Jeremy W. Eberle
University of Virginia
15 Papers
5 Citations
Jeremy W. Eberle is an academic researcher from University of Virginia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anxiety & Computer science. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 7 publications. Previous affiliations of Jeremy W. Eberle include University of Washington.
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Papers
Dialectical behavior therapy skills for transdiagnostic emotion dysregulation: A pilot randomized controlled trial
Andrada D. Neacsiu,Andrada D. Neacsiu,Jeremy W. Eberle,Rachel Kramer,Taylor Wiesmann,Marsha M. Linehan +5 more
TL;DR: Dialectical behavior therapy skills training (DBT-ST) is a promising treatment for emotion dysregulation for depressed and anxious transdiagnostic adults, although more assessment of feasibility is needed.
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A Weakly Supervised Learning Framework for Detecting Social Anxiety and Depression
Asif Salekin,Jeremy W. Eberle,Jeffrey J. Glenn,Bethany A. Teachman,John A. Stankovic +4 more
- 05 Jul 2018
TL;DR: A novel feature modeling technique named NN2Vec is presented that identifies and exploits the inherent relationship between speakers' vocal states and symptoms/affective states and achieves F-1 scores 17% and 13% higher than those of the best available baselines.
Adapting cognitive bias modification to train healthy prospection.
TL;DR: Results suggest that an online prospection intervention can lead to more positive expectations about future events and improve positive outlook, though open questions remain about what accounts for the training effects.
7
Improving the Computational Reproducibility of Clinical Science: Tools for Open Data and Code
Jeremy W. Eberle
- 12 Mar 2022
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors present five tools for openly sharing data and analysis code in clinical science, with a focus on R code (R Core Team, 2021). Companion code is available at https://doi.org/jfck.
5
Anxiety sensitivity, distress intolerance, and negative interpretation bias strengthen the relationship between trait anxiety and depersonalization
TL;DR: The authors investigated trait moderators of the relationships between anxiety and depersonalization, and found that trait moderators can influence co-occurring anxiety and self-depersonalisation, but little is known about factors that influence cooccurring depression.