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Lauren B. Alloy is a professor of psychology at Temple University and is recognized in the area of mood disorders. Her research focuses on cognitive, interpersonal, and biopsychosocial processes in the onset and maintenance of depression and bipolar disorder.〔(Abnormal Psychology: About the Authors ).〕 In the late 1970s, Alloy and her longtime collaborator Lyn Yvonne Abramson demonstrated that depressed individuals held a more accurate view than their non-depressed counterparts in a test which measured illusion of control. This finding held true even when the depression was manipulated experimentally〔(Time/CNN: How Full Is That Glass, Really?. )〕 (see also depressive realism). ==Awards〔(Professional Profile: Lauren Alloy ).〕== * 1984 - American Psychological Association Young Psychologist Award * 2001 - Temple University's Paul W. Eberman Faculty Research Award * 2002 - American Psychological Association Master Lecturer Award in Psychopathology (jointly with Lyn Abramson) * 2003 - American Psychological Association Division 12 Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award (jointly with Lyn Abramson) * 2003 - Society for a Science of Clinical Psychology Distinguished Scientist Award. * 2003 - American Psychological Association Division 12 Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award (with Lyn Abramson) * 2004 - Society for a Science of Clinical Psychology Distinguished Scientist Award * 2004 - Joseph Wolpe Distinguished Faculty Fellow in Psychology 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Lauren Alloy」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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