Professor of Psychology; Phil F. Jenkins Research Professor of Depression, Eisenberg Family Depression Center
About
Additional Research Interests: Ambulatory Assessment
Aidan Wright will NOT be considering PhD applicants this fall (2024 for a start in 2025).
Aidan Wright, PhD is a Professor in the Department of Psychology and the Phil F. Jenkins Research Professor of Depression in the Eisenberg Family Depression Center at the University of Michigan. His work is motivated by the observation that who we are (our personality) is related to the problems we have (psychopathology, physical health problems, relationship difficulties). In his research he uses a number of approaches, but most often he conducts studies using ambulatory assessment (e.g., smartphone surveys, passive sensing) to study participants naturalistically and intensively in their daily lives. This is where the action is—where individuals brush up against important contexts and work to overcome the natural friction of life—and where the processes that drive our personalities and our problems are revealed. He interrogates the long strings of data that emerge from these studies using a variety of advanced quantitative approaches, including methods designed to develop personalized predictive models of psychopathology.
Recent Representative Publications:
Wright, A. G., Pincus, A. L., & Hopwood, C. J. (2023). Contemporary integrative interpersonal theory: Integrating structure, dynamics, temporal scale, and levels of analysis. Journal of Psychopathology and Clinical Science, 132(3), 263-276.
Ringwald, W. R., Forbes, M. K., & Wright, A. G. (2023). Meta-analysis of structural evidence for the Hierarchical Taxonomy of Psychopathology (HiTOP) model. Psychological medicine, 53(2), 533-546.
Wright, A. G., Ringwald, W. R., Hopwood, C. J., & Pincus, A. L. (2022). It’s time to replace the personality disorders with the interpersonal disorders. American Psychologist, 77(9), 1085-1099.
Kaurin, A., Dombrovski, A. Y., Hallquist, M. N., & Wright, A. G. (2022). Integrating a functional view on suicide risk into idiographic statistical models. Behaviour research and therapy, 150, 104012.
Wright, A. G., & Woods, W. C. (2020). Personalized models of psychopathology. Annual review of clinical psychology, 16, 49-74.