Summary
Griffin Dugan is a Master's student in Psychology at Brandeis University specializing in language processing and cognition, currently conducting research in the Anne Berry Neurochemistry and Cognition Lab. He has a strong research foundation from an honors thesis in Arthur Wingfield’s lab and multiple research assistant roles across Brandeis memory, cognition, and CARD psychology labs. Griffin combines theoretical interest in language processing with hands-on experimental experience studying memory and social interaction, aiming to translate findings into deeper models of human behavior. With 11 years of cumulative research and related experience, he is preparing to pursue a PhD to advance his expertise and contribute to language cognition scholarship. Colleagues note his curiosity-driven approach and knack for connecting social-behavioral questions to rigorous experimental design. Based in Waltham, MA, he blends undergraduate breadth with focused graduate-level inquiry into how people think, behave, and interact.
11 years of coding experience