Stephanie Carpenter

Stephanie CarpenterPosition

Current: Post-doctoral fellow, Niedenthal Emotions Lab, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Former Ph.D. student

Curriculum vitae
website

Education

B. A. in Psychology from the University of Oregon (2004)
M. S. in Social Psychology from the University of Oregon (2007)
Ph.D. in Social Psychology and Marketing from the University of Michigan (2015)

Research interests

I study how affective and cognitive processes influence judgment and decision making. My current research projects examine the mechanisms underlying difficult decision making, how changes in affective processing across the adult lifespan influence choice, and how emotion regulation influences decision making.

Publications

Yoon, Carolyn, Ian Skurnik, and Stephanie M. Carpenter (2013). Aging and consumption. In R. Belk and A. Ruvio (Eds.), Routledge Companion to Identity and Consumption, Taylor & Francis, New York, NY.

Carpenter, Stephanie M. and Carolyn Yoon (2012). Aging and consumer decision making. In G. R. Samanez-Larkin (Ed.), Decision Making Over The Life Span, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, New York, NY, E1-E12.

Carpenter, Stephanie M., Ellen Peters, Alice M. Isen, and Daniel Västfjäll (2012). Positive feelings facilitate working memory and complex decision making among older adults. Cognition and Emotion, 27, 184-192.

Peters, Ellen, Daniel Romer, Paul Slovic, Kathleen Hall Jamieson, Leisha Wharfield, C.K. Mertz, and Stephanie M. Carpenter (2010). The impact and acceptability of Canadian-style cigarette warning labels among U.S. smokers and nonsmokers. In P. Slovic (Eds.) The Feeling of Risk, Taylor & Francis Group, New York, NY.

Peters, Ellen, Daniel Romer, Paul Slovic, Kathleen Hall Jamieson, Leisha Wharfield, C.K. Mertz, and Stephanie M. Carpenter (2007). The impact and acceptability of Canadian-style cigarette warning labels among U.S. smokers and nonsmokers. Nicotine & Tobacco Research, 9(4), 473-481.

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