L
Lisa S. Talbot
Researcher at San Francisco VA Medical Center
Publications - 35
Citations - 2214
Lisa S. Talbot is an academic researcher from San Francisco VA Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Polysomnography & Sleep disorder. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 34 publications receiving 1854 citations. Previous affiliations of Lisa S. Talbot include University of California, Berkeley & University of California, San Francisco.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Sleep Deprivation in Adolescents and Adults: Changes in Affect
TL;DR: The present study investigated the impact of sleep deprivation on several aspects of affective functioning in healthy participants selected from three different developmental periods: early adolescence, midadolescence, and adulthood.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia in posttraumatic stress disorder: a randomized controlled trial.
Lisa S. Talbot,Shira Maguen,Thomas J. Metzler,Martha Schmitz,Shannon E. McCaslin,Anne Richards,Michael L. Perlis,Donn Posner,Brandon Weiss,Leslie Ruoff,Jonathan Varbel,Thomas C. Neylan +11 more
TL;DR: Results suggest that a comprehensive approach to treatment of posttraumatic stress disorder should include behavioral sleep medicine, and CBT-I was superior to the waitlist control condition in all sleep diary outcomes and in polysomnography-measured total sleep time.
Journal ArticleDOI
Comparative efficacy of behavior therapy, cognitive therapy, and cognitive behavior therapy for chronic insomnia: a randomized controlled trial.
Allison G. Harvey,Lynda Bélanger,Lisa S. Talbot,Polina Eidelman,Simon Beaulieu-Bonneau,Émilie Fortier-Brochu,Hans Ivers,Manon Lamy,Kerrie Hein,Adriane M. Soehner,Chantal Mérette,Charles M. Morin +11 more
TL;DR: Both BT and CT are effective, with a more rapid effect for BT and a delayed action for CT, which provides unique insights into the process of behavior change via behavioral versus cognitive routes.
Journal ArticleDOI
Double trouble? The effects of sleep deprivation and chronotype on adolescent affect
Natasha Dagys,Eleanor L. McGlinchey,Lisa S. Talbot,Katherine A. Kaplan,Ronald E. Dahl,Allison G. Harvey +5 more
TL;DR: The findings extend previous research by suggesting that adolescents are adversely impacted by sleep deprivation, and that an evening chronotype might serve as a useful marker of emotional vulnerability.
Journal ArticleDOI
Sleep Disturbance in Bipolar Disorder Across the Lifespan
TL;DR: It is argued that sleep may be critically important in the complex multifactorial cause of interepisode dysfunction, adverse health outcomes, and relapse in children, adolescents and adults with bipolar disorder.