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Dr. Erik Moody
Assistant Professor of Psychology
Bio
My background in basic learning and memory phenomenon has led me the use of learning strategies in the classroom that have been empirically derived through years of research. I completed my Ph.D. with David Riccio at Kent State University where we investigated the process by which old memories are reactivated and modified. At my Post-doc with Mark Bouton at the University of Vermont we investigated the effects of context change on the return of a previously extinguished behavior. These highly controlled laboratory experiments provide important guidance that I try to incorporate in the courses I offer as a college professor. I am specifically interested in implementing these established learning phenomenon with new techniques now available because of emerging education technology.
The emerging field of Learning Analytics is just starting to harness the power of educational technology and data to improve learning outcomes in a number of ways. I have been focusing on the use of data collected within the period of a course allowing an instructor to action quickly. Data, which is quickly collected, analyzed, and reported can allow an instructor to intervene with a struggling student, or go over a concept that a large portion of the class is not understanding. I have been investigating a number of different approaches that harness the power of sophisticated courseware technology in a small traditional classroom setting. Automated data collection and dashboard reports provide me with the data I need to quickly assess the effectiveness of new strategies now possible because of innovative courseware.
As a member of the Online Academic Analytic Initiative OAAI, a Marist based effort to investigate the use of Learning Analytic technology in higher education, I contributed to a multi-institution effort to study the effectiveness of early alerts and interventions in college students with a goal of improving learning outcomes.
Education
Ph.D., Experimental Psychology (2003): Kent State University
Doctoral Dissertation: Modifiability of Old Memory is Determined by Level of Reactivation.
M.A., Experimental Psychology (2000): Kent State University
Master's Thesis: Is State-Dependent-Retention Induced by Corticosterone?
B.A. Psychology (1991): Manhattanville College
Research Interests / Areas of Focus
I am particularly interested in the use of educational data to identify students at risk of failure and using the data to best match an approach to help that student succeed considering their circumstances. Even an instructor with small class size in a traditional sit down course can benefit from the additional information provide through quality courseware systems.
Selected Publications
Jayaprakash S., Moody E., LaurÃa E., Regan J., Baron J., (2014) "Early Alert of Academically At-Risk Students: An Open Source Analytics Initiative", Journal of Learning Analytics 1,1, 6-47.
Lauria, E., Moody, E., Jayaprakash, S., Jonnalagadda, N., & Baron, J. (2013). Open Academic Analytics Initiative: Initial Research Findings. Procedings of the 3rd international Conference on Learning Analytics and Knowledge. ACM New York, NY, USA, 150-154 doi:10.1145/2460296.2460325
Moody, E. W., Sunsay, C., & Bouton, M. E. (2006). Priming and trial spacing in extinction: Effects on extinction performance, spontaneous recovery, and reinstatement in appetitive conditioning. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 59(5), 809-829.
Bouton, M. E., Garcia-Gutierrez, A., Zilski, J., & Moody, E. W. (2006). Extinction in multiple contexts does not necessarily make extinction less vulnerable to relapse. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 44, 983-994.
Bouton, M. E., Woods, A. M., Moody, E. W., Sunsay, C., & Garcia-Guitierrez, A. (2006). Counteracting the context-dependence of extinction: Relapse and some tests of possible methods of relapse prevention. In M. G. Craske, D. Hermans, & D. ansteenwegen (Eds.), Fear and learning: Basic science to clinical application. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
Bouton, M.E. & Moody, E.W. Memory Processes in Classical Conditioning. (2004). Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, Special issue: Neurobiology of Cognition in Laboratory Animals: Challenges and Opportunities, 28(7), 663-674.
Santucci, A. C., Mercado, M., Bettica A. & Moody, E.W. Residual behavioral and neuroanatomical effects of short-term chronic ethanol consumption in rats. (2004). Cognitive Brain Research, 20(3), 449-461.
Anderson, A.J., Barnes, G.W., Briggs, J.F., Ashton, K.M., Moody, E.W. Joynes, R.L., & Riccio, D.C. (2004). Effects of ontogeny on Performance of rats on a Novel-Object-Recognition Task. Psychological Reports, 94, 437-443.
Riccio, D.C., Millin, P.M., & Moody, E.W. (2002). Reconsolidation Reconsidered. Integrative Physiological & Behavioral Science, 37(4), 245-253.
Millin, P.M., Moody, E.W., & Riccio, D.C. (2001). Interpretations of Retrograde Amnesia: Old Problems Redux. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 2(1), 68-70.
Santucci A.C., Moody E.W., & Demetriades, J. (1995). Effects of Scopolamine on Spatial Working Memory in Rats Pretreated with the Serotonergic Depleter p-Chloroamphetamine. Neurobiology of Learning and Memory, 63, 286-290.
Selected Presentations
Moody E., Regan J., LaurÃa E., Jayaprakash S., Baron J., (May, 2014). Open Academic Analytics Initiative, a Lesson Learned. Poster presentation. 26th Meeting of the Association of Psychological Science May 2014, San Francisco, Ca.
Holmsten A, Swan M., E Moody (April, 2014). Effect of Retention Interval on False Memory. Talk given at the Hudson Valley Undergraduate Psychology Conference at Dominican College, Nyack, NY.