Postdoctoral Students and Graduate Students
Director
HANAKO YOSHIDA, PH.D.
Dr. Yoshida is an Associate Professor in the Department of Psychology. Her central research focuses on language learning mechanisms creating highly specialized learning processes and the cognitive consequences of the language learning. The core idea behind her research is that these specialized learning processes are derived from domain-general mechanisms and the process involving the fine-tuning and contextual cueing of attention to aspects of the learning environment. Dr. Yoshida studies these processes by studying young children learning different language(s). Her work provides insight into questions of how early learning interacts with regularities in the world, and how this relation feeds into self-sustaining learning.
Curriculum Vitae of Dr. Hanako Yoshida
Areas: Cognitive development (word/language learning, bilingual cognition, cross-linguistic comparison with children's category learning)
Postdoctoral Students and Graduate Students
LICHAO SUN
I am the first-year graduate student in the cognitive development lab. I am interested in the relationship between cognitive development and language learning. Specifically, I focus on the influences of dual/multi-language learning on cognitive flexibility and attention allocation during social interaction.
Graduate Student Alumni
JOSEPH BURLING
Joseph received his Ph.D. in Developmental Psychology (Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience Program) at the University of Houston in May 2015. Upon graduation, Joseph accepted a post-doctoral position at UCLA in the Computational Vision and Learning Lab. While at the lab, Joseph investigated cognitive factors that lead to the attentional development.
CRYSTAL TRAN
Crystal received her Ph.D. in Developmental Psychology (Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience Program) at the University of Houston in May 2015. She is an assistant professor of Psychology at University of St. Thomas.
BETH WOODS
Beth received her Ph.D. in Developmental Psychology (Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience Program) at the University of Houston in December 2013. She is an assistant professor of Psychology at Texas Lutheran University.
Research Assistants
AAKASH PATEL
My primary reason for joining the lab was to work with an active research group and engage in the practice of cognitive development. My research interests focus on brain development and attentiveness during learning. I am eager to learn about cognitive simulations and modeling to help provide insight on early learning.
MEGAN WHELEN
I joined the Cognitive Development Lab in order to further my understanding of what goes into research in psychology. I hope to go to graduate school for Clinical Psychology, where I will be trained as both a clinician and researcher, and with the experience I gain here I can go into it with extensive experience in the research process. I also look forward to learning about cognitive development and broadening my knowledge within the field of psychology.
VINCE BUI
Spurred by a fascination of the process of word-learning in children, I joined the Cognitive Development Lab. As a research assistant, I hope to gain practical experience as I learn more about the language development in children. I am particularly interested in the means children comprehend and form sentences. In the future, I plan to apply my experience and understanding of children as I head to medical school, specializing in pediatrics.
LAURA LAY
I joined the UH Cognitive Development Lab in hopes of getting hands-on experience in research. I am interested in the pediatrics side of the medical field, so being part of the Cognitive Development Lab is not only a way for me to learn more about cognitive science, but is also an opportunity for me to work with children. My research interests include learning about how maternal depression affects word learning and how autistic children learn.
CAROLYN NGUYEN
I joined the Cognitive Development Lab because I was interested in how the visual search performance of children is connected to their early learning. I hope to gain valuable research experience and learn more about what contributes to children's word learning. As an aspiring optometrist, I believe the knowledge I gain will deepen my understanding of vision and its impact on cognitive development..
KARINA GEORGE
My passion for education and interest in how early childhood moments impact long
term success drove me to join the Cognitive Development Lab. I am excited to learn
more about how different factors influence knowledge acquisition. As a research assistant,
I hope to gain practical research experience and broaden my skills as well as gain
more exposure to the psychology field.
K. KELLY MEINE
I am a senior majoring in Psychology with a minor in Quantitative Social Science.
In addition to being a research assistant with the lab, I am also the website administrator.
My research interests include how language is developed and processed in the brain,
and how social factors affect cognitive development.
FRANCISCA (FRANKIE) TORRES
Passionate about understanding neurodevelopmental processes, I joined the Cognitive
Development Lab to expand my practical experiences working in a research setting.
Within my time at the lab, I plan on familiarizing myself with the equipment and methods
used to analyze eye-gaze in children and to measure how it effects their learning.
To support my interest in neurodevelopment, I aim to further comprehend the learning
differences of typically-developing children to those identified with Autism Spectrum
Disorders.
ZAINAB ARIF
I am currently a Junior majoring in Biology with minors in Psychology and Business
Administration. I joined the UH Cognitive Development lab to further my understanding
of child psychology and brain development. I want to pursue a career in Pediatric
Neurology, and so getting experience working with children and discovering correlations
between their behavior and developmental process would be valuable experience towards
this long-term goal. This experience will also sharpen my understanding of the research
process. I am particularly interested in how children process words and learn language
and how that correlates with their social environment and interactions.
KEVIN DANG
I joined the Cognitive Development Lab because I was fascinated by neuroscience and
language acquisition in children. In this research lab, I hope to apply the scientific
method, obtain invaluable research experience, and learn more about the psychological
and biological processes involved in language acquisition in children. I am interested
in how skills such as attention, visual processing, and gestures affect word learning.
As an aspiring pediatrician, I hope the beneficial experience that I acquire from
this lab will enhance my knowledge of cognitive and language development.
ZAINUB MALLICK
I joined the Cognitive Development lab under Dr. Yoshida because I plan to pursue
a career in researching ABA therapy in relation to children with ASD. The work done
here in the lab appealed to my interest in languages as well as cognitive development.
Spending time volunteering with kids at the Children's Assessment Center combined
with my desire to research cognitive process in children on the spectrum pushed me
to join this lab and partake in conducting the research it is doing. In the future,
I hope to obtain a PsyD in Clinical Psychology, and conduct further research on learning
styles and therapy types for children on the spectrum.
LILIANA RAMOS
As an undergraduate student pursuing a degree in Psychology with a minor in Sociology,
research is very important to me. My ultimate goal is to attend graduate school and
obtain a Ph.D in Psychology and I hope to become a professor and researcher at a university.
My research interests revolve around personality psychology, developmental, and cognitive
psychology. More specifically, how our personality develops over our lifespan and
even how language affects our personality. I joined this lab because I am well aware
of how crucial it is to have research experience and because it is a part of my research
interests in the future.
Collaborators
LINDA B. SMITH, PH.D.
Chancellor's Professor Of Psychology
POORNA KUSHALNAGAR, PH.D.
Associate Professor, Gallaudet University
YUKIE NAGAI, PH.D.
Senior Researcher, Center for Information and Neural Networks, National Institute
of Information and Communications Technology, Japan
CANDICE ALFANO, PH.D.
Associate Professor & Director, Sleep and Anxiety Center of Houston, University of Houston
CARLA SHARP, PH.D.
Professor, Director of Clinical Training, Director of the Developmental Psychopathology Lab, University of Houston