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Janet B. W. Williams

Researcher at Columbia University

Publications -  180
Citations -  238340

Janet B. W. Williams is an academic researcher from Columbia University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Depression (differential diagnoses) & Anxiety. The author has an hindex of 73, co-authored 178 publications receiving 217291 citations. Previous affiliations of Janet B. W. Williams include University of York.

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Book

Structured clinical interview for DSM-IV axis I disorders : SCID-I: clinical version : administration booklet

TL;DR: The reusable Administration Booklet contains interview questions and DSM-IV diagnostic criteria as discussed by the authors, which is designed to be used with the Scoresheet during a 45- to 90-minute session and is tabbed to help the clinician move from one section to another.
Journal ArticleDOI

An ultra-brief screening scale for anxiety and depression: the PHQ-4.

TL;DR: The PHQ-4 is a valid ultra-brief tool for detecting both anxiety and depressive disorders and has a substantial effect on functional status that was independent of depression.
Journal ArticleDOI

A structured interview guide for the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale.

TL;DR: A test-retest reliability study conducted on a series of psychiatric inpatients demonstrated that the use of the SIGH-D results in a substantially improved level of agreement for most of the HDRS items.
Journal ArticleDOI

Research diagnostic criteria.

TL;DR: The article by Overall and Hollister in this paper "Comparative Evaluation of Research Diagnostic Criteria for Schizophrenia" troubles us for several reasons, such as the authors do not address the issue of the different purposes of various sets of research diagnostic criteria.
Book

User's guide for the structured clinical interview for DSM-IV axis II personality disorders : SCID-II

TL;DR: The Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis II personality disorders (SCID-II) as mentioned in this paper is an efficient, user-friendly instrument that will help researchers and clinicians make standardized, reliable, and accurate diagnoses of the 10 DSM-III personality disorders as well as depressive personality disorder, passive-aggressive personality disorder and personality disorder not otherwise specified.