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Research Overview
My research examines the psychological, behavioral, and health consequences of possessing a concealable stigmatized identity. Recent projects include a longitudinal study of disclosure among people living with HIV from around the U.S. and the development of conceptual frameworks to study disclosure processes and the effects of HIV stigma.
Education
Ph.D., University of Connecticut, 2009 (social psychology)
M.A., University of Connecticut, 2006 (social psychology)
B.A., University of Connecticut, 2003 (psychology)
Featured Publications
Quinn, D. M., & Chaudoir, S. R. (in press). Living with a concealable stigmatized identity: The impact of anticipated stigma, centrality, salience, and cultural stigma on psychological distress and health. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.
Chaudoir, S. R., & Quinn, D. M. (in press). Revealing concealable stigmatized identities: The impact of disclosure motivations and positive first disclosure experiences on fear of disclosure and well-being. Journal of Social Issues: Social Stigma and Social Disadvantage.
Earnshaw, V. A., & Chaudoir, S. R. (in press). From conceptualizing to measuring HIV stigma: A review of HIV stigma mechanisms measures. AIDS and Behavior.
Edmondson, D., Park, C. L., Chaudoir, S. R., & Wortmann, J. H. (2008). Death without God: Religious struggle as terror management system breakdown in the terminally ill. Psychological Science, 19, 628-632.
Johnson, B. T., Carey, M. P., Chaudoir, S. R., & Reid, A. E. (2006). Risk reduction for persons living with Human Immunodeficiency Virus: Research synthesis of randomized controlled trials, 1993-2004. Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes, 41, 642-650.
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