Surveying Non-Consensual Drink Spiking Among College and Online Samples

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Anne Lippert Jonathan M. Golding Jeffrey S. Neuschatz Libbi A. Geoghagan Mary M. Levi Millicent Day Delicia Drain a Prairie View A&M University, Houston, Texas, USAb University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, USAc University of Alabama at Huntsville, Hunstville, Alabama, USAAnne Lippert, PhD. is an Assistant Professor of Psychology at Prairie View A&M University. Her research examines issues of victimization, interpersonal dynamics, and deviant behavior.She also develops computational tools to study cognition and learning in social and clinical contexts.Jonathan M. Golding, PhD. has been a faculty member in the Department of Psychology at the University of Kentucky since 1988—he is a Full Professor. He is an active researcher investigating legal decision-making in cases involving various types of victimization (adult rape, child sexual assault, stalking, domestic violence, and elder abuse). Dr. Golding’s research has led to numerous publications in scientific journals and books (e.g., Jailhouse Informants) as well as conference presentationsJeffrey S. Neutschatz, PhD. is a core faculty member of the Applied Psychological Sciences Department at Fielding Graduate University. Before coming to Fielding, he was Distinguished Professor of Psychology and King-McDonald Eminent Scholar at the University of Alabama in Huntsville. He received his Doctorate in Cognitive Psychology from the State University of New York-Binghamton. His primary research interests include eyewitness memory, line-up identification, secondary confessions, and jury decision making.Libbi A. Geoghagan, MS. received her BA and MS in psychology from the University of Alabama in Huntsville, where she is currently a doctoral candidate studying applied experimental psychology. Her primary research interests include jury decision-making, perceptions of victimization cases, and the factors contributing to wrongful convictions (e.g., unreliable jailhouse informant testimony, false confessions, eyewitness misidentifications).Mary M. Levi, MS. is a clinical psychology doctoral candidate at the University of Kentucky. Her research focuses on the intersection between mental health and the criminal legal system, with specific interest in juror perceptions and decision-making in victimization cases.Millicent Day, BA. is a master’s student studying Industrial-Organizational Psychology at Rice University. Her research interests include employee resilience, workplace discrimination, and motivation.Delicia Drain, BA. is a clinical psychology doctoral student at Western Michigan University. Her research focuses on trauma, co-occurring substance use, and the influence of cultural factors on the experience and treament of trauma.

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