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Adam D. Brown
Researcher at New York University
Publications - 79
Citations - 2259
Adam D. Brown is an academic researcher from New York University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Autobiographical memory & Mental health. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 70 publications receiving 1681 citations. Previous affiliations of Adam D. Brown include The New School & Sarah Lawrence College.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Traumatic stress in the age of COVID-19: A call to close critical gaps and adapt to new realities.
Danny Horesh,Adam D. Brown +1 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that COVID-19 requires us to prioritize and mobilize as a research and clinical community around several key areas: (a) diagnostics, (b) prevention, (c) public outreach and communication, (d) working with medical staff and mainstreaming into nonmental health services, and (e) CO VID-19-specific trauma research.
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Overgeneralized autobiographical memory and future thinking in combat veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder.
TL;DR: Findings suggest that individuals with PTSD show similar deficits when generating personal past and future events, which may represent a previously unexamined mechanism involved in the maintenance of PTSD symptoms.
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Trauma centrality and PTSD in veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan
TL;DR: Findings that placing trauma at the center of one's identity is associated with PTSD symptomatology are replicated and extended.
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The impact of killing and injuring others on mental health symptoms among police officers.
Irina Komarovskaya,Shira Maguen,Shannon E. McCaslin,Thomas J. Metzler,Anita Madan,Adam D. Brown,Isaac R. Galatzer-Levy,Clare Henn-Haase,Charles R. Marmar +8 more
TL;DR: Greater attention to mental health services following these types of exposures can serve as a preventative measure for police officers who have been negatively impacted by killing or seriously injuring someone in the line of duty.
Journal ArticleDOI
Positive and Negative Emotion Prospectively Predict Trajectories of Resilience and Distress Among High-Exposure Police Officers
Isaac R. Galatzer-Levy,Adam D. Brown,Clare Henn-Haase,Thomas J. Metzler,Thomas C. Neylan,Charles R. Marmar +5 more
TL;DR: Findings emerging from a prospective longitudinal design provide evidence that resilience is predicted by both lower levels of negative emotion and higher levels of positive emotion prior to active duty stressor exposure.