I am currently the PI of a ZonMw-funded project at the intersection of causal inference, public mental health, and social psychology, as well as an NWO-funded project on data science and statistical literacy. My recent work was featured in an interview here: Addressing Selection Bias in Disparities Research – Association for Psychological Science – APS.
Selected publications are here; a full list on Google Scholar is here.
My recent methodological and statistical work on causal inference has appeared in Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science, American Psychologist, Epidemiology, Multivariate Behavioral Research, Organizational Research Methods, Perspectives on Psychological Science, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), and Psychological Methods, among others.
I enjoy collaborating with applied researchers in health and psychological sciences to improve health and equity. My co-authored work implementing causal inference methods has appeared in American Journal of Epidemiology, Emotion, Epidemiology, Health Psychology Review, Journal of Affective Disorders, and Pain. I am a member of the Causality in Psychology lab.
I am currently an assistant professor at Maastricht University. Before this, I was an assistant professor in the Department of Quantitative Theory and Methods (QTM) at Emory University. I was previously a postdoctoral researcher in Quantitative Psychology at Ghent University, and in Biostatistics at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill. I earned my Ph.D. in Statistics from University of Washington, Seattle; M.A. in Statistics from Harvard University; and B.Sc. in Mathematics and Statistical Science from University College London.