Matteo Cella
King's College London
124 Papers
363 Citations
Matteo Cella is an academic researcher from King's College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cognition & Cognitive remediation therapy. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 105 publications. Previous affiliations of Matteo Cella include University of Cambridge & Swansea University.
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Papers
Measuring fatigue in clinical and community settings.
Matteo Cella,Trudie Chalder +1 more
TL;DR: Physical and mental fatigue are clearly separable components of fatigue and the fatigue scale effectively discriminates, at high scores, between CFS patients and the general population.
353
Auditory verbal hallucinations in persons with and without a need for care
Louise Johns,Kristiina Kompus,Melissa Connell,Clara S. Humpston,Tania M. Lincoln,Eleanor Longden,Antonio Preti,Ben Alderson-Day,Johanna C. Badcock,Matteo Cella,Charles Fernyhough,Simon McCarthy-Jones,Emmanuelle Peters,Andrea Raballo,James Scott,Sara Siddi,Iris E. C. Sommer,Frank Larøi +17 more
TL;DR: Research on AVH in nonclinical individuals is reviewed and a cross-disciplinary view of the clinical relevance of these experiences in defining the risk of mental illness and need for care is provided.
The Automatic Detection of Chronic Pain-Related Expression: Requirements, Challenges and the Multimodal EmoPain Dataset
M.S.H. Aung,Sebastian Kaltwang,Bernardino Romera-Paredes,Brais Martinez,Aneesha Singh,Matteo Cella,Michel Valstar,Hongying Meng,Andrew Kemp,Moshen Shafizadeh,Aaron C. Elkins,Natalie Kanakam,Amschel de Rothschild,Nick Tyler,Paul J. Watson,Amanda C de C Williams,Maja Pantic,Nadia Bianchi-Berthouze +17 more
TL;DR: The factors and challenges in the automated recognition of such expressions and behaviour are described and potential avenues for development of such systems are discussed by discussing potential avenues in the context of these findings.
211
Impaired flexible decision-making in major depressive disorder
TL;DR: Depressed patients show impaired decision-making behaviour in static and dynamic environments and altered sensitivity to reward and punishment is proposed as the mechanism responsible for the lack of advantageous choices and poor adjustment to a changing environment.
208
Measuring attitudes towards mental health using social media: investigating stigma and trivialisation
TL;DR: The findings show that mental health stigma is common on social media, and trivialisation is also common, suggesting that while society may be more open to discussing mental health problems, care should be taken to ensure this is done appropriately.