G
Glyn Lewis
Researcher at University College London
Publications - 768
Citations - 57050
Glyn Lewis is an academic researcher from University College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Longitudinal study. The author has an hindex of 113, co-authored 734 publications receiving 49316 citations. Previous affiliations of Glyn Lewis include University College Hospital & St Bartholomew's Hospital.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Clinical Neuroimaging Findings in Catatonia: Neuroradiological Reports of MRI Scans of Psychiatric Inpatients With and Without Catatonia.
Roshell Jeyaventhan,R Thanikasalam,Mitul A. Mehta,Francesca Solmi,Thomas A Pollak,Timothy R Nicholson,Megan Pritchard,Amelia Jewell,Anna Kolliakou,Ali Amad,Alexandre Haroche,Glyn Lewis,Michael S. Zandi,Anthony S. David,Jonathan Rogers +14 more
TL;DR: Patients with catatonia were commonly reported to have brain MRI abnormalities, which largely consisted of diffuse cerebral atrophy rather than focal lesions, after adjustment for demographic variables.
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Inhibitory control of positive and negative information and adolescent depressive symptoms: a population-based cohort study.
TL;DR: Inhibitory control of positive and negative information does not appear to be a marker of current or future depressive symptoms in adolescents and would not be a useful target in interventions to prevent adolescent depression.
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Humanistic therapies versus other psychological therapies for depression.
Rachel Churchill,Philippa Davies,Deborah M Caldwell,Theresa Hm Moore,Hannah Jones,Glyn Lewis,Vivien Hunot +6 more
TL;DR: This is the protocol for a review to examine the effectiveness and acceptability of different humanistic therapy models compared with all other psychological therapy approaches for acute depression.
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Device-measured sedentary behaviour and anxiety symptoms during adolescence: a 6-year prospective cohort study.
Aaron Kandola,Glyn Lewis,David Osborn,David Osborn,Brendon Stubbs,Brendon Stubbs,Joseph Hayes,Joseph Hayes +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors found a positive association between sedentary behaviour at ages 12, 14, and 16, with anxiety symptoms at age 18, independent of total physical activity volume.