James Juergensen

Dr. James Juergensen - profile photo

Dr. James Juergensen

Associate Professor

Psychological Sciences & Counseling

jejuergensen@ysu.edu

  • 2014

    Ph D, Experimental Psychology

    Case Western Reserve University

    Dissertation/Thesis Title — "How Reappraising Approach-Motivated Positive Affect Can Alter Automatic Action-Tendencies, Breadth of Attention, and Future Behavior"

  • 2012

    MA, Experimental Pscyhology

    Case Western Reserve University

    Dissertation/Thesis Title — "How Approach-Motived Positive Affect and Emotion Regulation Alter Attentional Focus and Decision-Making"

  • 2009

    BA, Psychology

    Youngstown State University

    Dissertation/Thesis Title — "The Effects of Differing Motives and Social Influences on Poker Playing Style"

  • 2019

    "Reward sensitivity relates to automatic approach motivation for exercise: Preliminary validity for the Exercise-Approach Avoidance Task."

    C. May, J. Juergensen

    Open Science Journal of Psychology, volume 6, issue 2, p. 24-28

  • 2018

    "Stop pushing me away: Facebook addiction relates to implicit approach motivation for Facebook stimuli."

    J. Juergensen, C. Leckfor

    Psychological Reports

  • 2018

    "More Than Money: Experienced Positive Affect Reduces Risk-Taking Behavior on a Real-World Gambling Task."

    J. Juergensen, J. Weaver, C. May, H. Demaree

    Frontiers in Psychology, volume 9, issue 2116

  • 2016

    "New Challenges to Active Learning Initiatives"

    J. Juergensen, T. Oestreich, Y. Brian, M. Kenney

    Educause Review

  • 2016

    "Yum, cake!: How reward sensitivity relates to automatic approach motivation for dessert food images."

    C. May, J. Juergensen, H. Demaree

    Personality and Individual Differences, issue 90, p. 265-268

  • 2015

    "Approach-motived positive affect and emotion regulation alter global-local focus and food choice"

    J. Juergensen, H. Demaree

    Motivation and Emotion, issue 39, p. 580-588

  • 2015

    "Active Learning at Case Western University"

    J. Juergensen, T. Oestreich, Y. Brian, M. Kenney, K. Skapin, W. Shapiro

    Educause Review

  • 2014

    "A fallacious “Gambler’s Fallacy”?"

    H. Demaree, J. Weaver, J. Juergensen

    Cognition, p. 168-170

  • 2013

    "Surprise is predicted by event probability, outcome valence, outcome meaningfulness, and gender"

    J. Juergensen, J. Weaver, K. Burns, P. Knutson, J. Butler, H. Demaree

    Motivation and Emotion

  • 2012

    "). Subjective time perception and behavioral activation strength predict delay of gratification ability"

    A. Corvi, J. Juergensen, J. Weaver, H. Demaree

    Motivation and Emotion, p. 483-490