NEPSI – Seleção Pós-Doutorado (Etapa 2)
Anexo a lista de pessoas classificadas na Etapa 2.
Anexo a lista de pessoas classificadas na Etapa 2.
Abstract We examined the feasibility, acceptability, and clinical potential of a smartphone-based Approach-Avoidance Modification Training (AAMT) that required users to deliberately display anger and positive emotions (AAMT-AP) to move (dys-)functional stress-related beliefs away from and towards themselves, respectively. The per protocol sample consisted of N = 30 participants randomized to an AAMT-AP condition, a swipe control condition, or an inactive control condition. Feasibility and acceptability of the intervention and study design were assessed directly and changes in clinical outcomes (perceived stress (primary outcome), dysfunctional beliefs, symptoms of depression, and emotion regulation skills) one week after intervention completion. The results indicated that AAMT-AP [...]
Abstract The factors driving excessive reassurance seeking in obsessive–compulsive disorder are incompletely understood. We investigated whether low memory confidence, which drives compulsive checking, may also lead to excessive reassurance seeking during a novel in vivo contamination-based task. Undergraduates (N = 91) completed a memory test and received sham positive or negative performance feedback. Participants then viewed a complicated cleaning video and completed a corresponding cleaning task whilst their reassurance seeking was covertly coded. Afterwards, participants rated their anxiety, confidence, and experimenter responsibility for task outcomes. The novel laboratory task induced high levels of reassurance seeking from participants (median = 5 reassurance requests). There was [...]
Abstract The main purpose of this study is to adapt the Affective Style Questionnaire (ASQ) into Turkish. It also aims to examine the mediating role of affective styles between attachment styles and depression. The study was conducted on a total of three different samples (N1 = 261; N2 = 190; N3 = 263). The confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was used to test the construct validity of the scale and the Emotion Regulation Questionnaire (ERQ) was used to test the convergent validity. As a result of the CFA conducted in all three samples, the model was found to have adequate fit values. In the convergent validity, ASQ [...]
Abstract Two studies explored whether Hated Self and Inadequate Self forms of self-criticism demonstrate different relationships to self-critical rumination (SCR), metacognitive beliefs, decentering and psychopathology. In study 1, 137 community participants experiencing SCR completed an online questionnaire battery. Self-hate was associated with higher SCR, stronger positive and negative metabeliefs about SCR, higher psychopathology and nonreactivity to internal experiences. Effects of Inadequate Self on psychopathology were fully mediated by SCR whereas Hated Self exerted direct effects on psychopathology alongside indirect effects via SCR. Study 2 explored whether higher self-hate attenuated the ability to detach from SCR triggers. Twenty-three participants received a [...]
Abstract We previously found that rumination maintains obsessive–compulsive (OC) symptoms. Our goal was to explore the moderating roles of three characteristics in the immediate and intermediate effects of rumination on OC symptoms: trait rumination, severity of comorbid depressive symptoms, and the tendency to misinterpret the occurrence of unwanted intrusive thoughts as meaningful. We reanalyzed our previous study’s data and explored in a sample of 145 individuals diagnosed with obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD) whether any of the three characteristics moderated the observed immediate and intermediate effects of rumination on OC symptoms. Only the tendency to misinterpret unwanted intrusive thoughts moderated the immediate [...]
Across the globe, individuals whose sexual identities are minoritized are known to be more likely to experience mental health challenges compared with heterosexual individuals. This is evident across the lifespan but particularly significant in young people,1 especially considering the profound impact of identity development on future wellbeing and mental health. Reasons for the heightened mental health challenges are most often explained by the minority stress model,2 which posits that excess exposure to social stress due to structural stigma3 interacts with psychological factors to produce health impacts in sexual minority populations. [...]
High comorbidity in childhood emotional and behavioral disorders calls for transdiagnostic interventions that can address both internalizing and externalizing problems. Mentalization-Based Treatment for Children (MBT-C) is a transdiagnostic, time-limited individual child psychotherapy with parallel parent sessions, that aims to promote mentalization and emotion regulation. This pragmatic randomized controlled superiority trial investigated the efficacy of MBT-C compared to a group-based parenting and child social skills intervention (PSSG) at 12 weeks (primary endpoint) and 36-week follow-up (secondary endpoint). [...]
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is one of the most common psychiatric disorders of childhood and while highly heritable, there is a clear pattern of polygenic inheritance with many genes contributing to its expression. Yet, as described in this issue of JAACAP, ADHD is also overrepresented in neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1), an autosomal dominant disorder resulting from mutations in a single gene and affecting 1 in 3000 people.1 While NF1 is named after the characteristic neurofibromas, or benign nerve sheath tumors, and morbidity and mortality are most related the potential development of malignant nerve sheath and other tumors of the nervous system, [...]
Our study examined the association between state-level structural racism and past year rates of suicide ideation (SI) and suicide attempts (SA) among non-Hispanic Black, Hispanic, and non-Hispanic White adolescents. [...]
We are writing in response to two Letters to the Editor, both of which responded to our initial commentary, entitled “Clinical Research Trials of Psychedelic-Assisted Therapy in Adolescents aged 16 to 17 Years: Rationale Balanced With Caution.”1 We appreciate the thoughtful responses to our commentary, and we invite further dialogue about this important subject. Both commentaries emphasized the importance in engaging in thoughtful research approaches to ensure the safety of individuals whom are administered psychedelics. [...]
Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, EarlyView. [...]
Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, EarlyView. [...]
Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, EarlyView. [...]
Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, EarlyView. [...]
Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, EarlyView. [...]