Kelly Dixon

Kelly Dixon

Kelly Dixon

Clinical Trauma Psychology, Ph.D. Candidate

Biography

Kelly Dixon is a second year graduate student in the trauma track of the Clinical Psychology Ph.D. program at UCCS, and a member of Colin T. Mahoney’s research lab. She earned her B.A. at the University of Michigan, majoring in Psychology and minoring in Gender and Health Studies. During her time there, she had the opportunity to conduct traumatic stress research involving cognitive flexibility and fear conditioning paradigms using animal models of PTSD through the Ann Arbor VA. Following her undergraduate year, she was awarded an international Bonderman Fellowship and traveled to 15 countries around the world learning about disaster response and mental health resources in developing countries, international migration, and refugee trauma. Prior to beginning graduate school, she also spent time working in the Developmental Research Laboratory at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus. Outside of the lab, Kelly enjoys mountaineering, running, baking, and travel.

Research Interests

Kelly’s research interests include global mental health, trajectories of adaptation in refugees, and mechanisms of risk and resilience following trauma. Her M.A. thesis examined the COVID-19 pandemic from a framework of traumatic stress, using theoretical perspectives from contexts of continuous trauma to inform methodological assessment of peritraumatic stress response and categorization of pandemic-related traumatic stress profiles via latent profile analysis.