Socioemotional development in early childhood

This project is closed.

The Kids Lab is looking for research assistants. The Kids Lab studies sociocultural and family factors that influence children’s social, emotional, and brain development. We study both healthy trajectories as well as factors that increase risk for later mental health problems. Our work integrates developmental, behavioral, sociocultural, psychophysiological (RSA, PEP), and neuroscience (EEG, fNIRS) approaches to study development in early life. An additional main area of focus in the lab is to understand how the sociocultural background of Latinx children serves as a strength factor in the face of social inequalities and early adversity.

RAs will be asked to help with participant recruitment and scheduling, testing, and data cleaning and processing. Study procedures are in-lab, so in-person availability is essential.

If interested, please fill out this RA application: https://utexas.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_cRWUCDsopKwfatg

Qualifications

Detail oriented, motivated and conscientious, communicates well, flexible schedule including weekends. Students interested in socioemotional development. 

Preferred qualifications:
- Proficiency in spoken and written Spanish.
-Major in psychology or a related field.
-Previous work/volunteer experience with youth and families and/or outreach to community organizations in Austin.

Project Timeline

Start time is as soon as possible and all RAs are asked to complete a minimum of two semesters. RAs can continue past the two semester commitment. 

Duties

Recruitment, scheduling, testing Spanish, video coding, conducting literature searches, data entry/cleaning and any other duties as they come up.

Typical Time Commitment
10 hours/week
Desired Length of Commitment
2+ semesters

I'M INTERESTED IN THIS PROJECT. WHAT SHOULD I DO NEXT?

The Office of Undergraduate Research recommends that you attend an info session or advising before contacting faculty members or project contacts about research opportunities. We'll cover the steps to get involved, tips for contacting faculty, funding possibilities, and options for course credit. Once you have attended an Office of Undergraduate Research info session or spoken to an advisor, you can use the "Who to contact" details for this project to get in touch with the project leader and express your interest in getting involved.

Have you tried contacting professors and need more help? Schedule an appointment for additional support.