
We are delighted to share the winners of the NCHAT Wave 3 Call for Items! The winners are contributing new important constructs to the next NCHAT survey including chosen families and support, the disclosure of suicidal ideation to one's partner, remote work, racial and LGBT attitudes and socialization practices, and time strain. There will also be updates and extensions to current measures, including caregiving, suicidal ideation, and gender expression. Check out the proposal titles and investigators below! Congratulations to our winners!
Investigating the Protective Role of Communal Coping in the Dyadic Association between Microaggressions and Suicidal Ideation
- Principal Investigator: Michael Curtis, Assistant Professor, University of Minnesota
Racial and LGBT Attitudes and Socialization Practices with NCHAT Couples
- Co-Principal Investigator: Juan Del Toro, Assistant Professor, University of Minnesota
- Co-Principal Investigator: Richard M. Lee, Professor, University of Minnesota
Gender Expression and Labor Ideologies as Moderators of Division of Labor and Relationship Quality in Same-Gender and Different-Gender Couples
- Principal Investigator: Benjamin Karney, Professor, UCLA
- Co-Investigator: Molly Smith, Graduate student, UCLA
Interdyadic Associations between Mental Health and Relational Dynamics
- Co-Principal Investigator: Heather Love, Assistant Professor, University of Alabama
- Co-Principal Investigator: Preston Morgan, Assistant Professor, Oklahoma State University
Experiencing Time Strain in Close Relationships and for Oneself: Expanding Assessments across Diverse Family Groups
- Co-Principal Investigator: Melissa Milkie, Professor, University of Toronto
- Co-Principal Investigator: Kei Nomaguchi, Professor, Bowling Green State University
- Co-Principal Investigator: Hope Xu Yan, Assistant Professor, Louisiana State University
Couples and Caregiving in NCHAT
- Principal Investigator: Sarah Patterson, Research Assistant Professor, University of Michigan
- Co-Investigator: Adriana Reyes, Assistant Professor, Cornell University
Measuring the Prevalence of Voluntary Kinship in the United States and its Health Implications for Sexual, Gender, and Racial/Ethnic Minorities
- Principal Investigator: Megan Reed, Assistant Professor, Emory University
How Remote Work Shapes Couples' Lives: The Interplay of Own and Spouse's Work Status, Time Use, Health, and Well-Being
- Principal Investigator: Emma Zang, Assistant Professor, Yale University
- Co-Investigator: Kelly Musick, Professor, Cornell University