Ashlee McKeon is an O2X Sleep Specialist. Ashlee has over 14 years of experience assessing and probing sleep disruption in both military and veteran groups. She is an active duty U.S. Army officer who currently serves as the Chief of Research for the U.S. Army Special Operations Command (USASOC) at Ft. Bragg, NC. Her team’s mission is to support the development and validation of research/program evaluation initiatives across the Special Operations community. This includes the development and evaluation of Assessment & Selection programs for elite military units as well as Command- and Unit-level programs/initiatives aimed at enhancing force readiness through targeted assessment of knowledge, skills, and abilities needed to succeed in highly demanding and specialized military careers. Previously, Ashlee was assigned to the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (WRAIR) Center for Military Psychiatry and Neurosciences where she served as Chief of the Operational Research Team for 3 years. Her team developed, tested, and validated field-ready capabilities to determine the impact of disrupted sleep and circadian misalignment on the physical, cognitive, and emotional readiness of conventional and elite military units during training operations and in far-forward deployed environments. Much of her work was also dedicated to educating military units, small team leaders, and senior leaders on how to maximize shortened or shifted sleep opportunities in the operational environment to support mission success and reduce risk associated with sleep loss. Ashlee also has a special interest in examining the role of sleep and circadian rhythmicity as risk factors for posttraumatic stress and head injury in combat-exposed service members. Ashlee holds a Bachelor of Philosophy in Honors Psychology, with minors in both Applied Statistics and Sociology, from the University of Pittsburgh (2010). She also earned her Master of Science in Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, with a certificate in Rehabilitative Assistive Technology, from the University of Pittsburgh in 2013, and then continued her training to earn her Doctor of Philosophy in Rehabilitation Science from the University of Pittsburgh in 2016. Ashlee then completed postdoctoral training in Translational Sleep Medicine at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine before transferring her research program to the military in 2017. Ashlee commissioned as an officer into the U.S. Army Medical Service Corps as a Research Psychologist, or 71F, in 2018. Personally, Ashlee is an avid Crossfitter and trainer/coach. She also enjoys hiking, kayaking, fishing, and being outdoors with her two corgis, Bolt and Bandit. She loves to travel and strives to experience several new locations, domestic and international, each year.