Richard Reich, Ph.D. | College of Arts & Sciences | USF Sarasota-Manatee

addiction, drug, use, cognitions, drinking, reduction, prevention, biostatistics, cluster analysis, power analysis, mixed models, mediator analysis, non-parametric statistics

Richard Reich, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor - Psychology

Dr. Richard ReichPhone:  941-359-4219
Fax:  941-359-4489
Office:   SMC C252
Email:
rreich@usf.edu

Curriculum Vitae
Dr. Reich's Blog

Dr. Richard Reich is an Assistant Professor of Psychology at the University of South Florida Sarasota-Manatee. Dr. Reich is also affiliated with USF’s Alcohol and Substance Use Research Institute (ASURI) located on the Tampa campus where he was a graduate student in clinical psychology from 1997-2002 and conducted post-doctoral research from 2002-2005. Dr. Reich received a B.S. in psychology from the College of Charleston in 1994. Dr. Reich’s teaching philosophy is to train students to be synthesizers of (more...)information, not simply memorizers—students should be thinkers.

Dr. Reich’s research has been studying the cognitions that contribute to problematic drinking. Specifically, Dr. Reich has studied how what people expect will happen from drinking alcohol contributes to how much they drink, and how they behave under the influence of alcohol. Dr. Reich lives in Temple Terrace Florida with his wife Julie, and sons Zack, Nate and Eli. When not working and not playing with his family, he loves playing just about any sport and reading literature.
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Research

Selected recent publications

Reich, R. R., Ariel, I., Darkes, J., & Goldman, M. S. (2012, January 30). What Do You Mean “Drunk”? Convergent Validation of Multiple Methods of Mapping Alcohol Expectancy Memory Networks. Psychology of Addictive Behaviors. Advance online publication. doi: 10.1037/a0026873

Reich, R.R.
, & Goldman, M.S. (2012). Drinking in college students and their age peers: The role of anticipatory processes. In H.L. White & D.L. Rabiner (Eds.) College Drinking and Drug Use (pp. 105-120). Guilford: New York.  recent publication.

Extermann, M., Boler, I., Reich, R. R., Lyman, G. H., Brown, R. H., DeFelice, J., Levine, R. M., Lubiner, E. T., Reyes, P., Schreiber, F. J. and Balducci, L. (2011), Predicting the risk of chemotherapy toxicity in older patients: The Chemotherapy Risk Assessment Scale for High-Age Patients (CRASH) score. Cancer. doi: 10.1002/cncr.26646  http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/cncr.26646/full

(more...) Reich, R.R., Below, M.C. & Goldman, M.S. (2010). Explicit and implicit measures of expectancy and related alcohol cognitions: A meta-analytic comparison. Psychology of Addictive Behaviors,24, 13-25. doi: 10.1037/a0016556  

Goldman, M.S., Darkes, J., Reich, R.R., & Brandon, K.O. (2010). Anticipatory processing as a transdisciplinary bridge in addiction. In D. Ross, H. Kincaid, D. Spurrett, and P. Collins (Eds.) What is Addiction? (pp. 291-334). MIT Press: Cambridge, MA.
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Teaching

Syllabi from recent semesters. Click on Course Prefix and Number to review course syllabus.
Example PSY 3213

Courses for Summer 2012
Ref # 54198    EXP 4404   Sec: 521   Psychology of Learning,  MW  3:00pm-4:50pm
Ref # 57322    EXP 4404   Sec: 522   Psychology of Learning,  MW  3:00pm-4:50pm (North Port)
  Courses meet Summer C:  05/14-07/20

Courses for Spring 2012

Ref # 26578   PSB 3444   Sec: 521   Drugs and Behavior, TR 9:30am-10:45am
  class meets: 01/10, 02/16, 03/29, 05/01. LOC: USFSM
Ref # 24678   PSB 4004C  Sec: 521 Physiological Psychology, TR 11:00am-12:15pm
  class meets: 01/10, 02/16, 03/29, 05/01. LOC: USFSM

Courses for Fall 2011

Ref # 91546  PSY 3213  Sec: 522  Research Methods in Psychology, MW  2pm-3:45pm
Ref # 91547  PSY 4938  Sec: 591  Pro Seminar, W  6pm-8:45pm