FIU ReACH Lab | ReACH News
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ReACH News

  • ACE Project Graduate Students Present at Student Services Conference

    On October 27th, ACE graduate students, Benejelene Sutherland and Patricio Perez, presented at the Student Services Conference hosted at Ronald W. Reagan/Doral Senior High School. The conference provided Student Services professionals with valuable knowledge and insight from experts in their respective fields. Benejelene and Patrico presented information about e-cigarette use among adolescents, such as a quick background on e-cigarettes, e-cigarette use rates among teens, nicotine use and the developing brain, preliminary findings, and resources. They presented in three sessions, totaling an audience of 45 school counselors and teachers who were also interested in having them present in their respective schools.  ...

  • ReACH Lab Director Interviewed Regarding “One Chip Challenge”

    ReACH Lab Director, Dr. Elisa Trucco, was interviewed by two media companies in relation to the One Chip Challenge. In an article published by AP News on September 11th, 2023, author Wyatte Grantham-Philips details the recent social media trend and references a Massachusetts teen’s death that is allegedly tied to the challenge. The author quotes Dr. Trucco explaining how there is a “‘glamorization of these challenges on social media'”. She further elaborates how “‘You see a lot of ‘likes’ or comments (indicating) social status or popularity from these challenges, but you don’t see a lot of the negative consequences — like the trips to the E.R. or other injuries.'” Wyatte Grantham-Philips then quoted Dr. Trucco again at the end of the article: “‘There’s a reason why these challenges are appealing,'” and that, “‘This type of marketing sells.'” In another interview conducted over the radio by Corus Entertainment Inc. on September 13th, 2023, Dr. Trucco explains how adolescents are most vulnerable to these social media challenges. She also explains how adolescents in general are more susceptible to risk-taking behaviors and provides Juuls as an example. She elaborates on the biological reasoning for the vulnerability of adolescents: “reward centers of the brains, such as those activated when gaining social status and popularity…, develops much more quickly than areas of the brain having to do with decision making or stopping to think about possible consequences.” When asked about how to protect kids from these challenges and trends, Dr. Trucco replied that “this problem really involves various people taking action.” She continues stating, “More generally, in terms of what we could do for these challenges, [it is important for parents to] stay on top of these trends, to not only keep their eyes out for these products in the home but also to have open conversations with their children about these challenges and potential negative consequences.”...

  • ReACH Lab Graduate Student’s Recent Publication Featured in FIU News

    On July 13th, 2023, FIU News published an article referencing ReACH Lab Graduate Student, Julie Cristello’s, recently published article that was included in Drug and Alcohol Review. The FIU article, titled “Teens more likely to use alcohol and marijuana if they see their friends post about it on social media,” detailed Julie Cristello’s recent findings on how teens are more likely to use substances, specifically drink alcohol and use marijuana, if their friends post it on Instagram and Snapchat. The article further explained how teens, with an average screen time of 8.5 hours a day, are now spending more time online than at school and that “many adolescents are being exposed to alcohol- and marijuana-related content on Instagram and Snapchat.” Towards the end of the article, Julie emphasized how future work needs to identify the specific social media features that may contribute to the perceptions of teens.   ...

  • ACE Project Graduate Student Presents at CPDD Conference

    On June 18th, 2023, Ace Project Graduate student, Benjelene Sutherland, gave a presentation at the College on Problems of Drug Dependence (CPDD) conference during the “E-cigarettes: That’s not a thumb drive, Mom!” session. Her presentation was titled “Working memory alternations predict adolescent e-cigarette use and positive expectancies via Alexithymia” and was about her current project examining the interrelations between working memory, task performance, difficulty describing feelings and adolescent e-cigarette use, and positive outcome expectancies. The findings showed support for simple mediation via difficulty describing feelings, such that alterations in working memory were associated with more difficulty describing feelings and that in turn predicted more e-cigarette use and positive outcomes expectancies (i.e., believe that e-cigarettes would help with negative affect reduction). Over 100 people attended the presentation. Benjelene Sutherland was also awarded the NIDA Director’s travel award....

  • ReACH Lab Director Gave a Virtual Presentation at HHC Virtual 3rd Annual Vaping Forum

    On April 21st, 2023, ACE Project Co-PI and ReACH Lab Director, Dr. Elisa Trucco, provided a virtual presentation to teachers, community leaders, and school administrators at the HCC’s 3rd Annual Vaping Forum. The presentation was entitled “Understanding Etiological Processes in the Emergence of Electronic Cigarette Use. Dr. Trucco provided the recent findings from the ACE project data on adolescent vaping. There were 25 people in attendance....

  • ACE Project Graduate Student Presents at UF CARE 10th Annual Symposium

    On April 17th, 2023, ACE Project graduate student, Benjelene Sutherland, presented a research poster at the UF CARE 10th Annual Symposium, at the University of Florida. The poster was titled “Working memory alterations predict adolescent e-cigarette use and positive outcome expectancies via Alexithymia” and examined the interrelations between working memory, task performance, difficulty describing feelings, and adolescent e-cigarette use and positive outcome expectancies. The findings showed support for simple mediation via difficulty describing feelings, such that alterations in working memory were associated with more difficulty describing feelings and that in turn predicted more e-cigarette use and positive outcomes expectancies (i.e., believe that e-cigarettes would help with negative affect reduction). Benjelene Sutherland was also awarded the UF CARE annual symposium travel award that was funded by the Center for Addiction Research & Education, University of Florida. ...

  • ReACH Lab Featured in FIU News

    The work of ReACH lab members was recently highlighted in FIU News. The article covers a study published in the Journal of Youth and Adolescence , which finds a differential impact of prolonged social isolation during COVID-19 across youth with a history of childhood physical and emotional abuse on depression and anxiety. Findings were not what we expected! For teens with emotional abuse histories, low social isolation led to greater mental health. In contrast, among teens with physical abuse histories, low social isolation led to greater mental health problems. Read “Teens’ different responses to social isolation.”...

  • ReACH Lab Director presents virtually for Montefiore Medical Center/Albert Einstein College of Medicine

    On April 12th, 2023, ReACH Lab Director and Co-PI of the ACE Project, Dr. Elisa Trucco provided a virtual presentation to clinicians at the Montefiore Medical Center/Albert Einstein College of Medicine. The presentation was titled “Understanding Adolescent Substance Use through a Developmental Lens.” She discussed risk and protective factors involved in adolescent substance use with 22 participants in attendance. ...

  • ACE Team presents to Broward Youth Action Team

    On March 30th, 2023, The ACE Project team provided a virtual presentation for Youth Action Team Meeting for the United Way of Broward County Commission on Behavioral Health & Drug Prevention. Graduate Students Benjelene Sutherland and Nilofar Fallah-Sohy presented on vaping-related content and ACE Project findings. We were invited by Jenna Stein, Prevention Specialist, who we have previously collaborated with. There were over 40 attendees.  ...

  • 2023 Internship Pinning Ceremony

    Yesterday, ReACH Lab member, Julie Cristello, was celebrated for her successful match for clinical internship. She will be starting her clinical internship at The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University. Congratulations, Julie!...

  • ReACH Lab Graduate Students Present at SRCD Conference

    ReACH Lab graduate students, Nilofar Fallah-Sohy and Sarah Hartmann, presented at the Society for Research in Child Development (SRCD) Conference. The 2023 SRCD conference took place from March 23-25 in Salt Lake City, Utah. Nilofar’s presentation titled “Examining Reciprocal Relations Between Parental Knowledge, Child Disclosure, Parental Legitimacy Beliefs, and Adolescent Alcohol Use” examined prospective bidirectional effects between parental knowledge and child disclosure alongside youth-reported alcohol use and perceived legitimacy of parental authority. This multi-informant study’s findings showed that parental knowledge and child disclosure were found to weaken in response to youth alcohol use. A positive reciprocal association between parental knowledge and child disclosure was found in early adolescence, whereas an inverse reciprocal association was found between parental knowledge and child alcohol use in later years. This study also found that parental legitimacy beliefs were associated with reduced alcohol use. In turn, youth alcohol use led to reductions in parental knowledge and child disclosure. Sarah’s presentation titled “The Role of Sleep as a Pathway Linking Temperament and Problem Behavior in Adolescence” assessed newly identified sleep profiles as potential mediators between previously identified profiles of early adolescent temperament and subsequent internalizing and externalizing symptomatology. The findings converge with prior work suggesting that adolescent sleep significantly impacts problem behaviors. Conversely, adolescent temperament was not shown to significantly impact proximal problem behavior when accounting for prior behavioral difficulties. Nonetheless, present findings suggest that positive sleep hygiene may help to mitigate behavioral problems in adolescents.  ...

  • ACE Project Presents Virtually for John I. Smith K-8 Center

    On December 7th, 2022,  ACE Project graduate student, Katharine Crooks provided a virtual presentation for 6th to 8th-grade students and teachers on the harms of vaping. Ms. Crooks provided information on current rates of e-cigarette use/vaping among teens and described potential risks of e-cigarette use/vaping on teens and the developing brain. There were 100 students in attendance.    ...

  • ACE Project Presents on Vaping at Robert Morgan Educational Center

    On November 30th, 2022,  ACE Project graduate students, Benjelene Sutherland and Patricio Viera Perez, attended the student success center at Robert Morgan Educational Center to provide a presentation to students on the harms of vaping. They provided information on current rates of e-cigarette use/vaping among teens and described potential risks of e-cigarette use/vaping on teens and the developing brain. Over 20 students attended the presentation....

  • ReACH Graduate Students Awarded Seed Funding from the FIU Psychology Department for their Independent Projects

      Reach Lab graduate students Megan Hare and Sarah Hartman both received an FIU Psychology department seed fund for their independent projects. Megan Hare’s project will be the first step in developing a novel adult self-report measure of emotional competence. This measure will allow us to better capture adults’ emotional functioning as well as improve our understanding of how it impacts children’s emotional competence. Sarah Hartmann will use this award to fund her dissertation project. Within this project, Sarah will be utilizing mixed-method participatory research to inform the development of a novel culturally anchored parent report of adolescent temperament tailored to Latino families residing in the U.S....

  • ReACH Lab’s Graduate Student and Lab Manager Receive Notification about Publication

    ReACH graduate student, Megan Hare, and ReACH lab manager, Michelle Villar, received a notification from Development and Psychopathology that their manuscript was accepted for publication. Their paper titled: “Pathways to substance use: Examining conduct problems and parenting behaviors from preschool to adolescence” examines how child conduct problems, parenting behaviors, and parents’ own antisocial behavior relate from preschool to adolescence and eventuate in substance use....