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Dive into the research topics where Shimrit K. Black is active.

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Featured researches published by Shimrit K. Black.


Journal of Clinical Psychology | 2014

Stressful Life Events and Depression Symptoms: The Effect of Childhood Emotional Abuse on Stress Reactivity

Benjamin G. Shapero; Shimrit K. Black; Richard T. Liu; Joshua Klugman; Rachel E. Bender; Lyn Y. Abramson; Lauren B. Alloy

OBJECTIVE Stressful life events are associated with an increase in depressive symptoms and the onset of major depression. Importantly, research has shown that the role of stress changes over the course of depression. The present study extends the current literature by examining the effects of early life stress on emotional reactivity to current stressors. METHOD In a multiwave study (N = 281, mean age = 18.76; 68% female), we investigated the proximal changes that occur in depressive symptoms when individuals are faced with life stress and whether a history of childhood emotional abuse moderates this relationship. RESULTS Results support the stress sensitivity hypothesis for early emotional abuse history. Individuals with greater childhood emotional abuse severity experienced greater increases in depressive symptoms when confronted with current dependent stressors, controlling for childhood physical and sexual abuse. CONCLUSIONS This study highlights the importance of emotional abuse as an indicator for reactivity to stressful life events.


Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology | 2012

Cognitive vulnerabilities and depression versus other psychopathology symptoms and diagnoses in early adolescence.

Lauren B. Alloy; Shimrit K. Black; Mathew E. Young; Kim E. Goldstein; Benjamin G. Shapero; Jonathan P. Stange; Angelo S. Boccia; Lindsey M. Matt; Elaine M. Boland; Lauren C. Moore; Lyn Y. Abramson

We examined the concurrent associations between multiple cognitive vulnerabilities to depression featured in hopelessness theory, Becks theory, and response styles theory and depressive symptoms and diagnoses in a sample of early adolescents. We also examined the specificity of these cognitive vulnerabilities to depression versus anxiety and externalizing psychopathology, controlling for co-occurring symptoms and diagnoses. Male and female, Caucasian and African American, 12- to 13-year-old adolescents were assessed in a cross-sectional design. Cognitive vulnerabilities of hopelessness, inferential style, rumination, and self-referent information processing were assessed with self-reports and behavioral tasks. Symptoms and diagnoses of depressive, anxiety, and externalizing disorders were assessed with self-report questionnaires and diagnostic interviews. Hopelessness exhibited the greatest specificity to depressive symptoms and diagnoses, whereas negative inferential styles, rumination, and negative self-referent information processing were associated with both depressive and anxiety symptoms and diagnoses and, in some cases, with externalizing disorders. Consistent with cognitive theories of depression, hopelessness, negative inferential styles, rumination, and negative self-referent information processing were associated with depressive symptoms and diagnoses. However, with the exception of hopelessness, most of the remaining cognitive vulnerabilities were not specific to depression. With further maturation of our sample, these cognitive vulnerabilities may become more specific to depression as cognitive styles further develop and consolidate, the rates of depression increase, and individuals’ presentations of psychopathology become more differentiated.


Journal of Clinical Psychology | 2014

Stressful Life Events and Depression Symptoms

Benjamin G. Shapero; Shimrit K. Black; Richard T. Liu; Joshua Klugman; Rachel E. Bender; Lyn Y. Abramson; Lauren B. Alloy

OBJECTIVE Stressful life events are associated with an increase in depressive symptoms and the onset of major depression. Importantly, research has shown that the role of stress changes over the course of depression. The present study extends the current literature by examining the effects of early life stress on emotional reactivity to current stressors. METHOD In a multiwave study (N = 281, mean age = 18.76; 68% female), we investigated the proximal changes that occur in depressive symptoms when individuals are faced with life stress and whether a history of childhood emotional abuse moderates this relationship. RESULTS Results support the stress sensitivity hypothesis for early emotional abuse history. Individuals with greater childhood emotional abuse severity experienced greater increases in depressive symptoms when confronted with current dependent stressors, controlling for childhood physical and sexual abuse. CONCLUSIONS This study highlights the importance of emotional abuse as an indicator for reactivity to stressful life events.


Journal of Abnormal Psychology | 2015

Kindling of Life Stress in Bipolar Disorder: Comparison of Sensitization and Autonomy Models

Rachel B. Weiss; Jonathan P. Stange; Elaine M. Boland; Shimrit K. Black; Denise R. LaBelle; Lyn Y. Abramson; Lauren B. Alloy

Research on life stress in bipolar disorder largely fails to account for the possibility of a dynamic relationship between psychosocial stress and episode initiation. The kindling hypothesis (Post, 1992) states that over the course of recurrent affective disorders, there is a weakening temporal relationship between major life stress and episode initiation that could reflect either a progressive sensitization or progressive autonomy to life stress. The present study involved a comprehensive and precise examination of the kindling hypothesis in 102 participants with bipolar II disorder that allowed for a direct comparison of sensitization and autonomy models. Polarity-specific tests were conducted across the continuum of event severity with respect to impact and frequency of life events. Hypotheses were polarity- and event-valence specific and were based on the stress sensitization model. Results were only partially consistent with the sensitization model: Individuals with more prior mood episodes had an increased frequency of minor negative events before depression and of minor positive events before hypomania. However, the number of past episodes did not moderate relationships between life events and time until prospective onset of mood episodes. These results are more consistent with a sensitization than an autonomy model, but several predictions of the sensitization model were not supported. Methodological strengths, limitations, and implications are discussed regarding putative changes in stress reactivity that may occur with repeated exposure to mood episodes in bipolar II disorder.


Journal of Child & Adolescent Substance Abuse | 2014

Feasibility of Momentary Sampling Assessment of Cannabis Use in Adolescents and Young Adults

Shimrit K. Black; Carl de Moor; Ashley D. Kendall; Lydia A. Shrier

This study examines the feasibility of recruiting and retaining adolescents and young adults with frequent cannabis use for a 2-week momentary sampling study of cannabis use. Participants responded to random signals on a handheld computer with reports of their use. Participants also initiated reports pre- and post-cannabis use. Participants had high rates of completion (93%) and response to signals (74%) and low study burden. Cannabis use influenced the validity of the data (p < .05). These findings highlight the feasibility of recruiting and retaining adolescent/young adult cannabis users in a momentary sampling study. Data validity may be affected by substance use.


Psychological Services | 2018

Development and validation of a measure of PTSD-related psychosocial functional impairment: The Inventory of Psychosocial Functioning.

Michelle J. Bovin; Shimrit K. Black; Paola Rodriguez; Carole A. Lunney; Sarah E. Kleiman; Frank W. Weathers; Paula P. Schnurr; James Spira; Terence M. Keane; Brian P. Marx

This study describes the three-phase development and validation of the Inventory of Psychosocial Functioning (IPF), an 80-item, self-report measure of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)-related psychosocial functional impairment. In Phase I, we conducted 12 focus groups with male and female veterans (n = 53) to identify and operationalize the domains of psychosocial impairment associated with PTSD. This information was used to develop the IPF. We subsequently evaluated the psychometric properties of the newly developed inventory in Phases II (n = 276) and III (n = 368) using two independent samples of veterans. We found that the overall IPF score demonstrated stronger correlations with measures of mental health-related impairment (all rs > |.39|; all ps < .05) and weaker correlations with measures of physical health-related impairment (all rs < |.29|; all ps < .05). Overall IPF scores were most strongly associated with PTSD and other disorders associated with the anxious-misery factor of the three-factor model of psychiatric comorbidity (all rs > .56; all ps < .05) and less strongly associated with disorders associated with the fear factor (all rs < .48; all ps < .05) and the externalizing factor (r = .16; p < .05). The IPF demonstrated strong test–retest reliability (r = .77; p < .05). Our results suggest that the IPF is a valid and reliable measure of PTSD-related psychosocial functional impairment.


Psychological Services | 2018

Psychometric properties of a brief measure of posttraumatic stress disorder–related impairment: The Brief Inventory of Psychosocial Functioning.

Sarah E. Kleiman; Michelle J. Bovin; Shimrit K. Black; Paola Rodriguez; Laurel G. Brown; Meaghan E. Brown; Carole A. Lunney; Frank W. Weathers; Paula P. Schnurr; James Spira; Terence M. Keane; Brian P. Marx

This study validated the Brief Inventory of Psychosocial Functioning (B-IPF), an abridged version of the 80-item Inventory of Psychosocial Functioning (IPF; Bovin et al., 2018). The B-IPF-a 7-item self-report questionnaire that assesses posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)-related psychosocial functional impairment-was developed for use in settings in which the full IPF would be too time intensive to administer. In this study, we examined the psychometric properties of the B-IPF among a sample of 362 veterans recruited from 2 Veterans Affairs hospitals. The B-IPF demonstrated high internal consistency (Cronbachs alpha = .84) and adequate test-retest reliability (r = .65, p < .001). The B-IPF was strongly correlated with the IPF (r = .71, p < .01) and had higher correlations with measures of mental health impairment and quality of life (all rs > ∥.50∥; all ps < .001) than with a measure of physical health impairment (i.e., the Physical Component Summary; r = -.34; p < .001), which demonstrated strong construct validity. In addition, the B-IPF displayed strong criterion-related validity, with higher correlations with a PTSD symptom measure, (r = .63, p < .05), and measures of other internalizing disorders (all rs > .44; all ps < .05) and a lower correlation with a measure of an externalizing disorder (r = .14; p < .05). These results indicate that the B-IPF is a reliable and valid instrument for assessing PTSD-related impairment. The strong psychometric properties of the instrument, in addition to its length, make it ideal for settings in which time is a factor. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).


Academic Psychiatry | 2018

Results from the Field: Development and Evaluation of a Psychiatry Residency Training Rotation in Cognitive-Behavioral Therapies

Barbara W. Kamholz; Amy E. Lawrence; Gabrielle I. Liverant; Shimrit K. Black; Justin M. Hill

ObjectiveThe goal of this project was to develop and evaluate a new residency training rotation focused on cognitive-behavioral therapies (CBT) and to assess outcomes across multiple domains.MethodsData are presented from 30 psychiatry residents. Primary learning-related outcomes included content knowledge, self-efficacy, and attitudes and behavioral intentions towards evidence-based psychotherapies (e.g., CBT).ResultsResidents reported significant increases in CBT knowledge, CBT-specific self-efficacy, overall psychotherapy self-efficacy, belief in patient benefit from CBT, and behavioral intention to use CBT. However, there were almost no changes in attitudes towards evidence-based practice more broadly, with one significant finding showing an increase in skepticism towards such practices.ConclusionsThis empirically based example of training program development, implementation, and evaluation appears largely successful and represents one approach for addressing the CBT competency goals outlined by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) and Milestone Project Guidelines. Despite these initial, positive findings, conclusions should be tempered by limitations of the project design (e.g., the lack of comparison group, absence of objective measures of resident behavioral change, or assessment of the effect of such changes on patient outcomes). Findings highlight the need for continued development and evaluation of training methods in CBT for residency programs.


Journal of Trauma & Dissociation | 2017

A longitudinal examination of peritraumatic emotional responses and their association with posttraumatic stress disorder and major depressive disorder among veterans

Eden Engel-Rebitzer; Michelle J. Bovin; Shimrit K. Black; Raymond C. Rosen; Terence M. Keane; Brian P. Marx

ABSTRACT Research has revealed a significant association between several peritraumatic emotional responses and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Preliminary research has also linked peritraumatic emotional responses with a diagnosis of major depressive disorder (MDD). The majority of this research has been cross-sectional, thereby making it difficult to determine the extent to which the various peritraumatic emotional responses may increase risk for, or serve as a premorbid marker of, PTSD and MDD. This study examined the longitudinal role of peritraumatic emotional responses on the subsequent development of PTSD and MDD in a sample of US military veterans. Whereas a number of peritraumatic emotional responses were concurrently associated with PTSD, only peritraumatic numbness maintained the association with this diagnosis longitudinally. For MDD, peritraumatic numbness was the only emotional response related to the diagnosis both concurrently and longitudinally. Study findings are a preliminary proof of concept that peritraumatic numbness may serve as a premorbid marker for the development of PTSD and MDD following a traumatic event. Implications of these findings for the diagnosis, assessment, and treatment of both PTSD and MDD are discussed.


Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 2017

Associations Among Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Symptoms, Substance Use, and Affective Attentional Processing in OEF/OIF/OND Veterans

Gabrielle I. Liverant; Melissa M. Amick; Shimrit K. Black; Michael Esterman; Blair E. Wisco; Molly C. Gibian; Brian P. Marx; Regina E. McGlinchey

Abstract The majority of research examining affective attentional bias in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) has not examined the influence of co-occurring psychiatric disorders. This study examined the individual and interactive effects of PTSD symptoms and substance use disorders (SUDs) on affective attentional processing among 323 veterans deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan. Participants were divided into those with SUD (SUD+, n = 46) and those without (SUD−, n = 277). Substance use disorder was determined using the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV. Posttraumatic stress disorder was measured using the Clinician Administered PTSD Scale. A computerized go/no-go task (Robbins et al., 1994, Robbins et al.,1998) assessed affective attentional processing. Relative to those without SUD, those with SUD showed a significant association between PTSD symptoms and increased omission and commission accuracy rates and decreased d prime. No effects of valence were found. Findings suggest the need to consider co-occurring SUD when investigating the effects of PTSD on attentional control.

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Michelle J. Bovin

VA Boston Healthcare System

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Sarah E. Kleiman

VA Boston Healthcare System

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