User:Adelosreyes

Andres De Los Reyes received his Ph.D. in 2008 from Yale University. He began his career as an Assistant Professor at the University of Maryland at College Park. Within 10 years, he was promoted up the ranks to Full Professor with tenure. He serves as Director of the Comprehensive Assessment and Intervention Program, where he has provided research training to hundreds of undergraduate and graduate students. As part of his work on research training, he is the author of The Early Career Researcher’s Toolbox, where he reveals concrete strategies for building a research program and launching an academic career. The key goal of his research program is to improve our understanding of the inconsistent outcomes that commonly arise from multi-informant mental health assessments. Dr. De Los Reyes has published over 100 peer-reviewed articles on these and other topics, including articles published in such high-impact journals as the Psychological Bulletin, Psychological Review, Nature Neuroscience, Clinical Psychological Science, Journal of Abnormal Psychology, Child Development Perspectives, Development and Psychopathology, Psychological Assessment, Clinical Psychology Review, and Annual Review of Clinical Psychology. He has received over $1.5 million in funding for his work from the Institute of Education Sciences, National Science Foundation, and National Institutes of Health. His service record reveals his passion for education, mentoring, and professional development. In 2019, Dr. De Los Reyes served as Chair of the Board of Educational Affairs of the American Psychological Association, Psychology’s largest organization with over 100,000 members. He serves as Editor for the Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology (JCCAP) (2017-2025), a top-tier journal with subscriptions at institutions in over 30 countries. He also founded and serves as Program Chair for the Future Directions Forum. This annual event offers professional development workshops and small-group and one-on-one consultations on all aspects of scholarly work. He has received a number of honors for his work, including the American Psychological Association’s Distinguished Scientific Award for an Early Career Contribution to Psychology, the Society for Research in Child Development's Early Career Research Contributions Award, the Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies' President's New Researcher Award, Fellow status at both the American Psychological Association and Association for Psychological Science, and most recently, a Presidential Citation from the American Psychological Association and the 2021 Early Career Psychologist Champion Award, also from the American Psychological Association. During the 2021-2022 academic year, he serves as the Fulbright Canada Research Chair in Mental Health at the University of Regina. His research interests are: social anxiety, family relationships, adolescence, validating multi-informant approaches to assessment, and implementing physiological measures in clinical research and practice settings.