William C. Woods, MA, MS
PhD Student, Clinical Psychology, University of Pittsburgh
E-mail: wcw8@pitt.edu
Will is a graduate student in the Clinical Psychology Program at the University of Pittsburgh. He previously received an M.A. in Social Science from the University of Chicago and a B.S. in Psychology and Philosophy from Grand Valley State University. Will is interested in dynamic, idiographic models of psychopathology, particularly as they relate to social influences on the exacerbation and amelioration of mental health symptoms. He is also interested in statistical approaches to idiographic models that allow for the generation of generalizable knowledge about how the social environment impacts psychopathology more generally.
Whitney Wringwald, MSW, MS
PhD Student, Clinical Psychology, University of Pittsburgh
E-mail: wringwald@pitt.edu
Whitney is a graduate student in the clinical psychology program at the University of Pittsburgh. She received a B.A. in psychology from Marylhurst University, and an M.S.W. from the University of Pittsburgh. Her research focuses on linking the structures and processes of psychopathology and personality to understand the full range of psychological functioning.
Sienna Nielsen, MS
PhD Student, Clinical Psychology, University of Michigan
E-mail: siennarn@umich.edu
Sienna joined the team in 2021 as a clinical psychology doctoral student. Her interest in identity disturbance in borderline personality disorder is influenced by her undergraduate studies in psychology, continental philosophy, and neuroscience. Reach out about her research and the conversation may shift towards the Celtics, Kierkegaard, and/or LOTR.
Janan Mostajabi, BA
PhD Student, Clinical Psychology, University of Michigan
E-mail: jmost@umich.edu
Janan received a B.A. in Psychology and Film Studies from the University of California, Berkeley. She joined the lab in 2022 as a graduate student in the Clinical Psychology Program. Janan is interested in using ecological momentary assessment methods to study the dynamic and idiographic nature of impulsivity and emotion regulation and how they relate to internalizing-externalizing psychopathology.