Philip Corlett, PhD
Associate Professor of PsychiatryCards
About
Research
Publications
2026
Song-making in a group (SING): a longitudinal study for people experiencing psychosis
Greco D, de Obeso S, Camilo S, Freeland C, Pavlo A, Bien C, Nachemson J, Lubinski C, Christoferson A, Kenney J, Corlett P. Song-making in a group (SING): a longitudinal study for people experiencing psychosis. Psychosis 2026, ahead-of-print: 1-15. DOI: 10.1080/17522439.2026.2634654.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchHallucinations, Prior Overweighting, and Glutamate
Corlett P. Hallucinations, Prior Overweighting, and Glutamate. Biological Psychiatry 2026, 99: 513-514. PMID: 41825972, DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2026.01.007.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchIMPACT-ING the practice of computational psychiatry
Huys Q, Corlett P. IMPACT-ING the practice of computational psychiatry. Biological Psychiatry Cognitive Neuroscience And Neuroimaging 2026 PMID: 41839316, DOI: 10.1016/j.bpsc.2026.03.007.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchThreading the needle: Practical considerations for merging theory-driven computational psychiatry with data-driven analytics to enhance precision health at scale
Cheng A, Konova A, Powers A, Corlett P, Levy I, Gu X, Huys Q, Pushkarskya H, Fineberg S, Hauser T, Bzdok D, Harpaz-Rotem I, Babuscio T, Nichols L, Zhao Y, Sharma M, Meeker D, Xu H, Rutledge R, Pearlson G, Pittenger C, Yip S. Threading the needle: Practical considerations for merging theory-driven computational psychiatry with data-driven analytics to enhance precision health at scale. Biological Psychiatry Cognitive Neuroscience And Neuroimaging 2026 PMID: 41763489, DOI: 10.1016/j.bpsc.2026.02.009.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchComputational psychiatryLongitudinal trajectoriesLongitudinal dataParsing heterogeneityDiagnostic boundariesBehavioral tasksPsychiatric disordersPsychiatric diagnosticsDimensional approachLongitudinal courseSymptom trajectoriesCognitive processesDiagnostic categoriesPsychiatryIndividual changesUnderlying mechanismsClinical research methodsClinical researchHiTOPRDoCIndividualsClinical realityDisordersSymptomsTaskComputational phenotypes underlying effort-based decision-making and negative symptoms in a transdiagnostic severe mental illness sample
Luther L, Cooper J, Treadway M, Knippenberg A, Walker E, Gold J, Waltz J, Schiffman J, Ellman L, Mittal V, Zinbarg R, Silverstein S, Corlett P, Powers A, Woods S, Allen D, Lahti A, Strauss G. Computational phenotypes underlying effort-based decision-making and negative symptoms in a transdiagnostic severe mental illness sample. Molecular Psychiatry 2026, 1-11. PMID: 41691110, DOI: 10.1038/s41380-026-03474-x.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchEffort-based decision-makingNegative symptomsReward magnitudeDepressive disorderNegative symptom measuresClinical high riskFirst-episode psychosisMentally ill sampleMultiple psychiatric diagnosesReward taskSymptom measuresBipolar disorderNeuropsychological testsEffort expenditurePsychiatric diagnosisIll sampleDiagnostic groupsSubjective valueHealthy control groupCognitive impairmentHC groupBias modelRewardDisordersPsychosis
2025
Reduced interpersonal head synchrony in youth at clinical high risk for psychosis
Lozano-Goupil J, Pokorny V, Schiffman J, Silverstein S, Gold J, Waltz J, Ellman L, Strauss G, Walker E, Powers A, Corlett P, Woods S, Mittal V. Reduced interpersonal head synchrony in youth at clinical high risk for psychosis. Psychological Medicine 2025, 55: e387. PMID: 41457934, DOI: 10.1017/s0033291725102754.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsClinical high riskClinical high-risk participantsHealthy controlsHigh riskClinical high-risk groupStrength of synchronyClinical high-risk individualsTemporal alignmentPsychosis-risk statesGroup differencesClinical symptomsAt-risk populationsNo significant group differencesNegative symptomsPositive symptomsImpaired social functioningVideo analysis toolPotential biomarkersSignificant group differencesSocial anhedoniaSymptomsShort video recordingsClinical InterviewNonverbal synchronySocial functioningSpontaneous head movements during virtual clinical interviews help predict 12-months clinical outcomes in youth at clinical high risk for psychosis
Lozano-Goupil J, Parmacek S, Gold J, Corlett P, Strauss G, Schiffman J, Ellman L, Walker E, Powers A, Woods S, Waltz J, Silverstein S, Mittal V. Spontaneous head movements during virtual clinical interviews help predict 12-months clinical outcomes in youth at clinical high risk for psychosis. Schizophrenia 2025, 11: 137. PMID: 41258211, PMCID: PMC12630965, DOI: 10.1038/s41537-025-00683-1.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchClinical high riskClinical InterviewSymptom severityMarker of symptom severityDisorganized symptomsPsychosis vulnerabilitySocial anhedoniaNegative symptomsPositive symptomsBaseline symptomatologyGlobal functioningSpontaneous head movementsMotor behaviorSocial functioningMotor abnormalitiesSocial interactionAvolitionLongitudinal studyPrognostic valuePsychosisEarly interventionHead movementsHigh riskSymptomsSymptom monitoringShift in sex and age of individuals at a clinical high risk (CHR) for psychosis: relation to differences in recruitment methods and effect on sample characteristics
Farina E, Mourgues-Codern C, Stimler K, Kenney J, Saxena A, Mukhtar H, Addington J, Bearden C, Cadenhead K, Cannon T, Cornblatt B, Ellman L, Gold J, Keshavan M, Mathalon D, Mittal V, Perkins D, Schiffman J, Silverstein S, Strauss G, Stone W, Walker E, Waltz J, Corlett P, Powers A, Woods S. Shift in sex and age of individuals at a clinical high risk (CHR) for psychosis: relation to differences in recruitment methods and effect on sample characteristics. Schizophrenia 2025, 11: 123. PMID: 41053030, PMCID: PMC12501016, DOI: 10.1038/s41537-025-00663-5.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchClinical high riskClinical high-risk samplesNorth American Prodrome Longitudinal StudyOvert psychotic disordersSample characteristicsSample of individualsNegative symptomsPsychotic disordersPsychosis riskSelf-referralRecruitment sourcesBetween-study differencesComputerized assessmentHierarchical regressionPsychosisRecruitment source effectsClinical implicationsLongitudinal studyGeneral symptomsDemographic differencesClinical profileSymptomsParticipantsClinical heterogeneitySexPseudo-specificity, pseudo-modules, and pseudo-models in paranoia
Corlett P, Rossi-Goldthorpe R, Suthaharan P, Sheffield J, de Obeso S, Heyes C. Pseudo-specificity, pseudo-modules, and pseudo-models in paranoia. Trends In Cognitive Sciences 2025, 29: 1067-1068. PMID: 41015682, DOI: 10.1016/j.tics.2025.09.007.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchA remote care navigation solution associated with improved utilization and outcomes of mental healthcare: A nationwide cohort study in the USA
Ward E, Hawrilenko M, Ambwani G, Brown M, Krystal J, Corlett P, Chekroud A. A remote care navigation solution associated with improved utilization and outcomes of mental healthcare: A nationwide cohort study in the USA. PLOS ONE 2025, 20: e0331454. PMID: 40966254, PMCID: PMC12445557, DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0331454.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsCare navigationMental healthcare utilizationHealthcare utilizationCohort studyComplete demographic informationMental health benefitsMental health assessmentNationwide cohort studyAssociated with greater engagementMental healthcareCare utilizationRetrospective cohort studyPeople of colorScheduling appointmentsWhite participantsHealth assessmentCareGreater engagementParticipants of colorDemographic informationClinical implementationBaseline symptomsHealth benefitsParticipantsUS employers
Clinical Trials
Current Trials
Song-making In a Group (SING)
IRB ID2000026376RolePrincipal InvestigatorPrimary Completion Date08/31/2024Recruiting ParticipantsTeen Brain and Behavior Study
IRB ID1111009332RoleSub InvestigatorPrimary Completion Date12/21/2022Recruiting ParticipantsGenderBothAge13 years - 17 years
Academic Achievements & Community Involvement
News
News
- April 08, 2026
Making Music to Treat Symptoms of Psychosis
- September 05, 2025Source: Scientific American
Newfound 'Reality Signal' Helps the Brain Tell Imagination from Real Life
- September 04, 2025Source: The American Journal of Psychiatry
20 Years of Aberrant Salience in Psychosis: What Have We Learned?
- December 17, 2024Source: Yale News
Paranoia May Be, In Part, a Visual Problem
Get In Touch
Contacts
Mailing Address
Psychiatry
34 Park St., CNRU
New Haven, CT 06519
United States