I was Gwenda's Ph.D. mentor at Colorado State. I recently sent an email to my department about her, and thought I would share my memories here as well. I was very fortunate to be able to attend her beautiful memorial service, and many people there were curious about her accomplishments and time in grad school.
Gwenda began her Ph.D research in her mid 30s, after building a different career and raising her children to the teen years. It took her a few years to work out how she could get back to school, and by the time she started she was very excited and happy to be here. Gwenda was my second student, joining my lab in my third year at CSU. At the time I was still doing some language research, and Gwenda's background in linguistics was a great plus. Gwenda loved being in graduate school and the opportunities she had for intellectual exploration and research. Gwenda was intellectually honest and unafraid to go deep into ideas. While in graduate school she was also deeply committed to her evangelical church and I greatly admired her ability to balance this commitment with cognitive neuroscience, which requires one to grapple with issues of materialism and the mind-body problem, and her commitment to what we would now call DEI values.
Gwen was also very hard working and productive. I looked up an old reference letter I wrote for her and found this description: "For example, during her last year in graduate school she completed two separate NRSA grant applications (one predoctoral, one postdoctoral), submitted 3 papers for publication, started several new lines of research with Don Rojas, defended her dissertation, performed pilot work for a number of additional projects, and taught both our cognitive psychology lecture course and our cognitive psychology laboratory."
Gwenda loved research. Her MS thesis was very well designed and the results formed one of the most beautiful cross-over interactions I've ever seen. I checked recently and it has been cited around 220 times.
Schmidt, G. L., DeBuse, C. J., & Seger, C. A. (2007). Right hemisphere metaphor processing? Characterizing the lateralization of semantic processes. Brain Lang, 100, 127–141. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ban…
Her Ph.D. thesis tested an novel and innovative hypothesis, but unfortunately ended with null results, which at the time were not considered publishable.
In order to get more research experience, she also did collaborative research with Don Rojas at the medical school studying autism. This resulted in at least one publication as well:
Schmidt, G. L., Kimel, L. K., Winterrowd, E., Pennington, B. F., Hepburn, S. L., & Rojas, D. C. (2008). Impairments in phonological processing and nonverbal intellectual function in parents of children with autism. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology, 30(5), 557–567. https://doi.org/10.1080/13803…