NWPPA invites you to participate in our winter academic panel.
This year NWPPA is pleased to begin the evening with a half hour registration and conversation opportunity with light hors d’oeuvres.
The Academic Panel is free to attend; $35 for 2 CEs paid by check or cash at the time of the event.
Level: Introductory
Presentation 1: Pursuing a Deeper Understanding of the Black-White Mental Health Paradox: A Line of Inquiry
Presented by Megan LaMotte, Ph.D., Associate Director of Research, Susan Hirt Hagen CORE
Black Americans incur disproportionate stress due to systemic racial oppression in the United States and their socioeconomic disadvantages. Such stress exposure has significant negative impacts on Black peoples’ physical health. One would assume Black Americans’ mental health would equally suffer in the face of stress exposure, yet they have lower rates of depression and anxiety than Whites, a phenomenon referred to as the Black-White mental health paradox. In this presentation, I will discuss several theoretical mechanisms that potentially underly the paradox and review my empirical research on the topic. These studies highlight the importance of mixed methods and intersectionality as a theoretical framework and methodological approach in research on the paradox. Overall, I find that more research is needed on artifactual explanations of the paradox, and that any future research on race differences in mental health should not overlook within-race differences in outcomes or etiology.
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Presentation 2: The Intersection Between Personality Psychology and Neuropsychology Outcome Variables
Presented by Derek A. McKay, Ph.D., ABPP-CN, Assistant Professor of Psychology, Mercyhurst University
Much of the literature relating personality traits to outcome variables have focused exclusively on the Five-Factor Model (FFM) of personality (Costa & McCrae, 1987). Recent research has revealed support for a six-factor alternative model of personality trait structure known as the HEXACO model (Ashton & Lee, 2007). Some studies (McKay & Tokar, 2012) have shown that the HEXACO model significantly accounts for more variance than the FFM in the prediction of certain outcome variables, such as vocational interests. In a series of recent studies McKay and his research team examined the relationship between personality trait models and neuropsychological outcome variables, such as verbal fluency and cognitive flexibility. The purpose of this talk is to explore the rationale for examining such relationships, general findings of the connected studies, and limitations and future directions.
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