Alita Mobley Data-verified
Affiliation confirmed via AI analysis of OpenAlex, ORCID, and web sources.
Researcher
faculty
Research Areas
Links
Biography and Research Information
OverviewAI-generated summary
Alita Mobley's research investigates the intersection of alcohol consumption, emotions, and social behaviors, with a particular focus on sexual assault prevention and facial emotion recognition. Her work has explored how acute alcohol intoxication influences an individual's ability to accurately perceive emotions in others, examining gender as a moderating factor in these associations. Mobley has also examined the transition of cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) to virtual administration, identifying its strengths and barriers. She has published 13 articles, accumulating 106 citations and an h-index of 5. Mobley collaborates with several researchers at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville, including Lindsay S. Ham, Ana J. Bridges, Jacquelyn D. Wiersma‐Mosley, and Isabel F. Augur.
Metrics
- h-index: 5
- Publications: 13
- Citations: 108
Selected Publications
-
Gender moderates the association between acute alcohol intoxication and facial emotion recognition in a naturalistic field study setting (2021)
-
858 Transitions to Virtual Administration of CBT-I: Strengths & Barriers (2021)
-
Alcohol's Effects on Bystander Intervention Strategies to Prevent Sexual Assault (2021)
Collaboration Network
Top Collaborators
- Alcohol's Effects on Bystander Intervention Strategies to Prevent Sexual Assault
- Gender moderates the association between acute alcohol intoxication and facial emotion recognition in a naturalistic field study setting
- Alcohol's Effects on Bystander Intervention Strategies to Prevent Sexual Assault
- Alcohol's Effects on Bystander Intervention Strategies to Prevent Sexual Assault
- Alcohol's Effects on Bystander Intervention Strategies to Prevent Sexual Assault
- Alcohol's Effects on Bystander Intervention Strategies to Prevent Sexual Assault
- Alcohol's Effects on Bystander Intervention Strategies to Prevent Sexual Assault
- 858 Transitions to Virtual Administration of CBT-I: Strengths & Barriers
- 858 Transitions to Virtual Administration of CBT-I: Strengths & Barriers
- 858 Transitions to Virtual Administration of CBT-I: Strengths & Barriers
- Gender moderates the association between acute alcohol intoxication and facial emotion recognition in a naturalistic field study setting
Similar Researchers
Based on overlapping research topics