Stephanie Louise
Swinburne University of Technology
11 Papers
67 Citations
Stephanie Louise is an academic researcher from Swinburne University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Schizotypy & Mental health. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 10 publications. Previous affiliations of Stephanie Louise include Monash University & RMIT University.
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Papers
Mindfulness- And Acceptance-Based Interventions for Psychosis: Our Current Understanding and a Meta-Analysis
TL;DR: Overall, findings indicate that third wave interventions show beneficial effects on symptoms in persons with psychotic disorders, however, further research is required to determine the efficacy of specific models of treatment.
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Schizotypal Traits are Associated with Poorer Executive Functioning in Healthy Adults.
Stephanie Louise,Stephanie Louise,Caroline Gurvich,Erica Neill,Erica Neill,Eric J. Tan,Eric J. Tan,Tamsyn E Van Rheenen,Susan L. Rossell,Susan L. Rossell +9 more
TL;DR: It is found that higher scores on the subscales of unusual experiences, cognitive disorganization, and impulsive non-conformity related to worse performance on a measure of inhibition, and as introvertive anhedonia increased, both attention and processing speed and reasoning and problem-solving performance became more impaired.
Do schizotypy dimensions reflect the symptoms of schizophrenia
Elizabeth H.X. Thomas,Susan L. Rossell,Susan L. Rossell,Susan L. Rossell,Eric J. Tan,Eric J. Tan,Eric J. Tan,Erica Neill,Erica Neill,Tamsyn E Van Rheenen,Tamsyn E Van Rheenen,Tamsyn E Van Rheenen,Sean P. Carruthers,Sean P. Carruthers,Philip Sumner,Philip Sumner,Stephanie Louise,Stephanie Louise,Kiymet Bozaoglu,Caroline Gurvich +19 more
TL;DR: The results demonstrated significant correlations between the Oxford-Liverpool Inventory of Feelings and Experiences positive and negative subscales and their respective Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale subscales only, indicating thatpositive and negative schizotypy dimensions across patients and controls accurately reflect the respective schizophrenia symptomatology observed in patients.
Does cognitive performance map to categorical diagnoses of schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder and bipolar disorder? A discriminant functions analysis
Tamsyn E Van Rheenen,Tamsyn E Van Rheenen,Tamsyn E Van Rheenen,Shayden Bryce,Shayden Bryce,Eric J. Tan,Eric J. Tan,Erica Neill,Erica Neill,Caroline Gurvich,Stephanie Louise,Stephanie Louise,Susan L. Rossell,Susan L. Rossell,Susan L. Rossell +14 more
TL;DR: A discriminant functions analysis revealed a significant function comprising semantic memory, immediate memory and processing speed that maximally separated patients with SZ from those with BD, suggesting a cluster of non-executive cognitive processes appears to have some validity in mapping onto traditional nosological boundaries.
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The Acceptability, Feasibility and Potential Outcomes of an Individual Mindfulness-Based Intervention for Hearing Voices.
TL;DR: The findings suggest that this novel treatment protocol is appropriate, engaging and safe for persistent voice hearers, and for mindful responding and attentional switching suggest these to be potential mechanisms of change for further investigation.
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