Topic
- addiction
- adrenal cancer
- alcohol
- Alzheimer's
- asthma
- biobank
- breast cancer
- cancer
- cessation
- chemotherapy
- colorectal cancer
- diabetes
- disease management
- gastrointestinal illness
- genetics
- health insurance
- hearing loss
- hearing protection
- heart disease
- HIV / AIDS
- HPV
- injury
- liver
- lung cancer
- medical history
- medication adherence
- mental health
- nutrition
- obesity
- oral health
- organ donation
- organ quality
- organ transplant
- other
- ovarian cancer
- physical activity
- post-treatment
- prevention
- prostate cancer
- quality of life
- recurrence
- screening
- skin cancer
- sleep safety
- smoking
- STD
- stroke
- survivorship
- symptoms
- treatment
- vaccination
- weight loss
Audience
- adolescents
- adults
- African Americans
- alumni
- caregivers
- children
- college students
- farmers
- fraternities and sororities
- girls
- health care providers
- high risk
- HMO members
- Latinos
- LGBT
- Medicare enrollees
- men
- mothers
- non-smokers
- older adults
- parents
- patients
- people living with HIV/AIDS
- research volunteers
- school age children
- smokers
- survivors
- transplant recipients
- transplant waiting list
- underserved
- veterans
- women
- young adults
Setting
Technology
Email: hchua@umich.edu
Affiliations
Affiliations
- Cisco Systems, Inc. (Principal Psychological Scientist/User Research Scientist)
Hannah Faye C. Chua, PhD
Hannah Faye C. Chua, PhD, is a Lead Research Scientist at Cisco Systems, Inc. Prior to joining Cisco, she was a Research Assistant Professor at the University of Michigan School of Public Health. Dr. Chua is a social cognitive psychologist/neuroscientist whose research interests include: a) examining the mechanisms and efficacy of health communication tools, b) investigating the interaction of emotions and decision making, and c) identifying and understanding cross-cultural differences in cognition, using a combination of behavioral, neuroimaging, and eyetracking techniques.
Associated Projects (5) +
Associated Publications (5) +
- Amygdala response to smoking-cessation messages mediates the effects of serotonin transporter gene variation on quitting (2012)
- Self-related neural response to tailored smoking-cessation messages predicts quitting (2011)
- Methodologic and design issues in patient-centered e-health research (2010)
- Neural responses to elements of a web-based smoking cessation program (2009)
- Neural correlates of message tailoring and self-relatedness in smoking cessation programming (2008)

