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🗨️ Summer Seminar Series: Royette Dubar
College of Integrative Sciences
Title to be announced
Royette Dubar
Associate Professor of Psychology
Faculty Ambassador
Royette Tavernier Dubar is a developmental psychologist, whose research program examines the link between sleep and psychosocial adjustment. Professor Dubar uses both subjective (e.g., self-report) and objective (e.g., actigraphy) assessments to measure sleep characteristics, such as sleep duration, sleep onset latency, sleep efficiency, and sleep quality. Her interest in psychosocial adjustment spans a wide range of indices, including psychological well-being, emotion regulation, interpersonal relationships, and social media use. Some of the statistical tools used in her research include auto-regressive cross-lagged analysis, latent profile analysis, and hierarchical linear modeling. Her interest in sleep and psychosocial adjustment extends to both short term (i.e., day-to-day) and longer term (over months and years) associations, with a particular emphasis on the emerging adulthood years (i.e., 18-to-29-year olds).
A second line of research uses qualitative designs to examine the role of life story narratives in identity development and psychosocial well-being among diverse groups of adolescents and emerging adults.
Dubar enjoys cooking, dancing to Caribbean music (soca, bouyon, dancehall, reggae), and spending time with her husband, two sons, and their cat.