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Joanna Lewis

Joanna Lewis

Assistant Professor

Psychological Sciences
Education and Behavioral Sciences

Contact Information

Phone
970-351-2168
Office
McKee Hall 14P
Mailing Address
University of Northern Colorado
Psychological Sciences
Campus Box 94
Greeley, CO 80639

Education

Ph.D. – University of Central Florida, USA

B.S. – Colorado State University, USA

Professional/Academic Experience

Dr. Joanna E. Lewis is an Assistant Professor at the University of Northern Colorado. She received her doctorate from the University of Central Florida in 2018 in Human Factors and Cognitive Psychology. During her education, she was a National Science Foundation Graduate Fellow.  She joined the faculty of Psychological Sciences in 2018. She came to UNC because she wanted to join a university where mentorship and scholarship were strongly valued. She has overseen graduate and undergraduate students' independent projects. All of her undergraduate mentees have continued on to doctoral programs.

Research/Areas of Interest

Dr. Lewis’ research primarily focuses on human selective visual attention. Her work on attention primarily addresses attentional capture in visual search (i.e., look for a target object among distractors), and specifically for dynamic singletons. For example, do we prioritize objects that abruptly appear or loom towards us? She also evaluates the role of anxiety and threat perception in these visual processes. She also conducts research on changes in cognition during normal aging, the impact of technology on human performance, and cybersecurity categorization.

She has taught undergraduate courses on Research Methods in Psychology and Sensation & Perception.

Publications/Creative Works

Publications

Sarno, D. M., Lewis, J. E., & Neider, M. B. (2019). Depth benefits now loading: Visual working memory capacity and benefits in 3-D. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 81(3) 684-693.

Lewis, J. E. & Neider, M. B. (2017). Designing Wearable Technology for an Aging Population. Ergonomics in Design, 25(3), 4-10.

Lewis, J. E. & Neider, M. B. (2016). Through the looking (Google) glass: The impacts of heads-up displays on visual attention. Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 1(1), 1-13.

Shaw, A., Kenski, K., Stromer-Galley, J., Martey, R., Clegg, B., Lewis, J., Folkestad, J. and Strzalkowski, T. (2015). Serious Efforts At Bias Reduction: The Effects Of Digital Games And Avatar Customization On Three Cognitive Biases. Journal of Media Psychology, doi:10.1027/1864-1105/a000174.

Lewis, J. E., & Neider, M. B. (2015). Fixation Not Required: Characterizing Oculomotor Attention Capture for Looming Stimuli. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 77(7), 2247-2259.

Conference Proceedings

Lewis, J. E., Sarno, D.M., Hess A., Mishler, A. D., & Neider, M. B. (2017). You Can’t Catch ‘Em All: Inattention During Active Mobile Gaming.  Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting. Austin, TX: HFES.

Sarno, D. M., Lewis, J. E., Bohil, C. J., Shoss, M. K., & Neider, M. B. (2017, September). Who are Phishers luring?: A Demographic Analysis of Those Susceptible to Fake Emails. Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting. Austin, TX: HFES.

Schroeder, B. L., Leyva, K., Stowers, K., Lewis, J.E., & Sims, V. K. (2016). Investigating Usability, User Preferences, Ergonomics, and Player Performance in StarCraft II. Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting. Washington D.C.: HFES.

Clegg, B. A., Martey, R. M., Stromer-Galley, J., Kenski, K., Saulnier, T., Folkestad, J. E., McLaren, E., Shaw, A., Lewis, J.E. & Strzalkowski, T. (2014). Game-based Training to Mitigate Three Forms of Cognitive Bias. ProceedingsInterservice/Industry Training, Simulation, and Education Conference. Orlando, FL: I/ITSEC.

Lewis, J. E., & Neider, M. B. (2013). Do Looming Objects Capture Overt Attention? Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting. San Diego, CA: HFES.

Hill, A., Bohil, C., Lewis, J., & Neider, M. (2013). Prefrontal Cortex Activity During Walking While Multitasking An fNIR Study. Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting. San Diego, CA: HFES.

Gutzwiller, R. S., Clegg, B. A., Smith, C. A. P., Lewis, J. E., & Patterson, J. D. (2013). Predicted Failure Alerting in a Supervisory Control Task Does Not Always Enhance Performance. Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting. San Diego, CA: HFES.