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Psychology

D-Index
64
Citations
12186
World Ranking
3030
National Ranking
148

Overview

Robyn L. Tate is affiliated with the University of Sydney in Australia and has contributed to research primarily within the fields of Medicine and Psychology.

Their work spans several subfields including Epidemiology, Emergency Medicine, Neurology, Psychiatry and Mental Health, and Clinical Psychology. Tate's research has a strong focus on topics related to traumatic brain injury and its associated conditions, including:

  • Traumatic Brain Injury Research
  • Traumatic Brain Injury and Neurovascular Disturbances
  • Cardiac Arrest and Resuscitation
  • Cerebral Palsy and Movement Disorders
  • Behavioral and Psychological Studies
  • Trauma and Emergency Care Studies
  • Musculoskeletal pain and rehabilitation

Among recent publications authored or co-authored by Tate are:

  • From Boulder to Stockholm in 70 Years: Single Case Experimental Designs in Clinical Research (2020), The Psychological Record
  • A longitudinal study of support needs after severe traumatic brain injury (2020), Brain Injury
  • Communication and Psychosocial Outcomes 2-Years After Severe Traumatic Brain Injury: Development of a Prognostic Model (2023), Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
  • The psychological benefits of neuropsychological assessment feedback as a psycho-educational therapeutic intervention: A randomized-controlled trial with cross-over in multiple sclerosis (2022), Neuropsychological Rehabilitation
  • Research Note: Single-case experimental designs (2020), Journal of Physiotherapy

Their research has been published most frequently in the following venues:

  • Neuropsychological Rehabilitation (3 publications)
  • Brain Injury (2 publications)
  • The Psychological Record
  • Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
  • Journal of Physiotherapy

Tate has collaborated repeatedly with several scholars, including Skye McDonald, Michael Perdices, Grahame Simpson, Johan W.S. Vlaeyen, and Rikard K. Wicksell.

In addition to research articles, Tate has contributed to book publications such as "A Compendium of Tests, Scales and Questionnaires" published by Psychology Press eBooks in 2020.

Best Publications

  • The Single-Case Reporting Guideline In BEhavioural Interventions (SCRIBE) 2016 Statement†

    Robyn L. Tate;Michael Perdices;Ulrike Rosenkoetter;William Shadish

  • CONSORT extension for reporting N-of-1 trials (CENT) 2015 Statement

    Sunita Vohra;Larissa Shamseer;Margaret Sampson;Cecilia Bukutu

  • Rating the methodological quality of single-subject designs and n-of-1 trials: Introducing the Single-Case Experimental Design (SCED) Scale

    Robyn L Tate;Skye McDonald;Michael Perdices;Leanne Togher

  • Revision of a method quality rating scale for single-case experimental designs and n-of-1 trials: The 15-item Risk of Bias in N-of-1 Trials (RoBiNT) Scale

    Robyn L Tate;Michael Perdices;Ulrike Rosenkoetter;Donna Wakim

  • The Behavioural Assessment of the Dysexecutive Syndrome (BADS): Ecological, Concurrent and Construct Validity

    Gus Norris;Robyn L. Tate

  • Psychosocial outcome for the survivors of severe blunt head injury: the results from a consecutive series of 100 patients.

    Robyn L. Tate;J. M. Lulham;G. A. Broe;B. Strettles

  • The minimally conscious state and recovery potential: A follow-up study 2 to 5 years after traumatic brain injury

    Michele H. Lammi;Vanessa H. Smith;Robyn L. Tate;Christine M. Taylor

  • The Single-Case Reporting Guideline In BEhavioural Interventions (SCRIBE) 2016: Explanation and elaboration.

    Robyn L. Tate;Michael Perdices;Ulrike Rosenkoetter;Skye McDonald

  • Suicidality after traumatic brain injury: demographic, injury and clinical correlates

    Grahame Simpson;Robyn Tate

  • Adjustment to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: the importance of psychological factors

    H C McCathie;Susan Spence;Robyn L Tate

  • Suicidality in people surviving a traumatic brain injury: prevalence, risk factors and implications for clinical management.

    Grahame Simpson;Robyn Tate

  • Social skills treatment for people with severe, chronic acquired brain injuries: a multicenter trial.

    Skye McDonald;Robyn Tate;Leanne Togher;Cristina Bornhofen

  • Incidence of hospital-treated traumatic brain injury in an Australian community

    R.L. Tate;S. McDonald;J.M. Lulham

  • Single-subject designs as a tool for evidence-based clinical practice: Are they unrecognised and undervalued?

    Michael Perdices;Robyn L Tate

  • Measuring psychosocial recovery after traumatic brain injury: psychometric properties of a new scale.

    Robyn Tate;Adeline Hodgkinson;Ahmed Veerabangsa;Silvia Maggiotto

  • Evaluation of an Anger management therapy programme following acquired brain injury: A preliminary study

    Jessica Medd;Robyn L. Tate

  • INCOG recommendations for management of cognition following traumatic brain injury, part III: executive function and self-awareness.

    Robyn Tate;Mary R T Kennedy;Jennie Louise Ponsford;Jacinta M Douglas

  • CONSORT extension for reporting N-of-1 trials (CENT) 2015: explanation and elaboration.

    Larissa Shamseer;Margaret Sampson;Cecilia Bukutu;Christopher H Schmid

  • Executive dysfunction and characterological changes after traumatic brain injury: two sides of the same coin?

    Robyn L. Tate

  • Psychosocial adjustment after traumatic brain injury: what are the important variables?

    R. L. Tate;G. A. Broe

Frequent Co-Authors

Skye McDonald
Skye McDonald University of New South Wales
Leanne Togher
Leanne Togher University of Sydney
Jacinta Douglas
Jacinta Douglas La Trobe University
Grahame Simpson
Grahame Simpson University of Sydney
Tamara Ownsworth
Tamara Ownsworth Griffith University
Robert H. Horner
Robert H. Horner University of Oregon
David H. Barlow
David H. Barlow Boston University
Thomas R. Kratochwill
Thomas R. Kratochwill University of Wisconsin–Madison
Alan E. Kazdin
Alan E. Kazdin Yale University
Barbara A. Wilson
Barbara A. Wilson St George's, University of London

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