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METHOD:PUBLISH
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//PlanIt Purple//EN
BEGIN:VEVENT
STATUS:CONFIRMED
LAST-MODIFIED:20120321T104351
URL:http://www.wcas.northwestern.edu/psych/events/colloquium_series/
PRIORITY:0
CLASS:PUBLIC
UID:423659@northwestern.edu
SUMMARY:Psychology Colloquium with Tim Trull (University of Missouri)
DESCRIPTION:NU Department of Psychology presents: &#160; Ambulatory assessment of emotion dysregulation\, alcohol use\, and interpersonal functioning Timothy J. Trull\, PhD University of Missouri &#160; Traditional\, cross-sectional clinical assessment is limited by retrospective biases and is not able to capture the dynamic and time-dependent nature of the clinical phenomena that we seek to study. Experience sampling and ecological momentary assessment (ESM/EMA) studies of clinical phenomena indicate that moods\, behaviors\, and urges may wax and wane over time\, and these changes may be influenced by other events\, experiences\, and situations\, to name a few of the possibilities. It is asking too much of both patients and clinicians to use retrospective\, cross-sectional assessments to piece together the temporal sequencing of so many relevant variables. In turn\, this traditional approach is likely to result in a very simplistic\, limited\, and perhaps inaccurate account of the problems and concerns of our patients. &#160; I will present findings from my research program that focus on the ambulatory assessment of emotion dysregulation and associated problems in outpatients diagnosed with borderline personality disorder (BPD) and a comparison group of outpatients with current depression. The term ambulatory assessment includes ESM/EMA methods and also extends to methods that do not require self-report. Ambulatory assessment data that are collected in patients&#8217; natural environments provide additional insight into the association of emotional dysregulation\, alcohol use\, and interpersonal experience in daily life. I will present results from self-report data collected in real-time with palm pilots\, auditory data collected with the Electronically Activated Recording (EAR) device\, and discuss the future of ambulatory assessment in clinical psychology. http://psychology.missouri.edu/trullt &#160; Thursday\, April 5\, 2012 4:00pm Swift Hall 107 Evanston Campus http://www.wcas.northwestern.edu/psych/events/colloquium_series/
DTSTART:20120405T160000
DTEND:20120405T173000
CREATED:20110919T000000
DTSTAMP:20110919T000000
SEQUENCE:0
LOCATION:Evanston
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