Julie H. Wade
Drexel University
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Featured researches published by Julie H. Wade.
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 1991
Kim T. Mueser; Alan S. Bellack; Margaret S. Douglas; Julie H. Wade
Memory and symptomatology were examined as predictors of social skill acquisition in psychiatric inpatients participating in a social skills training program. Poor memory was related to pretreatment social skill impairments and slower rates of skill improvement during the intervention for patients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder, but not affective disorder. Symptomatology was not consistently related to pretreatment social skill or changes in skill for either schizophrenic or affective disorder patients. The results suggest that cognitive deficits in schizophrenia are associated with impairments in social skill and that such deficits may limit the rate of skill acquisition and clinical response to social skills training interventions.
Journal of Abnormal Psychology | 1990
Kim T. Mueser; Alan S. Bellack; Randall L. Morrison; Julie H. Wade
The relationship between gender and social skill measured by performance on a role play test was examined in a sample of 57 schizophrenics, 33 affective disorder patients, and 20 nonpatient controls. Female schizophrenics were more skilled than male schizophrenics, but no gender differences were present in the affective patients or the controls. Longitudinal analyses conducted on the schizophrenic group indicated that the superior social skill of women was stable over the year following a symptom exacerbation. Symptoms and social adjustment improved for both men and women over the year, but did not differ according to gender. The implications of the results for gender differences in the long-term outcome of schizophrenia are discussed.
Schizophrenia Research | 1989
Alan S. Bellack; Randall L. Morrison; Kim T. Mueser; Julie H. Wade
Social skill and role functioning were assessed in matched groups of patients with DSM-III-R schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder, and schizophrenia. Schizophrenics were categorized as negative syndrome or non-negative on the basis of the SANS. The negative schizophrenics were significantly more impaired on almost every measure of social functioning. The other three groups were not consistently different from one another. The results suggest that when patients are comparable on dimensions such as duration and severity of illness, schizoaffectives do not occupy an intermediate position between schizophrenics without negative syndrome and bipolar patients. Rather, the three groups exhibit similar degrees of social disability. In contrast, negative syndrome schizophrenics were more impaired even when they were similar in chronicity and severity.
Behavior Modification | 1995
Margaret D. Sayers; Alan S. Bellack; Julie H. Wade; Melanie E. Bennett; Pattey Fong
The development of a multimethod social problem-solving battery for schizophrenia is described. The battery is unique in that empirical methods were used throughout its development. The battery includes components that tap skills for response generation and response evaluation. The behavioral components of social problem solving are assessed in an extended role-play format. Individuals with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, as well as nonpatient controls, completed the social problem-solving battery and cognitive measures. Subjects in the schizophrenia group performed more poorly than controls on measures of the ability to generate and evaluate response alternatives, as well as on the role-play test. The two patient groups did not differ in performance on any of the social problem-solving components. Appropriateness of affect was the most powerful predictor of problem-solving effectiveness.
Schizophrenia Research | 1991
A.S. Bellack; Kim T. Mueser; Julie H. Wade; Steven L. Sayers; Randall L. Morrison
Thirty-four schizophrenic patients in an acute in-patient hospital were compared with 24 in-patients with major affective disorder and 19 non-patient controls on a role-play test of social skills and a test of affect perception. The role-play test consisted of 12 simulated conversations in which the subject was confronted by parents and friends expressing high-EE criticism or non-critical dissatisfaction. Schizophrenic patients lacked assertiveness and social skills in all conditions, but they did not show any differential impairment when presented with high EE. They consistently lied and denied errors rather than responding assertively or apologizing, whether confronted with high-EE or benign criticisms. On the affect perception test, schizophrenic patients consistently underestimated the intensity or negativeness of negative emotions, but they were not deficient in perception of positive emotional displays. The data do not support the hypothesis that schizophrenic patients are poor at dealing with high-EE behaviours, but do indicate that their ability to cope with even mild negative affect is impaired. Possible explanations for this impairment include limited attentional capacity, a neurologically based perceptual deficit, and a self-protective mechanism to reduce or avoid stress.
British Journal of Psychiatry | 1992
Alan S. Bellack; Kim T. Mueser; Julie H. Wade; Steven L. Sayers; Randall L. Morrison
Psychological Assessment | 1990
Alan S. Bellack; Randall L. Morrison; Kim T. Mueser; Julie H. Wade
Journal of Abnormal Psychology | 1993
Kim T. Mueser; Alan S. Bellack; Julie H. Wade; Steven L. Sayers; Ann Tierney; Gretchen L. Haas
British Journal of Psychiatry | 1992
Kim T. Mueser; Alan S. Bellack; Julie H. Wade; Steven L. Sayers; Carole K. Rosenthal
Psychological Assessment | 1992
Kim T. Mueser; Alan S. Bellack; Julie H. Wade