Brenda Lee

Ph.D., C.Psych.(Cand.), Counsellor University of Manitoba

  • Winnipeg MB

Relationship and sex researcher (monogamy, infidelity, breakups, relationship maintenance, cyber/stalking); clinical therapist.

Contact

Social

Biography

I am a clinical associate, and a clinical psychologist candidate in Manitoba. My research topics have addressed intimate relationship maintenance and breakup, human sexuality, and gender dynamics. Clinically, I primarily work with adults, adolescents, and children with mood, anxiety, adjustment, traumatic, developmental, and learning disorders.

Industry Expertise

Mental Health Care
Research

Areas of Expertise

Clinical and Health Psychology
Human Sexuality
Intimate Relationships
Intimate Partner Violence
Psychology
Research
Research Analysis
Abnormal Psychology
Developmental Psychology
Sexuality
Romantic Relationships
Gender
Learning and Attention Disorders
Developmental and learning disorders
Stalking
Moral Psychology
Psychological Assessment

Accomplishments

Snodgrass Graduate Research Proposal Award

Recipients of this award is chosen by an adjudicating committee struck by the Chair of the Department of Psychology. The award was made based on the scholarly merit of your research, which was judged on the basis of the following criteria: innovation, rigour, and potential to make a contribution to the discipline, as well as on your competence in presenting the study in the proposal.

Education

University of New Brunswick

Ph.D.

Clinical Psychology

2018

Affiliations

  • Canadian Psychological Association
  • Canadian Sex Research Forum
  • Psychological Association of Manitoba
  • Manitoba Psychological Society

Languages

  • English

Media Appearances

Interview on CBC Radio

CBC | The Current  radio

2014-10-13

Regarding my Masters level research on post-relationship breakup contact and tracking.

View More

Quoted in Elle Canada

Elle Canada  print

2015-03-16

Regarding my Masters level research on post-relationship breakup contact and tracking.

View More

Interview on the Daily Gleaner

Telegraph Journal | The Daily Gleaner  print

2014-10-28

Interview and research feature by Chislett, T. regarding my Masters level research on post-relationship breakup contact and tracking. "Breaking up still hard to do for young adults" (A8).

Show All +

Research Grants

Joseph-Armand Bombardier Canada Graduate Scholarships - Doctoral scholarship

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council

2012-09-01

The SSHRC Joseph-Armand Bombardier Canada Graduate Scholarships (CGS) Doctoral Scholarships aim to develop research skills and assist in the training of highly qualified personnel by supporting students who demonstrate a high standard of scholarly achievement in undergraduate and graduate studies in the social sciences and humanities.

View more

Joseph-Armand Bombardier Canada Graduate Scholarships - Master’s scholarship

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council

2011-09-01

The objective of the Canada Graduate Scholarships-Master’s (CGS M) Program is to help develop research skills and assist in the training of highly qualified personnel by supporting students who demonstrate a high standard of achievement in undergraduate and early graduate studies.

The CGS M Program provides financial support to high-calibre scholars who are engaged in eligible master’s or, in some cases, doctoral programs in Canada (refer to Eligibility). This support allows these scholars to fully concentrate on their studies in their chosen fields.

View more

Articles

The ex-factor: Characteristics of online and offline post-relationship contact and tracking among Canadian emerging adults.

Canadian Journal Of Human Sexuality

2014-08-01

The breakup of an intimate relationship is a highly distressing event among emerging adults (Cutler, Glaeser, Norberg, 2001) and can often be accompanied by difficulty adjusting to the loss and ‘‘letting go’’ (Mearns, 1991). Research on stalking and cyberstalking behaviours address criminal activities that incite fear in a target (e.g., Spitzberg & Cupach, 2007). Little is known about more general post-relationship contact and tracking (PRCT), that is, efforts to maintain or re-establish contact with an ex-partner or to track their whereabouts, new partnerships or activities. To understand both the use and experience of PRCT, we examined reports from 271 Canadian emerging adults (aged 18–25) regarding their most recent breakup within the prior year. Results indicated that online and offline forms of post-relationship contact and tracking were common, characterizing 87.8% of all recent breakups, and were typically used in conjunction. In fact, online forms rarely occurred in isolation. Attempts to keep in contact were most commonly reported by users and targets of behaviours, whereas extreme and threatening behaviours that might comprise stalking or cyberstalking were rare. No gender differences were found in the use of PRCT behaviours, although women reported experiencing more offline forms.

KEY WORDS:
Relationships, breakups, stalking, cyberstalking, online, emerging adulthood

View more

It Hurts to Let You Go: Characteristics of Romantic Relationships, Breakups and the Aftermath Among Emerging Adults

Journal of Relationships Research

2016-08-31

Relationship breakups are common (Connolly & McIsaac, 2009), and difficulty adjusting to the breakup can manifest as post-relationship contact and tracking (PRCT; Lee & O'Sullivan, 2014). Emerging adults (n = 271; aged 18–25; 66% female) provided reports of PRCT after their most recent breakup in the previous year. We examined relationship and breakup characteristics to predict the use of and experience of PRCT. Logistic regression analyses revealed that ex-partner initiation of the breakup and a more intense breakup predicted the use of PRCT, and ex-partner's surprise regarding the breakup predicted being a target of PRCT. A between-subjects comparison of participants who either used or experienced PRCT reported similar impact of PRCT on the self or their ex-partner. However, participants who both used and experienced PRCT reported that the impact that an ex-partner's PRCT had on their lives was more negative than their use of PRCT had on their ex-partner's life, likely reflecting an actor-observer bias in reports. Difficulty adjusting to relationship breakup is normal, and predictive of attempts to remain in contact with an ex-partner. However, the seemingly benign form of contact can have a negative impact on individuals. The findings have implications for those counselling individuals in distress following a breakup, and contribute to the discourse around boundaries after a breakup.

View more

Hierarchical Integration of Agency and Communion: A Study of Influential Moral Figures

Journal of Personality

2012-08-01

The purpose of this research is to (a) identify which of recent history's influential figures did and which did not personify moral excellence, and (b) to examine the motives that drove these individuals along such divergent paths. In Study 1, 102 social scientists evaluated the moral qualities of influential figures from Time Magazine's lists. In Study 2, we selected the 15 top ranking of these figures to comprise a moral exemplar group and the bottom 15 to comprise a comparison group of similarly influential people. We measured the motivational aspects of their personality (agency and communion) by content-analyzing extant speeches and interviews. Moral exemplars exhibited the hierarchical integration of agency and communion by treating agentic motives as a means to an end of communal motives. Comparison subjects, by contrast, personified unmitigated agency by treating motives of agency as both a means to an end and an end unto itself. These results imply that both the strength and structure of a person's motives account for moral behavior.

View more

Show All +