: (213) 740-2313
Office: SGM 501

 

Education

Ph.D. Clinical Psychology, USC, 8/2006
M.A. Clinical Psychology, USC, 12/2002
M.A. Psychology, CSU - Fullerton, 5/2000
B.S. Science and Psychology, Univ Notre Dame, 5/1997
 

Academic Appointment, Affiliation, and Employment History

Clinical Psychology Intern, UCSD School of Medicine- Department of Psychiatry, 2004-2005  
 

Description of Research

Summary Statement of Research Interests

My research is focused on understanding how children and adolescents face and overcome adversity, particularly within the context of family and peer relationships. I am especially interested in what makes children and their families fare better or worse in the face of various, often typical, stressors. As such, my work addresses the role of family factors in combination with individual characteristics that may exacerbate or protect youth from negative developmental outcomes as well as promote positive developmental trajectories. Influenced by family systems and spillover theories, I investigate family members’ mutual influence on one another, and the reciprocal nature of everyday family processes. I employ novel methodologies such as daily diaries and direct observations of family interactions to understand day-to-day and moment-by-moment processes in the family – e.g., repeated, immediate family interactions – that may support or undermine long-term psychological health and well-being. My research has examined daily fluctuations in marital conflict as they relate to children's daily mood and the impact of family violence history on observed patterns of marital and parent-child interactions. I am also interested in the connection between family violence and youths' conflict and aggression in their own romantic relationships. Before coming to USC, I worked on the Fullerton Longitudinal Study where I examined the roles of child temperament and family conflict in predicting youth psychopathology.
 
 
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