Morris Bell, PhD, ABPP
Professor Emeritus and Senior Research Scientist in PsychiatryCards
About
Titles
Professor Emeritus and Senior Research Scientist in Psychiatry
VA RR&D Senior Research Career Scientist
Biography
Dr. Morris Bell is Professor Emeritus and Senior Research Scientist in the Department of Psychiatry at Yale University School of Medicine and Senior Research Career Scientist for the Dept. of Veterans Affairs Rehabilitation Research and Development Service. Trained as a clinical and neuropsychologist, Dr. Bell’s career as clinician and researcher has been devoted to exploring interventions to restore cognitive and work function for people with severe and persistent mental disorders. His work spans four decades and has had wide national and international influence.
Dr. Bell’s research on work rehabilitation has revealed that cognitive impairment is a rate-limiting factor in improving work function. As a result, he has been at the forefront of developing cognitive remediation interventions. He has found that cognitive remediation can improve vocational outcomes in work therapy and supported employment. He is also a co-investigator on a study that combines cognitive enhancing medications with cognitive training for people with schizophrenia. His development and study of cognitive interventions has extended to other disorders including substance abuse, "chemo-brain", mild to moderate TBI and ADHD.
Dr. Bell developed a Virtual Reality Job Interview Training program with funding from the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) that has been designated by SAMSHA as an evidence-based practice for job interview training. It is now commercially available and widely used in vocational rehabilitation programs for adolescents with special needs including Autism Spectrum Disorder and for adults with disabling psychiatric illnesses. He was recently awarded a grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to develop methods for robot-assisted vocational training.
Dr. Bell has been an important contributor to studies of social cognition and is the co-developer of the Bell Lysaker Emotion Recognition Test (BLERT), which was recently recommended by NIMH for clinical trials involving social cognition. He has also developed the Social Attribution Test- Multiple Choice (SAT-MC) as a measure of theory of mind and the American version of the Hinting Task, a measure of Theory of Mind. He is currently a co-investigator on an NIMH funded study of the “Social Brain” that includes these instruments in a comparison of Adults with Schizophrenia, Autism and Healthy Controls. Other measures developed by Dr. Bell include the Bell Object Relations Reality Testing Inventory (BORRTI) and the Bell Relationship Inventory for Adolescents (BRIA), both published by Western Psychological Services, Her also co-developed the Work Behavior Inventory and the Vocational Cognitive Rating Scale for use in psychiatric rehabilitation.
Dr. Bell is currently developing a measure of embodied cognition that uses physical tasks to assess cognition in motion. Funded by NSF, this instrument will use motion capture technology to automatically score children as they perform balance, gait, attention, response inhibition, working memory and set-shifting tasks. These scores may more closely relate to daily functioning than current static neuropsychological assessment and more clearly represent cognitive development in children.
Dr. Bell’s research activities are supported by grants from National Institute of Mental Health, National Institute of Drug Abuse, National Science Foundation, Department of Defense and the Department of Veterans Affairs. He also serves as chairman of his Institutional Review Board and consults to industry and other research groups internationally on interventions that may lead to functional improvement in schizophrenia and other disabling psychiatric illnesses. Dr. Bell was recently selected by the World Health Organization to serve on their schizophrenia expert panel for the International Classification of Function, Disability and Health (ICF).
Dr. Bell directs the VA/Yale Learning Based Recovery Center. He also directs the Veterans Integration to Academic Leadership (VITAL) program which reaches out to Veterans on college campuses, providing psycho-education and mental health services, liaison to other Veteran Healthcare Administration services, and consultation and education for faculty about Veteran students.
Dr. Bell serves as Chair of the VA Connecticut Healthcare System IRB. The American Psychological Association has recognized Dr. Bell with a national award for Distinguished Contributions to Science in Public Service.
Appointments
Psychiatry
EmeritusPrimaryPsychiatry
Senior Research ScientistSecondary
Other Departments & Organizations
- Center for Brain & Mind Health
- Connecticut Mental Health Center
- Division of Mental Health Services
- Psychiatry
- Psychology Section
- VA-CMHC-Yale Learning Based Recovery Center
- Yale Global Mental Health Program
- Yale Ventures
Education & Training
- PhD
- George Washington University (1976)
Research
Overview
NIDA Cognitive Remediation and Work Therapy in the Early Phase of Substance Abuse Treatment. Pilot study to determine whether these interventions improve substance abuse outcomes.
NIMH SBIR “Vocational Rehabilitation Training Simulation for the Psychiatrically Disabled, Phase 1.- Development of computer-based job interview role-play training.
VA Rehabilitation R&D “Cognitive Training to Enhance Work Program
NIMH "Cognitive Training and Enhanced Supported Employment.” - RCT of Positscience cognitive training with CMHC based Supported Employment
VA Rehabilitation R&D (Lysaker PI, Bell Co-PI). Effects of CBT and Cognitive Remediation on Work in Schizophrenia.” - RCT of CBT and Positscience cognitive training with VA work therapy.
Medical Research Interests
Academic Achievements & Community Involvement
News
News
- September 16, 2022
Job Seekers Receive Help from Bell's Virtual Reality Job Interview Training Program
- April 05, 2022
Advocate For Medical Science VACHS / YSM Research Leader Dr. Fred Wright Retires
- August 16, 2021Source: Military.com
Off-the-Shelf Games Help Some Veterans With Brain Injuries
- July 28, 2021Source: Military Times
Brain games help restore function after mild TBIs, study finds