Lindsey Robidas
- Interdisciplinary Behavioral Health Program Coordinator
Education
PhD, University of Arkansas
MA, University of Arkansas
BA, University of South Carolina
Selected Publications
Associated Adults: Prospective Person Memory and Retrospective Person Memory for Family Abducted Children. Journal of Police and Criminal Psychology. March 9, 2013.
The Effect of Presenting Multiple Images on Prospective Person Memory for Missing Children. Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition. December 1, 2012.
The Psychology of the Missing: Missing and Abducted Children. In R. Holliday & T. Marche (Eds.), Child Forensic Psychology (pp. 241–272). Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave MacMillan. January 1, 2012.
Missing and Abducted Children. In J.M. Lampinen & K. Sexton-Radek (Eds.), Protecting Children from Violence: Evidence-Based Interventions (pp. 129–165). New York: Psychology Press. January 1, 2010.
Background
Lindsey Robidas received her Ph.D. in Experimental Psychology from the University of Arkansas in 2013. Her research focused on Prospective Person Memory for missing children, adolescents and the elderly. Additionally, Dr. Robidas conducted research on jurors' perceptions, specifically in cases of child sexual abuse and true and false confessions during videotaped interrogations.
Dr. Robidas spent the last 10 years in program operations, focused on the development and educational needs of children. She currently coordinates the operations of a $2.4M grant from the Department of Health and Human Services in the Garland School of Social Work. This program focuses on behavioral health workforce training for MSW students with an emphasis on best practices in interdisciplinary health care settings. She and her husband, Matthew, recently relocated south of Waco and are enjoying getting to know the area with their two boys, Dylan and Lucas.