University of Rhode Island and Rhode Island Training School
University of Rhode Island
Brown University
Memorial Hospital of Rhode Island, Brown University
L. A. R. STEIN received her PhD in clinical psychology from Kent State University. She is currently a professor of psychology at the University of Rhode Island, with affiliations at The Center for Alcohol and Addiction Studies and the Center for Prisoner Health and Human Rights of Brown University Medical School. In addition, she is the director of research at the Rhode Island Training School. Her areas of research interest include behavioral intervention development for high risk behaviors (e.g., crimes, risky sex, and substance use), mechanisms of behavior change, and assessment development, particularly in understudied and hard to reach populations.
MARY CLAIR received her PhD in clinical psychology from Drexel University. She is currently an assistant research professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Rhode Island. Her areas of research interest include behavioral intervention development to enhance health and reduce risk in understudied and hard to reach populations.
SHAYNA SOENKSEN-BASSETT received her MS in counseling psychology from Northeastern University. She is currently completing her dissertation in clinical psychology at the University of Rhode Island with specialty in methodology. Her areas of research interest include substance use, trauma and coping, as well as program implementation and policy.
ROSEMARIE A. MARTIN received her PhD from the University of Rhode Island in experimental psychology, specializing in health psychology. She is an assistant professor of research in the Department of Community Health and a research psychologist at the Providence VA Medical Center, Providence, Rhode Island. She is a faculty member of the Center for Alcohol and Addiction Studies’ NIAAA postdoctoral Fellowship Training Program. Her research interests include contingency management and motivational enhancement interventions, design and methodology in substance abuse research, outcomes evaluation, multivariate statistics, and modeling longitudinal data.
JENNIFER G. CLARKE received her MD from Cornell University, specializing in internal medicine and women’s health. She currently holds a position at Memorial Hospital of Rhode Island, Pawtucket, Rhode Island, as the Director of Health Disparities research, and she is a staff physician at the Rhode Island Department of Corrections, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. Her areas of research interest include reduction of HIV risk, smoking cessation, and reproductive healthcare in disadvantaged populations.
This work was supported by Grants R01 DA-13375, R01 DA-018851, and R01 DA-020731 from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (PI, Lynda A. R. Stein), and by Grants R01 HD-065942 (PI, Lynda A. R. Stein) and R01 DA-024093 (PI, Jennifer G. Clarke) from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.
L. A. R. Stein, University of Rhode Island, Center for Social Sciences Research, 130 Flagg Road, Kingston, RI 02881 [email protected]
Received July 1, 2013
revised August 25, 2014
Accepted September 4, 2014