Thomas Meyer
@thmeyer.bsky.social
Postdoc & CBT therapist in training. Stress, trauma, fatigue, comparative thinking in self-evaluation. Akademischer Wildwuchs @uni-muenster.de @morinalab, formerly @uclpals.bsky.social, @CogPT_lab, & @maastricht_fpn
Reposted by Thomas Meyer
Here a paper version rant on this in Nature Reviews Psychology.
www.nature.com/articles/s44...
(PDF: eiko-fried.com/wp-content/u...)
www.nature.com/articles/s44...
(PDF: eiko-fried.com/wp-content/u...)
Revisiting the theoretical and methodological foundations of depression measurement - Nature Reviews Psychology
Depressive disorders are among the leading causes of global disease burden. In this Perspective, Fried et al. argue that limited progress in understanding, predicting and treating depression despite a...
www.nature.com
November 1, 2025 at 6:17 AM
Here a paper version rant on this in Nature Reviews Psychology.
www.nature.com/articles/s44...
(PDF: eiko-fried.com/wp-content/u...)
www.nature.com/articles/s44...
(PDF: eiko-fried.com/wp-content/u...)
Reposted by Thomas Meyer
Here are two easy things YOU can do:
#1 Every academic supporting #openscience and #openaccess should consider ORE as their primary publishing venue and ask colleague/co-authors to do the same.
#2 Point your librarian, institutional leaders, funding agencies towards the documents linked above […]
#1 Every academic supporting #openscience and #openaccess should consider ORE as their primary publishing venue and ask colleague/co-authors to do the same.
#2 Point your librarian, institutional leaders, funding agencies towards the documents linked above […]
Original post on mastodon.social
mastodon.social
September 3, 2025 at 12:35 PM
Here are two easy things YOU can do:
#1 Every academic supporting #openscience and #openaccess should consider ORE as their primary publishing venue and ask colleague/co-authors to do the same.
#2 Point your librarian, institutional leaders, funding agencies towards the documents linked above […]
#1 Every academic supporting #openscience and #openaccess should consider ORE as their primary publishing venue and ask colleague/co-authors to do the same.
#2 Point your librarian, institutional leaders, funding agencies towards the documents linked above […]
Pretty sure "Migrationshintergrund" is very beneficial for the school's statistics - especially if risk factors associated with "Migrationshintergund" aren't present.
September 5, 2025 at 12:21 PM
Pretty sure "Migrationshintergrund" is very beneficial for the school's statistics - especially if risk factors associated with "Migrationshintergund" aren't present.
At PCI-RR, you don't have to commit to any single journal (though also no psychiatry journals will commit to your RR either; you'd get a transparently peer-reviewed and validated RR protocol that you can try and publish anywhere). Perhaps worth considering?
August 24, 2025 at 9:55 AM
At PCI-RR, you don't have to commit to any single journal (though also no psychiatry journals will commit to your RR either; you'd get a transparently peer-reviewed and validated RR protocol that you can try and publish anywhere). Perhaps worth considering?
Reposted by Thomas Meyer
It's like an association, but more causal.
This reasoning is very prevalent in psych as well (in particular when it comes to "lagged effects", aka lagged associations, and "within-person associations") which is why we wrote a paper about it:
journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...
This reasoning is very prevalent in psych as well (in particular when it comes to "lagged effects", aka lagged associations, and "within-person associations") which is why we wrote a paper about it:
journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...
August 21, 2025 at 6:35 AM
It's like an association, but more causal.
This reasoning is very prevalent in psych as well (in particular when it comes to "lagged effects", aka lagged associations, and "within-person associations") which is why we wrote a paper about it:
journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...
This reasoning is very prevalent in psych as well (in particular when it comes to "lagged effects", aka lagged associations, and "within-person associations") which is why we wrote a paper about it:
journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...