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Psychology

D-Index
55
Citations
12031
World Ranking
4391
National Ranking
476

Overview

Steven Jones is affiliated with Lancaster University in the United Kingdom. Their research spans medicine and psychology, with a strong focus on psychiatry and mental health, clinical psychology, general health professions, social psychology, and applied psychology.

Their work covers several main topics, including bipolar disorder and its treatment, family caregiving in mental illness, schizophrenia research and treatment, digital mental health interventions, adolescent and pediatric healthcare, mental health treatment and access, and studies related to suicide and self-harm.

Jones has published extensively in key academic venues with multiple publications in JMIR Mental Health, BMC Psychiatry, Journal of Affective Disorders, BMJ Open, and the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.

Among recent papers, some notable works include:

  • "Clinical effectiveness of a web-based peer-supported self-management intervention for relatives of people with psychosis or bipolar (REACT): online, observer-blind, randomised controlled superiority trial" (2020, BMC Psychiatry)
  • "Natural Language Processing Methods and Bipolar Disorder: Scoping Review" (2022, JMIR Mental Health)
  • "Personal recovery in bipolar disorder: Systematic review and 'best fit' framework synthesis of qualitative evidence - a POETIC adaptation of CHIME" (2021, Journal of Affective Disorders)
  • "An internet-delivered self-management programme for bipolar disorder in mental health services in Ireland: Results and learnings from a feasibility trial" (2020, Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy)
  • "Understanding the Impacts of Online Mental Health Peer Support Forums: Realist Synthesis" (2024, JMIR Mental Health)

Frequent co-authors working alongside Jones include Fiona Lobban, Paul Marshall, Paul Rayson, Heather Robinson, and Zoe Glossop.

Best Publications

  • A Brief Mental Health Outcome Scale-Reliability and Validity of the Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF)

    Steven H. Jones;Graham Thornicroft;Michael Coffey;Graham Dunn

  • The effects of improving sleep on mental health (OASIS): a randomised controlled trial with mediation analysis

    Daniel Freeman;Daniel Freeman;Bryony Sheaves;Bryony Sheaves;Guy M Goodwin;Guy M Goodwin;Ly-Mee Yu

  • Genome-wide association study identifies genetic loci for self-reported habitual sleep duration supported by accelerometer-derived estimates

    Hassan S. Dashti;Hassan S. Dashti;Samuel E. Jones;Andrew R. Wood;Jacqueline M. Lane;Jacqueline M. Lane

  • Actigraphic assessment of circadian activity and sleep patterns in bipolar disorder.

    Steven Huntley Jones;Dougal Julian Hare;Kate Evershed

  • Cognitive Therapy for Bipolar Disorder: A Therapist's Guide to Concepts, Methods and Practice

    Dominic H. Lam;Steven H. Jones;Peter Hayward

  • Cognitive therapy for bipolar illness : a pilot study of relapse prevention.

    Dominic H. Lam;Jeny Bright;Steven H. Jones;Peter Hayward

  • London-East Anglia randomised controlled trial of cognitive-behavioural therapy for psychosis. II: Predictors of outcome.

    Philippa Garety;David Fowler;Elizabeth Kuipers;Daniel Freeman

  • A review of the role of illness models in severe mental illness

    Fiona Lobban;Christine Barrowclough;Steve Jones

  • Early detection of bipolar disorder : a pilot familial high-risk study of parents with bipolar disorder and their adolescent children

    Steven Huntley Jones;Sara Tai;Kate Evershed;Rebecca Knowles

  • Circadian rhythms, multilevel models of emotion and bipolar disorder--an initial step towards integration?

    Steven H. Jones

  • Stability of self-esteem in bipolar disorder: comparisons among remitted bipolar patients, remitted unipolar patients and healthy controls.

    Rebecca Knowles;Sara Tai;Steven H Jones;Julie Highfield

  • Group cognitive-behavioural therapy for schizophrenia. Randomised controlled trial.

    Christine Barrowclough;Gillian Haddock;Fiona Lobban;Steven H. Jones

  • Cognitive-behavioural therapy of schizophrenia: D. G. Kingdon and D. Turkington: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Ltd, Hove (1994). xii + 212 pp

    Steven H. Jones

  • Antonymy: A Corpus-Based Perspective

    Steven Jones

  • Antonyms in English: Construals, Constructions and Canonicity

    Steven Jones;M Lynne Murphy;Carita Paradis;Caroline Willners

  • Psychotherapy of bipolar disorder: a review

    Steven H. Jones

  • The impact of beliefs about mental health problems and coping on outcome in schizophrenia

    Fiona Lobban;Christine Barrowclough;Steven H. Jones

  • Psychological interventions for adults with bipolar disorder: systematic review and meta-analysis

    Matthijs Oud;Evan Mayo-Wilson;Ruth Braidwood;Peter Schulte

  • Loss of the Kamin blocking effect in acute but not chronic schizophrenics.

    Steven H. Jones;Jeffrey A. Gray;David R. Hemsley

  • Assessing cognitive representations of mental health problems. I. The illness perception questionnaire for schizophrenia.

    Fiona Lobban;Christine Barrowclough;Steven H. Jones

  • Causes of differences in student outcomes, Higher Education Funding Council for England

    AK Mountford-Zimdars;J Sanders;S Jones;D Sabri

Frequent Co-Authors

Gillian Haddock
Gillian Haddock Manchester Academic Health Science Centre
Sheri L. Johnson
Sheri L. Johnson University of California, Berkeley
David R. Hemsley
David R. Hemsley King's College London
Christine Barrowclough
Christine Barrowclough University of Manchester
Richard P. Bentall
Richard P. Bentall University of Sheffield
Greg Murray
Greg Murray Swinburne University of Technology
Rachel Calam
Rachel Calam University of Manchester
Anthony P. Morrison
Anthony P. Morrison University of Manchester
Patricia A. Gooding
Patricia A. Gooding University of Manchester
Matthew R. Sanders
Matthew R. Sanders University of Queensland

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