Gallagher CV 1 Address 508 Fulton Street (152) Durham NC 27705 Phone (336) 456-4440 Email matthew.gallagher2@va.gov Education Curriculum Vitae M. Patrick Gallagher, Ph.D. Post-Doctoral Research Fellow Center for Health Services Research in Primary Care Durham VA Medical Center 20 April 2011 Aug. 2005-Sep. 2010 Aug 2003-May 2005 Jan 1999-May 2003 Ph.D., Social Psychology Duke University Durham, NC Advisor: Rick H. Hoyle GPA: 4.0 M.A., Experimental Psychology Wake Forest University Winston-Salem, NC Advisor: William Fleeson GPA: 3.66 B.A., Psychology Major GPA: 4.00 B.A., Media Studies, Major GPA: 3.72 University of North Carolina at Greensboro Greensboro, NC Research Goals 1. To apply social psychological- and personality-based tools to improving patient adherence 2. To investigate psychological factors in management and prevention of chronic illness 3. To investigate stability, variability, and behavioral implications of personality
Gallagher CV 2 Publications Papers In Press Gallagher, P., Fleeson, W., & Hoyle, R. (in press; accepted 25 Oct., 2010). A selfregulatory mechanism for personality trait stability: Contra-trait effort. Social Psychological and Personality Science. Papers Under Review Gallagher, P., Hoyle, R., & Fleeson, W. Self-awareness of variability of trait expression in behavior. (Submitted 1 March, 2011). Gallagher, P., & Voils, C. The percentage of peoples behaviors that reflects their personality traits. (Submitted 15 March, 2011). Published Papers Seta, J., McCormick, M., Gallagher, P., McElroy, T., & Seta, C.E. (2010). Voice frequency impacts hemispheric processing of attribute frames. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 46, 1089-1092. Fleeson, W. & Gallagher, P. (2009). The implications of Big Five standing for the distribution of trait manifestation in behavior: Fifteen experience-sampling studies and a meta-analysis. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 97(6), 1097-1114. Smith, R., Hunt, R., & Gallagher, P. (2008). The effect of study modality on false recognition. Memory and Cognition, 36(8), 1439-49. Gallagher, P. & Dagenbach, D. (2007). Manipulating noise frequencies alters hemispheric contributions to decision-making. Brain and Cognition, 64(1), 42-49. Papers in Preparation (data collected) Prasad, S., Gallagher, P., Lucas, J., Cook-Deegan, R., & Chandrasekharan, S. Genomic risk information for preventing Type 2 Diabetes among Asian Indians: The influence of perceived personal control. Gallagher, P., Voils, C.I., & Yancy, W.S. Person factors and daily barriers to likelihood and duration of daily physical activity. Gallagher, P., Yancy, W.S., Weinberger, M., Coffman, C.J., Jeffreys, A., Bosworth, H.B., McKenzie, J., Slade, A., Smith, R., Steward, N., Voils, C.I. The relationship between patient and spouse psychosocial factors and patient weight: Baseline results from the Couples Partnering for Lipid Enhancing Strategies (CouPLES) trial. Gallagher, P., Yancy, W.S., Weinberger, M., Coffman, C.J., Jeffreys, A., Bosworth, H.B., McKenzie, J., Slade, A., Smith, R., Steward, N., Voils, C.I. Longitudinal mediation effects of spousal support on LDL, weight, and diet in the CouPLES trial.
Gallagher CV 3 Gallagher, P., Killeya-Jones, L., Prasad, S., Chandrasekharan, S., & Cho, A. Baseline attitudes toward genomic risk information and perceived personal control for preventing Type 2 Diabetes in a diabetes prevention trial. Funding, Honors, and Awards Research 2009.2010 Fellow, Program for Advanced Research in the Social Sciences Social Science Research Institute, Duke University Full Academic Year Stipend Spring 2009 Summer 2008 NRSA Pre-doctoral Fellowship Application How Personality Traits Guide Behavior: Do Contra-trait Behaviors Use More Energy? Scored but not funded Summer Research Fellowship Graduate School, Duke University $4000 Spring Graduate Research Travel Fellowship 2007, 2008, Graduate School/Department of Psychology and Neuroscience 2009, 2010 Duke University $714 Teaching/mentorship 2010 Dean s Award for Excellence in Teaching Duke University Graduate School $1500 Summer 2010 Summer 2009, 2008 Vertical Integration Program Mentorship Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Duke University $3000 Vertical Integration Program Mentorship Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Duke University $1800 Professional Memberships Association for Research in Personality Social Personality and Health Network Society of Behavioral Medicine Society for Personality and Social Psychology
Gallagher CV 4 Research Assistantships Aug 2008-May 2009 May 2006-Aug 2006 July 2005-Aug 2005 Aug 2001-May 2003 Research Assistant SSRI Faculty Fellows: Medical Decision Making Co-Conveners: Kevin Weinfurt, John Payne Duke University Durham, NC Research Assistant Harmony Study Duke University Department of Psychiatry P.I.: Lana Watkins Data Consultant Integrating Process and Structure in Personality project Wake Forest University Department of Psychology P.I.: William Fleeson Undergraduate Research Assistant Psychology Department/Broadcasting & Cinema Departments University of North Carolina at Greensboro Greensboro, NC Presentations Talks Gallagher, P. (2010, February). A Self-regulatory Mechanism for Personality Trait Stability: Contra-trait Effort. Talk presented to the Program for Advanced Research in the Social Sciences/Triangle Political Methods Group, Durham, NC. Gallagher, P. & Dagenbach, D. (2008, February). Sound Decisions: Manipulating Noise Frequencies Affects Risky-choice Framing. Talk presented at the Annual Meeting of the North Carolina Cognition Group, Raleigh, NC. Fleeson, W. & Gallagher, P. (2006, November). The Implications of Big-Five Standing for the Distribution of Behavior: Thirteen Experience-Sampling Studies and a Meta-Analysis. Talk presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Southeastern Social Psychologists, Knoxville, TN. Posters Gallagher, P., Yancy, W.S., Weinberger, M., Coffman, C.J., Jeffreys, A., Bosworth, H.B., McKenzie, J., Slade, A., Smith, R., Steward, N., Voils, C.I. (2011, April). The relationship between patient and spouse psychosocial factors and patient
Gallagher CV 5 weight: Baseline results from the Couples Partnering for Lipid Enhancing Strategies (CouPLES) trial. To be presented at the 32 nd annual meeting of the Society for Behavioral Medicine, Washington D.C. Prasad, S., Gallagher, P., Lucas, J., Cook-Deegan, R., & Chandrasekharan, S. (2011, April). Use of genomic risk information for prevention of Type 2 Diabetes among Asian Indians: The influence of perceived personal control. Presented at the 2011 ELSI Congress, Chapel Hill, NC. Gallagher, P., & Hoyle, R. (2011, January). A self-control-mechanism for trait stability: Contra-trait effort in contextualized behaviors. Presented at the annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, San Antonio, TX. Gallagher, P. (2010, January). Construct validity for a self-report measure of distributions of trait behavior. Presented at the annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Las Vegas, NV. Gallagher, P., Hoyle, R., & Fleeson, W. (2009, November). Construct validity for a self-report measure of distributions of trait behavior. Presented at the annual meeting of the Society of Southeastern Social Psychologists, Ft. Myers, FL. Gallagher, P., Hoyle, R., & Fleeson, W. (2009, July). A multiple-parameter, self-report trait measure: Can people describe their own density distributions? Presented at the annual meeting of the Association for Research in Personality, Evanston, IL. Gallagher, P. (2009, February). Sound decisions: The relative frequency properties of voices affect framing. Presented at the annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Tampa, FL. Gallagher, P., Hoyle, R., & Fleeson, W. (2008, October). A multiple-parameter, self-report trait measure: Can people describe their own density distributions? Poster presented at the annual meeting of Society of Southeastern Social Psychologists, Greenville, SC. Gallagher, P. & Fleeson, W. (2008, January). The predictive power of traits for everyday behavior: An experience sampling study. Presented at the annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Albuquerque, NM. Gallagher, P. & Fleeson, W. (2007, January). Do traits predict behavior? 13 experience sampling studies and a meta-analysis. Presented at the annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Memphis, TN. Gallagher, P. & Fleeson, W. (2006, January). Investigating stability in trait behavior: The contra-trait energy hypothesis. Presented at the annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Palm Springs, CA. Gallagher, P. & Dagenbach, D. (2005, February). Double filtering by frequency theory and framing effects. Presented at the North Carolina Cognition Conference, Winston-Salem, NC. Gallagher, P. & Fleeson, W. (2005, January). Estimated and actual variability in everyday
Gallagher CV 6 behavior. Presented at the annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, New Orleans, LA. Gallagher, P., Smith, R., & Hunt, R. (2001, February). Investigating the Modality Effect in False Memory. Poster presented at annual meeting of the North Carolina Cognition Group, Chapel Hill, NC. Reviewing Ad-hoc reviewer Brain and Cognition Contemporary Clinical Trials Poster abstract reviewer 2009 meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology Teaching Positions Courses Taught: Summer 2007, Personality, Duke University (PSY 114). 2009, 2010 Covering classic personality theories, research methodology, and current issues in the field. Summer 2007 Personality and Social Behavior, Duke University (PSY 99). Covering classic personality and social psychology theories, research methodology, and current issues in both fields. April 2007 Experience Sampling Research with PDAs Methodology Workshop Social Science Research Institute, Duke University Covering Methods of Experience Sampling Research using PDA technology from design to data analysis. Mentorships: August 2008-2009 Mentored a Duke senior, Ryan Egan, in his senior thesis. Mentored student, along with professor James Shah, in all stages of his own research project, from identifying a research question to executing data collection and analysis. Spring 2008, 2009 Tutored several student athletes weekly in Cognitive
Gallagher CV 7 Psychology: Introduction and Survey, Duke University. Summer 2008, Mentored an undergraduate student in the Vertical 2009, 2010 Integration Program, Duke University. Worked closely with students in 8-week program reviewing literature, developing research questions, and designing and testing procedures to be used in my research program. Spring 2005-Summer 2010 Coordinated and directed several Research Assistants in the Hoyle and Shah labs, Duke University; Linville lab, Duke University, and Fleeson lab, Wake Forest University. Trained students in various research tasks, directed data collection, guided literature searches. Teaching Assistantships: Spring 2008, Fall 2007, Spring 2006 Fall 2006 Fall 2004, Spring 2005 Teaching Assistant, Personality and Social Behavior, Duke University. Taught two undergraduate discussion sections covering personality and social psychology. Teaching Assistant, Data Analysis and Statistical Inference, Duke University. Consulted with students on coursework covering basic statistical principles. Teaching Assistant, Research Methods for Minors, Wake Forest University. Taught undergraduate lab section covering research design, correlation, regression, and ANOVA for students minoring in Psychology.
Gallagher CV 8 Professional References Rick H. Hoyle, Ph.D. Department of Psychology & Neuroscience PO Box 90086 Duke University, Durham, NC 27708 919.660.5791 rhoyle@duke.edu Corrine Voils, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Medicine Duke University Medical Center Center for Health Services Research in Primary Care 508 Fulton Street (152) Durham VA Medical Center Durham NC 27705 919.286.0411 x.5196 voils001@mc.duke.edu William S. Yancy, Jr., M.D., M.H.S. Associate Professor of Medicine Duke University Medical Center Center for Health Services Research in Primary Care Durham VA Medical Center 508 Fulton Street (152) Durham NC 27705 919.286.0411 x.7770 yancy006@mc.duke.edu Mark R. Leary, Ph.D. Dept. of Psychology and Neuroscience PO Box 90086 Duke University, Durham, NC 27708 919.660.5750 leary@duke.edu William Fleeson, Ph.D. Department of Psychology 415 Greene Hall P.O. Box 7778 Reynolda Station Winston-Salem, NC 27109 336.758.4232 fleesonw@wfu.edu