Research Topics
| J M HooleySummaryAffiliation: Harvard University Country: USA Publications
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Publications
Measuring expressed emotion: an evaluation of the shortcutsJill M Hooley
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
J Fam Psychol 20:386-96. 2006..In this article, the authors discuss alternative ways of assessing EE. They also evaluate the predictive validity of these measures and make recommendations for researchers and clinicians interested in using these assessments...
Expressed emotion and relapse of psychopathologyJill M Hooley
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
Annu Rev Clin Psychol 3:329-52. 2007..Finally, the possibility that high levels of EE may stress patients by perturbing activity in neural circuits that underlie psychopathology is considered and new directions for EE research are outlined...
Affective and neural reactivity to criticism in individuals high and low on perceived criticismJill M Hooley
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States of America
PLoS ONE 7:e44412. 2012..Criticism may be a risk factor for relapse because it helps to "train" pathways characteristic of depressive information processing. The Perceived Criticism measure may help identify people who are more susceptible to this vulnerability...
Adult attachment to transitional objects and borderline personality disorderJill M Hooley
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, 33 Kirkland Street, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
J Pers Disord 26:179-91. 2012..Heavy emotional reliance on transitional objects in adulthood may be an indicator of underlying pathology, particularly BPD...
Pain perception and nonsuicidal self-injury: a laboratory investigationJill M Hooley
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
Personal Disord 1:170-9. 2010..People who self-injure may regard suffering and pain as something that they deserve. Our findings also have implications for understanding factors that might be involved in the development and maintenance of self-injury...
Neural processing of emotional overinvolvement in borderline personality disorderJill M Hooley
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
J Clin Psychiatry 71:1017-24. 2010..Specifically, we tested the hypothesis that, unlike healthy controls or people with other psychiatric problems, people with BPD process EOI as an approach-related stimulus...
Cortico-limbic response to personally challenging emotional stimuli after complete recovery from depressionJill M Hooley
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
Psychiatry Res 171:106-19. 2009..Criticism may be a risk factor for relapse because it activates the amygdala and perturbs the affective circuitry that underlies depression...
Activation in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex in response to maternal criticism and praise in recovered depressed and healthy control participantsJill M Hooley
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massacusetts 02138, USA
Biol Psychiatry 57:809-12. 2005..Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used to assess focal activation changes in DLPFC in response to a novel psychosocial challenge stimulus developed from the expressed emotion construct...
Expressed emotion and causal attributions in the spouses of depressed patientsJ M Hooley
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA
J Abnorm Psychol 106:298-306. 1997..The results suggest that causal attributions are important for understanding spouses' criticism but are of limited predictive validity with respect to depressive relapse...
Expressed emotion and clinical outcome in borderline personality disorderJ M Hooley
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
Am J Psychiatry 156:1557-62. 1999..This longitudinal follow-up study examined the predictive validity of relatives' expressed emotion in a group of patients diagnosed with borderline personality disorder...
Personality and expressed emotionJ M Hooley
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusets 02138, USA
J Abnorm Psychol 109:40-4. 2000..Even with statistical control of potential demographic confounds, flexibility remained a significant predictor of EE status...
Pain insensitivity in the relatives of schizophrenia patientsJ M Hooley
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, 33 Kirkland Street, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
Schizophr Res 47:265-73. 2001..The pattern of findings suggests that pain insensitivity may warrant further exploration as a potential marker of underlying liability to psychosis...
Cortico-limbic response to personally challenging emotional stimuli after complete recovery from depressionJill M Hooley
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
Psychiatry Res 172:83-91. 2009..Criticism may be a risk factor for relapse because it activates the amygdala and perturbs the affective circuitry that underlies depression...
Developing family psychoeducational treatments for patients with bipolar and other severe psychiatric disorders. A pathway from basic research to clinical trialsD J Miklowitz
Department of Psychology, University of Colorado, Boulder 80309 0345, USA
J Marital Fam Ther 24:419-35. 1998..The methodological complexities of psychosocial treatment studies are many. Moreover, the results of these studies often reflect interactions between treatment, process, and outcome variables...
The emotion reactivity scale: development, evaluation, and relation to self-injurious thoughts and behaviorsMatthew K Nock
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
Behav Ther 39:107-16. 2008..These findings provide preliminary support for the ERS and suggest that increased emotion reactivity may help explain the association between psychopathology and SITB...
Directed forgetting of emotional stimuli in borderline personality disorderL Korfine
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA
J Abnorm Psychol 109:214-21. 2000..In other words, borderline participants remembered borderline words that they were instructed to forget. These results may be consistent with enhanced encoding of salient words and perhaps related themes in BPD individuals...
Detecting individuals with borderline personality disorder in the community: an ascertainment strategy and comparison with a hospital sampleLauren Korfine
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, USA
J Pers Disord 23:62-75. 2009..Results suggest that some research questions might be addressed better with participants from community samples, while others might be better suited to clinical samples...
Predicting expressed emotion: a study with families of obsessive-compulsive and agoraphobic outpatientsD L Chambless
Department of Psychology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599 3270, USA
J Fam Psychol 15:225-40. 2001..Patient Pathology predicted perceived criticism but not observer-rated hostility...
Child maltreatment, non-suicidal self-injury, and the mediating role of self-criticismLisa H Glassman
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, 33 Kirkland Street, 1280, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
Behav Res Ther 45:2483-90. 2007..Future research is needed to test the temporal relation between maltreatment and NSSI and should aim to identify additional pathways to engagement in NSSI...
Control and controllability: beliefs and behaviour in high and low expressed emotion relativesJill M Hooley
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
Psychol Med 32:1091-9. 2002..They further suggest that controlling behaviours on the part of relatives may mediate the EE-relapse link in schizophrenia. Such behaviours may be important targets for modification in family-based interventions for schizophrenia...
Cognitive aspects of nonclinical obsessive-compulsive hoardingSara A Luchian
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, 33 Kirkland Street, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
Behav Res Ther 45:1657-62. 2007..These findings suggest that underinclusiveness and indecisiveness, characteristic of clinical hoarders, are evident in nonclinical hoarders as well...
Attributions and expressed emotion: a reviewChristine Barrowclough
Academic Division of Clinical Psychology, School of Psychiatry and Behavioural Sciences, University of Manchester, Education and Research Building 2nd Floor, Wythenshawe Hospital, M23 9LT, Manchester, UK
Clin Psychol Rev 23:849-80. 2003..Particularly helpful in this regard may be interventions that use verbal and behavioral reattribution techniques similar to those described in the cognitive behavioral treatment of emotional disorders...
Causal attributions about schizophrenia in families in China: expressed emotion and patient relapseLawrence H Yang
Psychiatric Epidemiology Training Program, Columbia University, 722 West 168th Street MSPH Box 43, 7th Floor Room 720 F, New York, NY 10032, USA
J Abnorm Psychol 113:592-602. 2004..EE mediated the effect of controllable, but not personal, attributions on relapse. Relatives' use of a particular Chinese characteristic (narrow-mindedness) was integral to the personal dimension's protective effect...
Family members' knowledge about borderline personality disorder: correspondence with their levels of depression, burden, distress, and expressed emotionPerry D Hoffman
Department of Psychiatry, Weill Medical College of Cornell University, USA
Fam Process 42:469-78. 2003..Further research is warranted and may provide additional information to this understudied area...
