- Lauren Alloy
Lauren B. Alloy is a
professor ofpsychology atTemple University recognized in the area of mood disorders. Her research focuses on cognitive, interpersonal, and biopsychosocial processes in the onset and maintenance of depression and bipolar disorder. [ [http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/007242298x/information_center_view0/about_the_authors.html Abnormal Psychology: About the Authors] .] In the late 1970s, Alloy and her longtime collaborator Lyn Abramson demonstrated that depressed individuals hold a more accurate view of their control of the social environment than do non-depressed individuals. This finding holds true even when the depression is manipulated experimentally [ [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/printout/0,8816,1015922,00.html Time/CNN: How Full Is That Glass, Really?.] ] (see also:illusion of control )Awards [ [http://alloy.socialpsychology.org/ Professional Profile: Lauren Alloy] .]
* 1984 -
American Psychological Association Young Psychologist Award
* 2001 - Temple University's Paul W. Eberman Faculty Research Award
* 2002 - American Psychological Association Master Lecturer Award in Psychopathology (jointly with Lyn Abramson)
* 2003 - American Psychological Association Division 12 Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award (jointly with Lyn Abramson)
* 2003 - Society for a Science of Clinical Psychology Distinguished Scientist Award.
* 2003 - American Psychological Association Division 12 Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award (with Lyn Abramson)
* 2004 - Society for a Science of Clinical Psychology Distinguished Scientist Award
* 2004 -Joseph Wolpe Distinguished Faculty Fellow in PsychologyPublications
* Alloy, L. B., Abramson, L. Y., Gibb, B. E., Crossfield, A. G., Pieracci, A. M., Spasojevic, J., & Steinberg, J. A. (2004). Developmental antecedents of cognitive vulnerability to depression: Review of findings from the cognitive vulnerability to depression project. "Journal of Cognitive Psychotherapy", 18(2), 115-133.
* Crossfield, A. G., Alloy, L. B., Gibb, B. E., & Abramson, L. Y. (2002). The development of depressogenic cognitive styles: The role of negative childhood life events and parental inferential feedback. "Journal of Cognitive Psychotherapy", 16(4), 487-502.
* Gibb, B. E., Abramson, L. Y., & Alloy, L. B. (2004). Emotional maltreatment from parents, verbal peer victimization, and cognitive vulnerability to depression. "Cognitive Therapy & Research", 28(1), 1-21.
* Gibb, B. E., Alloy, L. B., & Abramson, L. Y. (2003). Global reports of childhood maltreatment versus recall of specific maltreatment experiences: Relationships with dysfunctional attitudes and depressive symptoms. "Cognition & Emotion", 17(6), 903-915.
* Gibb, B. E., Alloy, L. B., Abramson, L. Y., Beevers, C. G., & Miller, I. W. (2004). Cognitive vulnerability to depression: A taxometric analysis. "Journal of Abnormal Psychology", 113(1), 81-89.
* Gibb, B. E., Alloy, L. B., Abramson, L. Y., & Marx, B. P. (2003). Childhood maltreatment and maltreatment-specific inferences: A test of Rose and Abramson's (1992) extension of the hopelessness theory. "Cognition & Emotion", 17(6), 917-931.
* Gibb, B. E., Zhu, L., Alloy, L. B., & Abramson, L. Y. (2002). Attributional styles and academic achievement in university students: A longitudinal investigation. "Cognitive Therapy & Research", 26(3), 309-315.
* Robinson, M. S., & Alloy, L. B. (2003). Negative cognitive styles and stress-reactive rumination interact to predict depression: A prospective study. "Cognitive Therapy & Research", 27(3), 275-292.
* Safford, S. M., Alloy, L. B., Crossfield, A. G., Morocco, A. M., & Wang, J. C. (2004). The relationship of cognitive style and attachment style to depression and anxiety in young adults. "Journal of Cognitive Psychotherapy", 18(1), 25-41.
* Spasojevic, J., & Alloy, L. B. (2002). Who becomes a depressive ruminator? Developmental antecedents of ruminative response style. "Journal of Cognitive Psychotherapy", 16(4), 405-419.
* Spasojevic, J., & Alloy, L. B. (2001). Rumination as a common mechanism relating depressive risk factors to depression. "Emotion", 1(1), 25-37.
* Steinberg, J. A., Gibb, B. E., Alloy, L. B., & Abramson, L. Y. (2003). Childhood emotional maltreatment, cognitive vulnerability to depression, and self-referent information processing in adulthood: Reciprocal relations. "Journal of Cognitive Psychotherapy", 17(4), 347-358.References
External links
* [http://www.temple.edu/psychology/FacultyWebs/Alloy/alloy.html Temple University faculty page]
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