People

Claire E. Smith

Claire Smith

Assistant Professor

CONTACT

Office: PCD 4151
Phone: 813/974-
Email

LINKS

BIO

Dr. Claire E. Smith is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Psychology and Deputy Director of the Sunshine Education & Research Center. She earned her Ph.D. In Industrial and Organizational (I/O) Psychology from Bowling Green State University, where she researched employee recovery from work stress and burnout. She completed her postdoctoral training at the 51ÔÚÏß’s School of Aging Studies, studying the connection between work, health behaviors (sleep, exercise), and long-term health outcomes as employees get older. Dr. Smith’s current research in occupational health psychology (OHP) connects these threads, aiming to answer the question: What are the biggest threats to modern workers aiming to live healthy, fulfilling, long lives, and how can we move toward effective solutions?

EDUCATION

  • 08/2021     Bowling Green State University: Ph.D. in I/O Psychology 
  • 08/2016     Georgia Institute of Technology: B.S. in Psychology 

RESEARCH

Our lab studies a variety of topics within occupational health psychology (OHP), spanning physical and mental health. Current topics of interest include the work-life interface (e.g., work as it relates to sleep, exercise, and romantic relationships in addition to work-family) and the long-term impact of work on health as we age (e.g., chronic conditions, mortality), with special attention to health disparities and the well-being of marginalized groups (e.g., racial/ethnic and sexual orientation minorities).

TEACHING

Industrial-Organizational Psychology, Occupational Health Psychology

SPECIALTY AREA

Industrial-Organizational

SELECTED PUBLICATIONS

*Smith, C.E., Lee, S., Brooks, M.E., Barratt, C.L., & Yang, H. (2023). Working and working out: Decision-making inputs connect daily work stress to physical exercise.  Journal of Occupational Health Psychology, 28(3), 160–173. https://doi.org/10.1037/ocp0000349.
           
*Selected as an APA Editor’s Choice Paper

Smith, C.E., Lee, S., & Allen, T.D. (2023). Hard work makes it hard to sleep: Job characteristics link to multidimensional sleep phenotypes. Journal of Business & Psychology. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10869-023-09882-y

Lawson, K. M., Lee, S., Smith, C.E., & Thiem, K. (2023). Staying in STEM: Work-to-life conflict and retention-related outcomes in a male-dominated occupation. Gender in Management. https://doi.org/10.1108/GM-10-2022-0326

Smith, C.E., Wayne, J.H., Matthews, R., Lance, C., Griggs, T., & Pattie, M. (2022). Stability and change in levels of work-family conflict: A multi-study, longitudinal investigation. Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology, 95(1), 1-35. https://doi.org/10.1111/joop.12372

Smith, C.E., Matthews, R.A., Mills, M., Hong, Y., & Sim, S. (2021). Organizational benefits of onboarding contingent workers: An anchoring model approach. Journal of Business and Psychology, 37, 525-541. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10869-021-09757-0

Smith, C.E., Barratt, C.L., & Hirvo, A. (2020). Burned out or engaged at work? The role of self-regulatory personality profiles. Stress and Health, 37(3), 572-587. https://doi/ 10.1002/smi.3015