Wythe Whiting Professor of Cognitive and Behavioral Science

Wythe Whiting

Parmly Hall 133
540-458-8210
whitingw@wlu.edu

Education

Ph.D. Experimental Psychology, Georgia Institute of Technology
B.S. Psychology, Birmingham-Southern College

Research

I am a co-investigator with Dr. Karla Murdock in the Technology, Health, and Cognition Lab. Our lab explores the intersection of Technology (e.g., smartphone usage), Health (e.g., sleep, heart rate, etc.), and Cognition (e.g., attention and distractibility). Currently, we are investigating relationships between social media use and health outcomes. We maintain an active lab involving several students throughout the year, and also engage in campus outreach programs.

Teaching

Cognition (CBSC 112)
Evolutionary Psychology (CBSC 215)
Research Design and Analysis (CBSC 250)
Attention (CBSC 254)
Advanced Methods in Attention Research (CBSC 354)

Selected Publications

Whiting, W.L., & Murdock, K.K. (2021). Notification Alert! Effects of auditory text alerts on attention and heart rate variability across three developmental periods. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology. Advanced online publication. https://doi.org/10.1177/17470218211041851

Whiting, W.L., & Murdock, K.K. (2016). Emerging Adults’ Sleep Patterns and Attentional Capture: The Pivotal Role of Consistency. Cognitive Processing, 17, 155-62.

Whiting, W.L., Sample, C. & Hagan, S. (2014). Top-Down Processing Modulates Older Adults' Susceptibility to Noise. Aging, Neuropsychology, and Cognition, 21, 370-385.

Johnson, D.R., & Whiting, W.L. (2013). Detecting subtle expressions: Older adults demonstrate automatic and controlled positive response bias in emotional perception. Psychology and Aging, 28, 172-178.

Costello, M.C., Madden, D.J., Mitroff, S.R., & Whiting, W.L. (2010). Age-Related Decline of Visual Processing Components in Change Detection. Psychology and Aging, 25, 356-368.

Whiting, W.L., Madden, D.J., & Babcock, K. (2007). Overriding Age Differences in Attentional Capture with Top-down Processing. Psychology and Aging, 22, 223-232.