2024
Do people know how suicidal they will be? Understanding suicidal prospection
Coppersmith D, Jaroszewski A, Gershman S, B. C, Millner A, Fortgang R, Kleiman E, Nock M. Do people know how suicidal they will be? Understanding suicidal prospection. Suicide And Life-Threatening Behavior 2024, 54: 750-761. PMID: 38700375, PMCID: PMC11305949, DOI: 10.1111/sltb.13087.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsSuicidal thoughtsSuicidal thinkingKilling selfSeverity of suicidal thoughtsPsychological processesParticipants' predictionsReal-time monitoring studySuicideDay participantsThoughtsSelfParticipantsNext daySeverityPredicted levelsFitting modelFollow-up surveyThinkingPrediction errorAverage severityUrgeAdultsPeopleFollow-up period
2018
Testing Mood-Activated Psychological Markers for Suicidal Ideation
Cha C, O’Connor R, Kirtley O, Cleare S, Wetherall K, Eschle S, Tezanos K, Nock M. Testing Mood-Activated Psychological Markers for Suicidal Ideation. Journal Of Psychopathology And Clinical Science 2018, 127: 448-457. PMID: 29927267, DOI: 10.1037/abn0000358.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsNegative mood inductionImplicit Association TestSuicidal ideationPsychological processesMood inductionDepressive symptomsSuicide stroop taskLikelihood of suicidal ideationBaseline suicidal ideationDifferential activation hypothesisFunction of moodPsychological risk factorsMeasuring psychological processesStroop taskIAT performanceTransient moodStroop scoresNegative moodSuicidal individualsImplicit identificationIdeationPsychological markersMoodActivation hypothesisAssociation Test