Peggy Zoccola
Education
Ph.D., Psychology & Social Behavior, University of California, Irvine (2010)
M.A., Social Ecology, University of California, Irvine (2006)
B.A., Psychology, University of Pennsylvania (2002)
Research
Research Areas
- Experimental Health
Research Lab
Psychosocial Processes and Health Laboratory
Dr. Zoccola is not currently accepting new graduate students.
Research Interests
Dr. Zoccola鈥檚 research interests lie in understanding whether and how cognitive and emotional factors may prolong physiological and psychological stress responses and the potential health consequences of this persistent activation. To date, her program of research has focused on how repetitive thought processes such as rumination and worry may influence cortisol stress responses and related health outcomes. A few of questions that Dr. Zoccola addresses in her work include: Do individuals who ruminate, or mentally rehearse past stressors, have greater increases in stress hormones (cortisol) or inflammatory markers (C-reactive protein) in response to a stressful event. If so, for how long do these stress-related changes persist after the stressor ends? What are the consequences of rumination and prolonged stress-related physiological activation? Her work also aims to identify individual- and situation-level factors that may promote or prevent rumination and physiological activation. For example, are some individuals at greater risk for rumination? Are certain types of stressors or environmental contexts more likely to elicit ruminative thought and increases in cortisol? Dr. Zoccola鈥檚 research program also addresses key methodological issues and questions: How do operational definitions of rumination impact associations with physiology? How can we best measure or manipulate ruminative thought? In ongoing and recently completed studies with her colleagues and students at 91探花, Dr. Zoccola is also exploring potential stress-buffering factors, such as trait reflection, mindfulness and mindfulness-based stress reduction, dispositional hardiness, positive post-stressor messages, and comprehensive lifestyle interventions.
Publications
Lang, J. C., Peters, B. J., Tudder, A. T., Gresham, A. B., Zoccola, P. M., & Allan, N. (2024). Conflicting patterns of cardiovascular reactivity, self-report, and behavior associated with social anxiety during a conversation with a close friend. Psychophysiology.
Strickland, M. G., Myszkowski, N., Hooker, E. D., Zoccola, P. M., & Dickerson, S. S. (2024). Depressive and anxious symptoms, experimentally manipulated acute social-evaluative threat, and cortisol reactivity. Psychosomatic Medicine.
Weeks., J. W., Beltzer, M., Schmidt, K., Olino, T., Goldin, P., Gross, J., Heimberg, R. G., Zoccola, P. M. (2024). Re-Assessing the assessment of fears of positive and negative evaluation: Scale development and psychometric evaluation of the Bivalent Fear of Evaluation Scale (BFOES). Journal of Anxiety Disorders, 105, 102879.
Zoccola, P. M., Manigault, A., Decastro, G., Taylor, C., & Dickerson, S. S. (2024). The role of social-evaluative threat for cortisol profiles in response to psychosocial stress: A person-centered approach. American Psychologist.
Zoccola, P. M., & Bryan, Angela D. (2023). [Editorial] Sexual orientation and gender identity minority health in behavioral medicine: An introduction to the continuing series. Annals of Behavioral Medicine, kaad064, 1-3.
Saab, P., Revenson, T., Zoccola, P. M., & Marchetti, D. (in press). Reimagining health psychology training in the 21st century. To appear in T. W. Smith & N. Anderson (Eds.), APA Handbook of Health Psychology, Volume 1.
Revenson, T. A., & Zoccola, P. M. (2022). [Editorial] New instructions to authors emphasize open science, transparency, full reporting of sociodemographic characteristics of the sample, and avoidance of piecemeal publication. Annals of Behavioral Medicine, 56(5), 415-417.
Zoccola, P. M., Appelmann, H., & Decastro, G., (2022). Stress and reactions. In R. Gurung & R. LaCaille (Eds.). Routledge Encyclopedia of Psychology in the Real World.
Manigault, A., & Zoccola, P. M. (2021). Psychoneuroimmunology: How chronic stress makes us sick. In H. Hazlett-Stevens (Ed.), Biopsychosocial Factors of Stress, and Mindfulness for Stress Reduction (pp. 83-103). Cham, Switzerland: Springer Nature.
Manigault, A. W., Shorey, R. C., Appelmann, H., Hamilton, K., Scanlin, M. C., Juster, R.-P., & Zoccola, P. M. (2021). Gender roles are related to cortisol habituation to repeated social evaluative stressors in adults: Secondary analyses from a randomized controlled trial. Stress, 24(6), 723-733.
Manigault, A. W., Shorey, R. C., Decastro, G., Appelmann, H. W., Hamilton, K., Scanlin, M. C., France, C. R., & Zoccola, P. M. (2021). Standardized stress reduction interventions and blood pressure habituation: Secondary results from a randomized controlled trial. Health Psychology. 40(3), 196鈥206.
Geist, K., Zoccola, P., Andary, N., Geist, E., Dogbey, D., Tuttle, B., Williams, L. A. (2021). A randomized pilot study of rhythm-based music with movement strategies on stress and interaction behaviors of infant caregivers. Music and Medicine, 13(1), 7-19.
Figueroa, W. S., Zoccola, P. M., Manigault, A. W., Hamilton, K. R., Scanlin, M. C., & Johnson, R. C. (2021). Daily stressors and diurnal cortisol among sexual and gender minority young adults. Health Psychology, 40(2), 145-154.
Appelmann, H., Manigault, A. W., Shorey, R. C., Zoccola, P. M. (2021). Childhood adversity and cortisol habituation to repeated acute stress in adulthood. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 125, 105118.
Manigault, A., Peters, B. J., & Zoccola, P. M. (2021). When enhanced awareness threatens: Interactive effects of domain-specific awareness and acceptance manipulations on cardiovascular indices of challenge and threat. Psychophysiology, 58(1), 1-15.
Manigault, A., & Zoccola, P. M. (2020). Rumination. In K. Sweeny & M. L. Robbins (Eds.), The Wiley Encyclopedia of Health Psychology: Volume II, The Social Bases of Health Behavior (pp. 557-567). Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley and Sons.
Manigault, A., & Zoccola, P. M., W眉st, S., & Yim, I. S. (2020). Corroborative evidence for an association between initial hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical axis reactivity and subsequent habituation in humans. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 121, 104798.
Hooker, E., Campos, B., Hoffman, L., Zoccola, P. M., & Dickerson, S. S. (2020). Is receiving social support costly for those higher in subjective socioeconomic status? An examination of stressor appraisals and salivary cortisol in a study of daily life. International Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 27, 325-336.
Manigault, A. W., Shorey, R. C., Hamilton, K., Scanlin, M. C., Woody, A., Figueroa, W., France, C. R., & Zoccola, P. M. (2019). Cognitive behavioral therapy, mindfulness, and cortisol habituation: A randomized controlled trial. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 104, 276-285.
Manigault, A. W., Zoccola, P. M., Hamilton, K., & Wymbs, B. T. (2019). Testosterone to cortisol ratio and aggression toward one鈥檚 partner: Evidence for moderation by provocation. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 103, 130-136.
Revenson, T. A., Saab, P. G., Zoccola, P. M., & Traeger, L. N. (2019). . New York, NY: Taylor & Francis.
Hooker, E. D., Campos, B., Zoccola, P. M., & Dickerson, S. S. (2018). Cortisol stress buffering when social status is low and social support is high. Social Psychological and Personality Science, 9, 981-989.
Borchardt, A. R., & Zoccola, P. M. (2018). Recovery from stress: An experimental examination of focused attention meditation in novices. Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 41, 836-849.
Hooker, E. D., Zoccola, P. M., & Dickerson, S. S. (2018). Toward a biology of social support. In C. R. Snyder, S. J. Lopez, L. M. Edwards, & S. C. Marques (Eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Positive Psychology (3rd ed.) (pp. 1-21). New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
Manigault, A. W., Woody, A., Zoccola, P. M., & Dickerson, S. S. (2018). Education is associated with the magnitude of cortisol responses to psychosocial stress in college students. International Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 25(5), 532-539.
Manigault, A. W., Figueroa, W., Hollenbeck, C., Mendlein, A., Woody, A., Hamilton, K., Scanlin, M., Johnson, R., & Zoccola, P. M. (2018). When family matters most: Sexual minority identity disclosure to family members uniquely predicts diurnal cortisol exposure in sexual minority young adults. Psychosomatic Medicine, 80, 717-723.
Woody, A., Hooker, E. D., Zoccola, P. M., & Dickerson, S. S. (2018). Social evaluative threat, cognitive load, and the cortisol and cardiovascular stress response. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 97, 149-155.
Manigault, A. W., Figueroa, W., Hollenbeck, C., Mendlein, A., Woody, A., Sinegar, S., Hamilton, K., Scanlin, M., Johnson, R., & Zoccola, P. M. (2018). A test of the association between mindfulness subcomponents and diurnal cortisol patterns. Mindfulness, 9, 897-904.
Manigault, A. W., Woody, A., Zoccola, P. M., & Dickerson, S. S. (2018). Trait mindfulness predicts the presence but not the magnitude of acute cortisol responses to social-evaluative stress. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 90, 29-34.
Zoccola, P. M. (2018). Psychobiological Measurement. In H. Blanton, J. M. LaCroix, & G. D. Webster (Eds.), (pp. 75-101). New York, NY: Taylor & Francis.
Zoccola, P. M., Woody, A., & Bryant, A. (2018). Health Neuroscience. In T. A. Revenson & R. A. R. Gurung (Eds.), (pp. 465-473). New York, NY: Taylor & Francis.
Zoccola, P. M., Manigault, A. W., Figueroa, W. S., Hollenbeck, C., Mendlein, A., Woody, A., Hamilton, K., Scanlin, M., & Johnson, R. (2017). Trait rumination predicts elevated evening cortisol in sexual and gender minority young adults. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 14, 1365.
Bunford, N., Evans, S. W., Zoccola, P. M., Owens, J. S., Flory, K. & Spiel, C. (2017). Correspondence between heart rate variability and emotion dysregulation in children, including children with ADHD. Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 45, 1325-1337.
Woody, A., Hamilton, K., Livitz, I. E., Figueroa, W. S., & Zoccola, P. M. (2017). Buccal telomere length and its associations with cortisol, heart rate variability, heart rate, and blood pressure responses to an acute social evaluative stressor in college students. Stress, 20, 249-257.
Woody, A., Figueroa, W., Benencia, F., & Zoccola, P. M. (2017). Stress-induced parasympathetic control and its association with inflammatory reactivity. Psychosomatic Medicine, 79, 306-310.
Woody, A., & Zoccola, P. M. (2017). Stress and physiological indicators. In S. G. Rogelberg (Ed.), (2nd ed., Vol. 4., pp. 1537-1540). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Zoccola, P. M., & Woody, A. (2017). Cortisol. In A. E. Wenzel (Ed.), (Vol. 2, pp. 894-899). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Weeks, J., & Zoccola, P. M. (2016). Fears of positive versus negative evaluation: Distinct and conjoint neuroendocrine, emotional, and cardiovascular responses to social threat. Journal of Experimental Psychopathology, 7, 632-654.
Chadwick, A. E., Zoccola, P. M., Figueroa, W. S., & Rabideau, E. M. (2016). Communication and stress: Effects of hope evocation and rumination messages on heart rate, anxiety, and emotions after a stressor. Health Communication, 31, 1447-1459.
Figueroa, W. S., & Zoccola, P. M. (2016). Sources of discrimination and their associations with health in sexual minority adults. Journal of Homosexuality, 63, 743-763.
Woody, A., Figueroa, W. F., & Benencia, F., Zoccola, P. M. (2016). Trait reflection predicts interleukin-6 response to a social-evaluative stressor. Brain, Behavior, and Immunity, 52, 27-31.
Weeks, J., & Zoccola, P. M. (2015). "Having the heart to be evaluated": The differential effects of fears of positive and negative evaluation on emotional and cardiovascular responses to social threat. Journal of Anxiety Disorders, 36, 115-126.
Woody, A., Smolak, E., Rabideau, E. M., Figueroa, W., & Zoccola, P. M. (2015). Trait rumination moderates the effect of mentation type on heart rate responses to stressor recall. Stress, 18, 554-560.
Figueroa, W. S., & Zoccola, P. M. (2015). Individual differences of risk and resiliency in sexual minority health: The roles of stigma consciousness and psychological hardiness. Psychology of Sexual Orientation and Gender Diversity, 2, 329-338.
Zoccola, P. M., & Dickerson, S. S. (2015). Extending the recovery window: Effects of trait rumination on subsequent evening cortisol following a laboratory performance stressor. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 58, 67-78.
Juth, V., Dickerson, S. S., Zoccola, P. M., & Lam, S. (2015). Understanding the utility of emotional approach coping: Evidence from a laboratory stressor and daily life. Anxiety, Stress, & Coping, 28, 50-70.
Gianferante, D., Thoma, M. V., Hanlin, L., Chen, X., Breines, J., Zoccola, P., & Rohleder, N. (2014). Post-stress rumination predicts HPA axis responses to repeated acute stress. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 49, 244-252.
Zoccola, P. M., Figueroa, W. S., Rabideau, E. M., Woody, A., & Benencia, F. (2014). Differential effects of post-stressor rumination and distraction on cortisol and C-reactive protein. Health Psychology, 33, 1606-1609.
Zoccola, P. M., Rabideau, E. M., Figueroa, W. S., & Woody, A. (2014). Cardiovascular and affective consequences of ruminating on a performance stressor depend on mode of thought. Stress & Health, 30, 188-197.
Dickerson, S. S., & Zoccola, P. M. (2013). Cortisol responses to social exclusion. In C. N. DeWall (Ed.), (pp. 143-151). New York: Oxford University Press.
Zoccola, P. M., Dickerson, S. S., & Lam, S. (2012). Eliciting and maintaining ruminative thought: The role of social-evaluative threat. Emotion, 12, 673-677.
Zoccola, P. M., & Dickerson, S. S. (2012). Assessing the relationship between rumination and cortisol: A review. Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 73, 1-9.
Schlotz, W., Yim, I. S., Zoccola, P. M., Jansen, L., & Schulz, P. (2011). The Perceived Stress Reactivity Scale: Measurement invariance, stability and validity in three countries. Psychological Assessment, 23, 80-94.
Zoccola, P. M., Dickerson, S. S., & Yim, I. S. (2011). Trait and state perseverative cognition and the cortisol awakening response. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 36, 592-595.
Zoccola, P. M., Green, M. C., Karoutsos, E., Katona, S. M., & Sabini. J. (2011). The embarrassed bystander: Embarrassability and the inhibition of helping. Personality and Individual Differences, 51, 925-929.
Zoccola, P. M., Quas, J. A., & Yim, I. S. (2010). Salivary cortisol responses to a psychosocial laboratory stressor and later verbal recall of the stressor: The role of trait and state rumination. Stress, 13, 435-443.
Dickerson, S. S., & Zoccola, P. M. (2009). Toward a biology of social support. In C. R. Snyder & S. J. Lopez (Eds.), (2nd ed., pp. 519-526). New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
Lam, S., Dickerson, S. S., Zoccola, P. M., & Zaldivar, F. P. (2009). Emotion regulation and cortisol reactivity to a social-evaluative speech task. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 34, 1355-1362.
Zoccola, P. M., Dickerson, S. S., & Lam, S. (2009). Rumination predicts longer sleep onset latency after an acute psychosocial stressor. Psychosomatic Medicine, 71, 771-775.
Dickerson, S. S., Mycek (Zoccola), P. J., & Zaldivar, F. P. (2008). Negative social evaluation, but not mere social presence, elicits cortisol responses to a laboratory stressor task. Health Psychology, 27, 116-121.
Zoccola, P. M., Dickerson, S. S., & Zaldivar, F. P. (2008). Rumination and cortisol responses to laboratory stressors. Psychosomatic Medicine, 70, 661-667.
Dickerson, S. S., & Mycek (Zoccola), P. J. (2007). Health psychology. In R. F. Baumeister & K. D. Vohs (Eds.), (Vol. 1, pp. 415-419). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Courses Taught
Graduate
- First-Year Seminar in Experimental Psychology
- Advanced Research Methods in Psychology
- Psychoneuroimmunology (PNI)
- Social Endocrinology
- Stress Science
Undergraduate
- Human Stress
- Psychology of Health & Illness
- Research Methods in Psychology
Recent Grants
鈥淓xamining emotion regulation processes in social anxiety from an interpersonal and observational perspective,鈥 National Institute of Mental Health (3-year Federal Research Grant). MPI: Peters & Zoccola. $453,000, 2022-2025.
鈥淧rofiles of Stress and Resilience in a Racially Diverse Sample of Queer Adults in Franklin County, Ohio,鈥 The Ohio State University College of Public Health (1-year Internal Research Grant). Co-I (PI: Figueroa). $75,000. 2021-2022.
鈥淭he Impact of Music-Based Interactive Strategies on Caregiver Stress Levels and Caregiver/Infant Attachment Behaviors: Demonstrating Feasibility Among At-Risk Families,鈥 National Endowment for the Arts (2-year Federal Research Grant, plus 1-year no cost extension). Co-I (PI: Geist). $29,000, 2020-2023.
鈥淭he Impact of Music-Based Interactive Strategies on Caregiver Stress Levels and Caregiver/Infant Attachment Behaviors: Demonstrating Feasibility Among At-Risk Families鈥, 91探花 Research Committee Grant, 91探花. Co-I (PI: Geist). $7,950, 2019-2020.
鈥淏iopsychosocial Outcomes of a Lifestyle Intervention for Individuals with Chronic Pain Post-intervention and at 1-year Follow-up,鈥 PI. Baker Fund Award, $10,129, 2018-2020.
鈥淎lcohol intoxication as a risk factor for intimate partner aggression among adults with ADHD,鈥 Sponsored by National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. Co-I (PI: Wymbs). $262,500, 2017-2021.
Graduate Students
Current Graduate Students
- Gabby Decastro
- Taylor Hall
- Elizabeth Haudrich
- Kris Kumfer
- Endia Reid
- Nate Stuart
- Courtney Taylor
Former Graduate Students
- Wilson Figueroa
- Katrina Hamilton
- Andrew Manigault
- Erin Rabideau
- Matt Scanlin
- Stanley Singer
- Mohsin Sultan
- Alex Woody