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BOHSI Staff and Contact Information
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The following contact information should be used for all staff:
Board on Human-Systems Integration
The National Academies
Keck Center
500 5th Street, NW – 11th Floor
Washington, D.C. 20001
Tel: (202) 334-2678 | Fax: (202) 334-2210
Email: BOHSI@nas.edu (BOHSI)
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- Barbara A. Wanchisen, Ph.D., Director, 202-334-2394
- Mary Ellen O’Connell, M.M.H.S., Deputy Director, 202-334-2607
- Jeanne Rivard, Ph.D., Senior Program Officer, 202-334-2967
- Cherie Chauvin, M.S., M.A., Program Officer, 202-334-2096
- Toby Warden, Ph.D., Program Officer, 202-334-3357
- Tina Winters, Associate Program Officer, 202-334-2808
- Matthew D. McDonough, M.A., Research Associate, 202-334-2213
- Moses M. Jackson, Program Associate, 202-334-2437
- Christie R. Jones, Program Associate, 202-334-3868
- Eric Chen, Senior Program Assistant, 202-334-1747
- Jatryce Jackson, Senior Program Assistant, 202-334-1743
- Renee L. Wilson Gaines, Senior Program Assistant, 202-334-2145
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Biographies
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Cherie Chauvin, M.S., M.A.
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Program Officer
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Cherie Chauvin joined BBCSS in 2008 as the Study Director for two studies involving national security. She possesses an MS in Strategic Intelligence from the National Defense Intelligence College (Washington, DC), an MA in International Relations from The Maxwell School at Syracuse University (Syracuse, NY), and a BS in Cognitive Science from the University of California at San Diego (La Jolla, CA). Previously, Ms. Chauvin was with the Department of Defense, Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), where her last position was Intelligence Officer and Platform Manager in the Directorate of Human Intelligence, Asia Pacific Division. As such, she supported military operations and liaison relationships in Japan, South Korea and Mongolia. During her time with DIA Ms Chauvin deployed to Afghanistan where she conducted intelligence collection operations in Kabul to answer strategic and tactical military intelligence requirements. In recognition of her service, she was awarded both the DIA Civilian Expeditionary Medal and the Department of the Army Commander’s Award for Civilian Service.
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Eric Chen
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Senior Program Assistant
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Eric received a B.A. in Biological Basis of Behavior from the University of Pennsylvania, where he also wrote about science and technology for the Daily Pennsylvanian. Before joining BBCSS and BOHSI, Eric worked in the financial services industry and owned a bicycle shop in Washington, DC. At the NRC, he provides support to projects involving transportation and human-systems integration. Having a desire to travel to South America, he is currently learning Spanish.
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Jatryce Jackson
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Senior Program Assistant
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Jatryce Jackson holds a B.A. in History and American Studies. Most recently, she obtained a master’s certificate in Documentary Filmmaking. Prior to coming to NAS, she taught in the Prince George’s County Public Schools system and in a private academy. Jatryce has a passion for social justice and education and would like to utilize her career to effect positive change in our society.
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Moses M. Jackson
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Program Associate
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Moses, a former editorial staff member at the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), rejoined the National Academies in 2011 after spending two years in Honduras as a Peace Corps volunteer. In his role there as Water and Sanitation Engineer, he managed a range of sustainable development programs aimed at improving health in underserved communities through increased access to potable water and sanitation systems. Prior to his Peace Corps service, Moses worked for three years as Senior Editorial Coordinator at PNAS, where he coordinated with NAS members and authors to facilitate manuscript quality control and peer review. Moses grew up in and around Washington DC and has since traveled extensively. He is proficient in Spanish and hopes to continue traveling whenever possible. He holds a B.A. from the University of Maryland and plans to pursue graduate studies in the DC area.
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Christie R. Jones
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Program Associate
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Christie Jones, a graduate of Bennett College with B.A cum laude in International Relations, came to BBCSS and BOHSI from the Executive Office of the National Academy, where she served as Meetings Associate for two years. She was responsible for the planning of the NAS Annual Meetings, NAS Regional meetings, and NAS Council Meetings. Prior to the National Academies, Christie worked in the meeting and events industry for nearly ten years for organizations such as American University and the US Holocaust Memorial Museum. The daughter of a retired U.S. Ambassador, she grew up in the Dominican Republic, Costa Rica, Thailand, and Belgium. She is fluent in Spanish and conversant in French and Thai.
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Matthew D. McDonough, M.A.
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Research Associate
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Matthew D. McDonough is a graduate of The George Washington University with an M.A. in anthropology and a concentration in international development. In six years working at the NRC he has staffed the Board on Life Sciences, the Board on Behavioral, Cognitive, and Sensory Sciences, the Board on Human-Systems Integration, and the Board on Children, Youth, and Families. In addition to assisting with the work of BBCSS and BOHSI, he currently provides support to the External Evaluation of NIDRR and Its Grantees. He has supported the development of many reports, such as Guidelines for Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research, Human-Systems Integration in the Design Process: A New Look, Human Behavior in Military Contexts, Early Childhood Assessment: Why, What, and How, and Intelligence Analysis: Behavioral and Social Scientific Foundations. The Red Sox are the best team ever.
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Mary Ellen O’Connell, M.M.H.S.
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Deputy Director
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Mary Ellen O’Connell has a B.A. (with distinction) from Cornell University and a Masters in the management of human services from the Heller School for Social Policy and Management at Brandeis University. She has served as study director for five consensus studies at the National Research Council: on prevention of mental disorders and substance abuse, international education and foreign languages, ethical considerations for research on housing-related health hazards involving children, reducing underage drinking, and assessing and improving children’s health. She also served as study director for the Committee on Standards of Evidence and the Quality of Behavioral and Social Science Research, a DBASSE-wide strategic planning effort; developed standalone workshops on welfare reform and children and gun violence; and facilitated meetings of the national coordinating committee of the Key National Indicators Initiative. She came to DBASSE from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), where she spent eight years in the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, most recently as director of state and local initiatives. Prior to HHS, she worked at the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development on homeless policy and program design issues and for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts as the director of field services.
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Jeanne Rivard, Ph.D.
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Senior Program Officer
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Jeanne Rivard earned a Ph.D. in Social Work at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where she received a National Research Service Award from NIMH (F31, MH11552) to conduct her dissertation study investigating factors promoting change in interagency collaboration. She also has a M.S.W. degree (University of South Carolina) and a M.S.Ed. (Mount St. Mary's College, Los Angeles, CA). While on the faculty of the Columbia University School of Social Work, her research included a developmental study examining the implementation and intermediate outcomes of a trauma-focused intervention for youth (R21 MH62896) and an evaluation of the implementation and outcomes of an interagency initiative designed to integrate vocational and supportive housing services for homeless persons with mental illness, substance abuse, HIV, and other disabilities. Before coming to DBASSE she worked at the National Association of State Mental Health Program Directors Research Institute where she led initiatives to promote the dissemination of evidence-based practices, was a team leader on the impact component of a cross-site evaluation of a federal child trauma initiative, and coordinated pilot studies to increase the utilization of multi-state administrative datasets to address mental health policy questions. At DBASSE Jeanne will be working with the Committee on the external evaluation of National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research (NIDRR)-funded research and development grants.
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Barbara A. Wanchisen, Ph.D.
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Director, Board on Behavioral, Cognitive, and Sensory Sciences
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Director, Board on Human-Systems Integration
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Barbara A. Wanchisen received a B.A. in English and Philosophy from Bloomsburg University in Pennsylvania, an M.A. in English from Villanova University, and her Ph.D. in Experimental Psychology from Temple University. She is a long-standing member of the Psychonomic Society, American Psychological Association (fellow, Division 25), Association for Behavior Analysis - International, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. She has served on the editorial boards of the Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior and The Behavior Analyst while also serving as a guest reviewer of a number of other journals in experimental psychology. From November 2001 until April 2008, Wanchisen was the executive director of the Federation of Behavioral, Psychological, & Cognitive Sciences in Washington, DC, a non-profit advocacy organization. In 2004, she was instrumental in the founding of the Federation's Foundation for the Advancement of Behavioral and Brain Sciences, which assumed the educational mission of the Federation. Previously, Wanchisen was Professor in the Department of Psychology and Director of the college-wide Honors Program at Baldwin-Wallace College in Cleveland, Ohio.
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Toby Warden , Ph.D.
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Program Officer
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Toby Warden has a Ph.D. in Social Ecology with an emphasis on Environmental Analysis and Design from the University of California, Irvine. Her doctoral research applied quantitative and qualitative methodologies to examine the rise of the U.S. Mayors Climate Protection Agreement. She has a B.A. in History from the University of California, Irvine where she graduated Magna Cum Laude and Phi Beta Kappa. Prior to joining BOHSI, she worked as a Program Officer with the Board on Atmospheric Sciences and Climate of the National Research Council. She served as study director for Climate Stabilization Targets: Emissions, Concentrations, and Impacts over Decades to Millennia and When Weather Matters: Science and Service to Meet Critical Societal Needs. She has nearly a decade’s worth of experience as a program manager and community organizer in the fields of public health and youth advocacy in Boston, Massachusetts.
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Renée L. Wilson Gaines
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Senior Program Assistant
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Renée L. Wilson Gaines is a graduate of Howard University with a B.A. in Criminal Justice/Sociology. She plans on entering a masters’ program in a business or technology related-field in 2011. Renée joins BBCSS and BOHSI after more than 32 years of law office, non profit, and academia experience. Since joining the NRC, she has staffed the Committee on Unifying Social Frameworks, the Committee on the Role of Human Factors in Home Healthcare, the Committee on Field Evaluation of Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences-Based Methods and Tools for Intelligence and Counterintelligence, and the Panel to Review O*NET. She has supported studies such as Sociocultural Data to Accomplish Department of Defense Missions, The Role of Human Factors in Home Health Care, Field Evaluation in the Intelligence and Counterintelligence Context, and A Database for a Changing Economy: Review of the Occupational Information Network (O*NET). Renée is a die-hard native New Yorker who considers herself an ambassador for the City.
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Tina Winters
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Associate Program Officer
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Tina Winters has returned to the Academies to work with the Committee on the External Evaluation of NIDRR and Its Grantees. Prior to rejoining the Academies, she worked on an initiative to spread innovative health care practices and with the coordinating center for a medical registry on islet cell transplantation. In her previous tenure at the Academies, she worked with the Committee on Social Science Evidence for Use and has supported numerous studies, including Scientific Research in Education, Knowing What Students Know: The Science and Design of Educational Assessment, and the National Science Education Standards.
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