Gregory L. Garamoni
University of Pittsburgh
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Featured researches published by Gregory L. Garamoni.
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 1994
Eric A. Nofzinger; Robert M. Schwartz; Charles F. Reynolds; Michael E. Thase; J. Richard Jennings; Ellen Frank; Amy L. Fasiczka; Gregory L. Garamoni; David J. Kupfer
This article explored the relationship between daytime affect and REM sleep in 45 depressed men before and after treatment with cognitive-behavioral therapy and in a control group of 43 healthy subjects. The intensity of daytime affect (as measured by the sum of positive and negative affects) in depressed men correlated significantly and positively with phasic REM sleep measures at both pre- and posttreatment. This relationship was not found in healthy control subjects. In depressed men, both affect intensity and phasic REM sleep measures decreased over the course of treatment. The results suggest a relationship between phasic REM sleep and intensity of affect reported by depressed men. On the basis of this preliminary observation, it was hypothesized that abnormalities in phasic REM sleep in depressed patients are related, in part, to fundamental alterations in the intensity of their affective experience.
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 1991
Gregory L. Garamoni; Charles F. Reynolds; Michael E. Thase; Ellen Frank; Susan R. Berman; Amy L. Fasiczka
The States of Mind (SOM) model provided a framework for assessing the balance between self-reported positive and negative affects in a sample of 39 outpatients with major depression and 43 healthy control subjects. The SOM model proposes that healthy functioning is characterized by an optimal balance of positive (P) and negative (N) cognitions or affects (P/(P + N) approximately 0.63), and that psychopathology is marked by deviations from the optimal balance. Research thus far has focused on the functional significance of cognitive rather than affective balance. Within this framework, we hypothesized that patients in untreated episodes of major depression would balance their positive and negative affects at the same level where depressed patients in other studies have balanced their positive and negative cognitions--namely, at P/(P + N) approximately 0.37. Points and confidence interval (CI) estimation procedures yielded results (mean = 0.35, 95% CI = 0.30 - 0.40) consistent with this hypothesis in a sample of 39 depressed male outpatients. Correlational analysis indicated that affect balance is inversely related to symptom severity as measured by self-report (Beck) and clinician-rating (Hamilton) scales.
Biological Psychiatry | 1992
Michael E. Thase; Charles F. Reynolds; J. Richard Jennings; Ellen Frank; Gregory L. Garamoni; Eric A. Nofzinger; Amy L. Fascizka; David J. Kupfer
A descriptive study was conducted in a new sample of 51 men with DSM-III-R research diagnostic criteria (RDC) major depression in order to replicate earlier observations that measures of nocturnal penile tumescence (NPT) and penile rigidity are disturbed in depressive states. When compared to both the age-equated patient (n = 34) and normal control (n = 28) groups reported in our 1988 study, the new sample manifested significant abnormalities of NPT and diminished penile rigidity. Such disturbances were not, however, significantly correlated with psychobiological indicators of severe or endogenous depression.
Journal of Psychopathology and Behavioral Assessment | 1986
Robert M. Schwartz; Gregory L. Garamoni
Clarifying methodological and assessment issues is fundamental to the further development of cognitive-behavioral approaches. The present work examines potential method confounds in several cognitive assessment techniques (e.g., self-statement inventories, postperformance videotape reconstruction) in light of social psychological research on objective self-awareness. On the basis of this analysis, a conceptual framework is proposed to organize research on the assessment of clinical cognition.
Clinical Psychology Review | 1986
Gregory L. Garamoni; Robert M. Schwartz
Abstract The present review outlines conceptual and empirically-based similarities between Type A Behavior Pattern (TABP) and Compulsive Personality (CP), a correspondence that suggests avenues for further theoretical development and research. Both clinical description and empirical data indicate that TABP and CP are defined by the same cluster of traits. Furthermore, both have been conceptualized as an attempt to gain and maintain a sense of control. These similarities suggest that TABP may be a subtype of CP (i. e., “compulsive achievement”). Implications of this psychodynamic-behavioral integration for the etiology and treatment of TABP are explored.
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 1993
Eric A. Nofzinger; Robert M. Schwartz; Charles F. Reynolds; Michael E. Thase; J. Richard Jennings; Ellen Frank; Amy L. Fasiczka; Gregory L. Garamoni; David J. Kupfer
Although depressed patients have been shown to have diminished nocturnal penile tumescence (NPT), there remains considerable variability of NPT in depression. We hypothesized that affective experience during the day accounts for some of this variability. Forty-five depressed men had assessments of affect intensity and affect balance, NPT, and daytime sexual function, both before and after treatment with Becks cognitive behavior therapy (CBT). Forty-three normal control subjects were studied for comparison. Daytime affect intensity in depressed men, but not in control subjects, correlated significantly and positively with measures of NPT duration and rigidity both before and after treatment, regardless of the adequacy of daytime sexual function. When the effect of daytime affect on REM activity was controlled, the observed correlations became nonsignificant at pretreatment, but remained significant at posttreatment. Neuropharmacologically mediated changes in arousal responsivity associated with depression may underlie the observed relation between daytime affect intensity, rapid eye movement activity, and NPT.
Archives of General Psychiatry | 1993
Eric A. Nofzinger; Michael E. Thase; Charles F. Reynolds; Ellen Frank; J. Richard Jennings; Gregory L. Garamoni; Amy L. Fasiczka; David J. Kupfer
Stress Medicine | 1992
John R. McQuaid; Scott M. Monroe; John R. Roberts; Sheri L. Johnson; Gregory L. Garamoni; David J. Kupfer; Ellen Frank
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 1992
Gregory L. Garamoni; Charles F. Reynolds; Michael E. Thase; Ellen Frank; Amy L. Fasiczka
Sleep | 1993
Eric A. Nofzinger; Amy L. Fasiczka; Michael E. Thase; Charles F. Reynolds; Ellen Frank; J. Richard Jennings; Gregory L. Garamoni; Jeanette V. Matzzie; David J. Kupfer