Ashley Hampton, B.A.

 

Email: ashleyhampton@temple.edu

Bio: Ashley is currently a third year graduate student in the clinical program, working with Dr. Deborah Drabick. She received her B.A. in psychology in 2009 from the College of William & Mary. Ashley's research interests include the treatment and etiology of substance abuse and criminal behavior, specifically the roles of sensation seeking, psychopathy, emotion regulation, and cognitive/executive functioning.

Representative Publications:

Hampton, A. S., Conner, B. T., Albert, W. D., Anglin, M. D., Urada, D., & Longshore, D. (2011).  Pathways to treatment retention for individuals legally coerced to substance use treatment: The interaction of hope and treatment motivation. Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 118, 400-407.

Conner, B. T., Hampton, A. S., Album, V., Hunter, J., & Urada, D. (2011). Treating opioid use under California’s Proposition 36: Differential outcomes by treatment modality. Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, 43(S1), 77-83.

Hampton, A.S., Seelbach, A.C., Morrison, A.S., Conner, B.T., Urada, D., & Longshore, D. (2010). The Role of Motivation in Drug Treatment Completion. In Criminal Justice Treatment Study (pp. 53-63). Los Angeles: UCLA.