In a series of completed and ongoing projects both in the lab and elsewhere with collaborators (including Drs. Lindsey Potter, Lenny Vartanian, Collette Eccleston, and Liz Brondolo) we explore the relationships between self-reported stigma/discrimination and indicators of health, including, but not limited to, stress and affect, health behaviors, physiology and biomarkers, and disease symptoms and indicators. Many of our studies utilized ecological momentary assessment (EMA) methods. As such, we are interested in examining these processes in everyday life, as they unfold in real life and natural contexts. Finally, we are also exploring the utility of EMA in this (and other) contexts to dynamically assess the impact of social identities (e.g. to explore intersectionality in context and as a process). Collectively, we hope this work will help explicate processes through which stigma/discrimination may impact health outcomes and help inform the development of interventions.