Publications by authors named "F R Goodman"

Because social anxiety and depression commonly co-occur, it can be challenging to disentangle the emotional and motivational features of these conditions in everyday life contexts. In this daily diary study, we sought to understand the interplay between daily social anxiety and depression symptoms and emotion and motivation, determining whether daily symptoms are independently linked with positive affect, negative affect, and social motivation (desire to approach or to withdraw from others). Community-dwelling adults (N = 269) with a wide range of social anxiety and depression symptoms completed daily assessments for 14 consecutive days (a total of 2,986 daily surveys).

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Research using psychophysiological methods holds great promise for refining clinical assessment, identifying risk factors, and informing treatment. Unfortunately, unique methodological features of existing approaches limit inclusive research participation and, consequently, generalizability. This brief overview and commentary provides a snapshot of the current state of representation in clinical psychophysiology, with a focus on the forms and consequences of ongoing exclusion of Black participants.

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Article Synopsis
  • The SuDDICU trial aims to evaluate the effects of selective decontamination of the digestive tract (SDD) on outcomes for ventilated patients in ICUs, focusing on whether it reduces hospital mortality and affects antibiotic resistance.
  • This international study involves 19 ICUs in Australia and 10 in Canada and the UK, recruiting 15,000 to 17,000 patients over two 12-month trial periods, comparing SDD plus standard care against standard care alone.
  • Key primary and secondary outcomes include all-cause hospital mortality, duration of ventilation, ICU and hospital stay, incidence of new infections, and the development of antibiotic resistance, with recruitment starting in 2017.
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Objective: Improvement in emotion regulation is a proposed transdiagnostic mechanism of change. However, treatment research is limited by disorder-specific investigations that assess a narrow number of emotion regulation strategies. Moreover, most assess pre-to-post-treatment change without examining short-term changes throughout psychotherapy that might influence treatment response.

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