All Stories

  1. Within-Person Relationship between Attenuated Positive Symptoms and Suicidal Ideation among Individuals at Clinical High Risk for Psychosis
  2. Self-concept and Narrative Identity in Youth at Clinical High Risk for Psychosis
  3. Lower cohesion and altered first-person pronoun usage in the spoken life narratives of individuals with schizophrenia
  4. Discrepancies between self and caregiver perceptions of agency in first-episode psychosis
  5. Variability in suicidal ideation during treatment for individuals at clinical high risk for psychosis: The importance of repeated assessment
  6. Mapping Psychosis Risk States Onto the Hierarchical Taxonomy of Psychopathology Using Hierarchical Symptom Dimensions
  7. Automated measures of speech content and speech organization in schizophrenia: Test-retest reliability and generalizability across demographic variables
  8. The good and the bad in black and white: Stories of life’s high and low points told by black and white midlife adults in America
  9. Interactions between the cortical midline structures and sensorimotor network track maladaptive self-beliefs in clinical high risk for psychosis
  10. Reciprocal Social Behavior and Related Social Outcomes in Individuals at Clinical High Risk for Psychosis
  11. Racial and Ethnic Biases in Computational Approaches to Psychopathology
  12. Secondary Sources of Negative Symptoms in Those Meeting Criteria for a Clinical High-Risk Syndrome
  13. Narrative identity in the psychosis spectrum: A systematic review and developmental model
  14. Changes in core beliefs over time predict symptoms and functioning in clinical high risk for psychosis
  15. The power of narrative
  16. Transdiagnostic Dimensions of Psychiatric Comorbidity in Individuals at Clinical High Risk for Psychosis: A Preliminary Study Informed by HiTOP
  17. Heterogeneity of emotional experience in schizophrenia: Trait affect profiles predict clinical presentation and functional outcome.
  18. Deconstructing Negative Symptoms in Individuals at Clinical High-Risk for Psychosis: Evidence for Volitional and Diminished Emotionality Subgroups That Predict Clinical Presentation and Functional Outcome
  19. Is schizophrenia research relevant during the COVID-19 pandemic?
  20. Personality and coping in life challenge narratives
  21. Three types of psychotic-like experiences in youth at clinical high risk for psychosis
  22. Quantity Over Quality? Reproducible Psychological Science from a Mixed Methods Perspective
  23. The single greatest life challenge: How late-midlife adults construct narratives of significant personal challenges
  24. Distinct and opposite profiles of connectivity during self‐reference task and rest in youth at clinical high risk for psychosis
  25. Differentiating implicit and explicit theory of mind and associated neural networks in youth at Clinical High Risk (CHR) for psychosis
  26. Can a Good Life Be Unsatisfying? Within-Person Dynamics of Life Satisfaction and Psychological Well-Being in Late Midlife
  27. Core beliefs in healthy youth and youth at ultra high-risk for psychosis: Dimensionality and links to depression, anxiety, and attenuated psychotic symptoms
  28. Reach Out and Read is Feasible and Effective for Adolescent Mothers: A Pilot Study
  29. Reading and Adolescent Parents: A Clinical Reading Intervention