Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Elizabeth B. Rush is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Elizabeth B. Rush.


Child Development | 2014

Stress, Interviewer Support, and Children's Eyewitness Identification Accuracy

Elizabeth B. Rush; Jodi A. Quas; Ilona S. Yim; Mariya Nikolayev; Steven E. Clark; Rakel P. Larson

Few studies have investigated how stress affects eyewitness identification capabilities across development, and no studies have investigated whether retrieval context in conjunction with stress affects accuracy. In this study, one hundred fifty-nine 7- to 8- and 12- to 14-year-olds completed a high- or low-stress laboratory protocol during which they interacted with a confederate. Two weeks later, they attempted to identify the confederate in a photographic lineup. The lineup administrator behaved in either a supportive or a nonsupportive manner. Participants who experienced the high-stress event and were questioned by a supportive interviewer were most accurate in rejecting target-absent lineups. Results have implications for debates about effects of stress on eyewitness recall, how best to elicit accurate identifications in children, and developmental changes in episodic mnemonic processes.


Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2015

Experimental manipulation of the Trier Social Stress Test-Modified (TSST-M) to vary arousal across development.

Ilona S. Yim; Jodi A. Quas; Elizabeth B. Rush; Douglas A. Granger; Nadine Skoluda

Reliable laboratory protocols manipulating the intensity of biobehavioral arousal for children are uncommon, and those available have minimal converging evidence of their efficacy in manipulating arousal across multiple biological systems. This report presents two studies of the efficacy of the modified Trier Social Stress Test (TSST-M). In Study 1, sixty-three 7-15-year olds, and 19 young adults (18-25 yrs) completed the TSST-M. Comparable reactivity across age groups was observed for salivary cortisol, salivary alpha-amylase (sAA), pre-ejection period (PEP) and respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA), whereas self-reported stress was higher in adults compared to children. In Study 2, eighty-four 7-8-year olds and eighty-six 12-15-year olds were randomly assigned to a standard or low-stress TSST-M condition. Cortisol and self-reported stress responses were higher in the standard compared to the low-stress condition. In contrast, sAA and PEP were higher in the low-stress condition and RSA responses were comparable between the two TSST-M conditions. In addition, age group differences emerged in Study 2, though never in conjunction with the TSST-M manipulation. To test, refine, and advance theory about the implications of stress for child development, laboratory tasks that manipulate and enable assessment of biobehavioral arousal in children are needed.


Child Maltreatment | 2014

Disclosure Suspicion Bias and Abuse Disclosure Comparisons Between Sexual and Physical Abuse

Elizabeth B. Rush; Thomas D. Lyon; Elizabeth C. Ahern; Jodi A. Quas

Prior research has found that children disclosing physical abuse appear more reticent and less consistent than children disclosing sexual abuse. Although this has been attributed to differences in reluctance, it may also be due to differences in the process by which abuse is suspected and investigated. Disclosure may play a larger role in arousing suspicions of sexual abuse, while other evidence may play a larger role in arousing suspicions of physical abuse. As a result, children who disclose physical abuse in formal investigations may be doing so for the first time, and they may be more reluctant to provide details of the abuse. We examined abuse disclosure and evidence in comparable samples of court-substantiated physical (n = 33) and sexual (n = 28) abuse. Consistent with predictions, the likelihood that the child had disclosed abuse before an investigation began was lower in physical (27%) than that in sexual (67%) abuse cases, and there was more nondisclosure evidence of abuse in physical abuse cases. These findings have implications for understanding the dynamics and meaning of disclosure in cases involving different types of abuse.


Memory | 2016

Stress and emotional valence effects on children's versus adolescents’ true and false memory

Jodi A. Quas; Elizabeth B. Rush; Ilona S. Yim; Robin S. Edelstein; Henry Otgaar; Tom Smeets

Despite considerable interest in understanding how stress influences memory accuracy and errors, particularly in children, methodological limitations have made it difficult to examine the effects of stress independent of the effects of the emotional valence of to-be-remembered information in developmental populations. In this study, we manipulated stress levels in 7–8- and 12–14-year-olds and then exposed them to negative, neutral, and positive word lists. Shortly afterward, we tested their recognition memory for the words and false memory for non-presented but related words. Adolescents in the high-stress condition were more accurate than those in the low-stress condition, while childrens accuracy did not differ across stress conditions. Also, among adolescents, accuracy and errors were higher for the negative than positive words, while in children, word valence was unrelated to accuracy. Finally, increases in childrens and adolescents’ cortisol responses, especially in the high-stress condition, were related to greater accuracy but not false memories and only for positive emotional words. Findings suggest that stress at encoding, as well as the emotional content of to-be-remembered information, may influence memory in different ways across development, highlighting the need for greater complexity in existing models of true and false memory formation.


Developmental Psychobiology | 2011

The role of cortisol reactivity in children's and adults' memory of a prior stressful experience

Jodi A. Quas; Ilona S. Yim; Robin S. Edelstein; Larry Cahill; Elizabeth B. Rush


Biological Psychology | 2012

Hypothalamic pituitary adrenal axis and sympathetic activation: joint predictors of memory in children, adolescents, and adults.

Jodi A. Quas; Ilona S. Yim; Elizabeth B. Rush; Mariya Sumaroka


Memory | 2014

Effects of stress on memory in children and adolescents: Testing causal connections

Jodi A. Quas; Elizabeth B. Rush; Ilona S. Yim; Mariya Nikolayev


Geriatric Nursing | 2014

Physical activity and depressive symptoms in older adults

Heeyoung Lee; Jung-Ah Lee; Jaspreet S. Brar; Elizabeth B. Rush; Christina J. Jolley


Legal and Criminological Psychology | 2017

The effects of the putative confession and parent suggestion on children's disclosure of a minor transgression

Elizabeth B. Rush; Stacia N. Stolzenberg; Jodi A. Quas; Thomas D. Lyon


Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2013

Stress at encoding, context at retrieval, and children's narrative content.

J. Zoe Klemfuss; Helen M. Milojevich; Ilona S. Yim; Elizabeth B. Rush; Jodi A. Quas

Collaboration


Dive into the Elizabeth B. Rush's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jodi A. Quas

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ilona S. Yim

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Thomas D. Lyon

University of Southern California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Heeyoung Lee

University of Pittsburgh

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jung-Ah Lee

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge