The C.A.P. Study

Cognition, Affect, and Psychophysiology Study

Research Interests

In the C.A.P. Study (Cognition, Affect, and Psychophysiology) at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, we study multiple aspects of cognitive development, with an emphasis on individual differences in the development of short-term/working memory. In our research studies, we focus on attention, self-regulation, and temperament as the main sources of these individual differences. Our most current work is longitudinal in nature and examines the relations between cognition and affect (or emotion) across infancy and childhood. We are focusing on the observation of behaviors, as well as developmental psychophysiology, including the measurement of brain electrical activity (EEG) and heart rate activity (ECG). This work is funded by the National Institutes of Health / National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (R03-HD43057; R01-HD49878).