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Derek Heim

Researcher at Edge Hill University

Publications -  95
Citations -  1591

Derek Heim is an academic researcher from Edge Hill University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Context (language use) & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 83 publications receiving 1283 citations. Previous affiliations of Derek Heim include HealthPartners & University of Central Lancashire.

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Twenty Years of Stereotype Threat Research: A Review of Psychological Mediators

TL;DR: Stereotype threat appears to affect diverse social groups in different ways, with no one mediator providing unequivocal empirical support, and the discussion postulates that different forms of stereotype threat may be mediated by distinct mechanisms.
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Rethinking drinking cultures : a review of drinking cultures and a reconstructed dimensional approach

TL;DR: The study suggests that the wet-dry dichotomy is no longer relevant and that a revised version of a more recent dimensional approach featuring three dimensions - hedonism, function and control - may be better placed to describe and measure contemporary drinking cultures.
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"I have no clue what I drunk last night" using Smartphone technology to compare in-vivo and retrospective self-reports of alcohol consumption.

TL;DR: Overall, retrospective accounts of alcohol consumption may underestimate the amount of actual, real-time alcohol consumed, and a degree of caution appears warranted with regards to the use of retrospective self-report methods of recording alcohol consumption.
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Challenging the brain disease model of addiction: European launch of the addiction theory network

TL;DR: In this paper, the journal Nature published an editorial concerned primarily with the attempt by animal rights activists to close down addiction research labs that experimented on animals (Anima, 2014).
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A critical systematic review of alcohol-related outcome expectancies.

TL;DR: There is a need for fuller consideration of the influences of demographics and environmental and social contexts on research findings, and it is recommended that alcohol intake measures should be standardized to a greater degree in future research.