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
2016
Examining Potential Iatrogenic Effects of Viewing Suicide and Self-Injury Stimuli
B. C, Glenn J, Deming C, D’Angelo E, Hooley J, Teachman B, Nock M. Examining Potential Iatrogenic Effects of Viewing Suicide and Self-Injury Stimuli. Psychological Assessment 2016, 28: 1510-1515. PMID: 26821197, DOI: 10.1037/pas0000280.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsImplicit Association TestSelf-injurySelf-Injury Implicit Association TestIAT studiesAdolescent psychiatric inpatientsSelf-injurious thoughtsFemale research participantsPsychiatric inpatientsSuicidal urgesBehavioral measuresMood declineNeurobiological studiesAssociation TestIatrogenic effectsHigh-stakes natureSuicideUndergraduate studentsClinical scienceWeb-based respondentsResearch participantsSITBsMoodStimuliInpatientsUrge