M
Mark Shevlin
Researcher at Ulster University
Publications - 474
Citations - 18791
Mark Shevlin is an academic researcher from Ulster University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Mental health. The author has an hindex of 59, co-authored 417 publications receiving 13957 citations. Previous affiliations of Mark Shevlin include Aarhus University & Trinity College, Dublin.
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Childhood adversity and psychosis in detained inpatients from medium to high secured units: Results from the Scottish census survey.
Thanos Karatzias,Thanos Karatzias,Mark Shevlin,Jamie Pitcairn,Lindsay Thomson,Adam Mahoney,Philip Hyland +6 more
TL;DR: Increased levels of childhood adversity were significantly associated with an increased risk of criminal convictions, self-reported abuse of animals, suicidal and self-injurious behaviour, and problematic use of drugs or alcohol.
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Different conspiracy theories have different psychological and social determinants : comparison of three theories about the origins of the COVID-19 virus in a representative sample of the UK population
Todd K. Hartman,Michael Marshall,Thomas V. A. Stocks,Ryan McKay,Kate M. Bennett,Sarah Butter,Jilly Gibson-Miller,Philip Hyland,Liat Levita,Anton P. Martinez,Liam Mason,Orla McBride,Jamie Murphy,Mark Shevlin,Frédérique Vallières,Richard P. Bentall +15 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed the factors associated with belief in three origin theories related to COVID-19, namely that it originated in a meat market in Wuhan, China; it was developed in a lab in China; and 3) is caused by 5G mobile networks.
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Employee attitudes to the distribution of organizational influence: Who should have the most influence on which issues?
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the relationship between how individuals actually experience influence in organizational issues and which actors in the organizational structure are preferred to have the most influence over different issues.
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Profiles of Irish survivors of institutional abuse with different adult attachment styles.
Alan Carr,Edel Flanagan,Barbara Dooley,Mark Fitzpatrick,Roisin Flanagan-Howard,Mark Shevlin,Kevin Tierney,Megan White,Margaret Daly,Jonathan Egan +9 more
TL;DR: The group with the secure adult attachment style had the most positive profile, while the most negative profile occurred for the fearful group in terms of DSM IV diagnoses and scores on the Trauma Symptom Inventory and the Kansas Marital Satisfaction Scale.
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From child maltreatment to ICD‐11 complex post‐traumatic stress symptoms: The role of emotion regulation and re‐victimisation
Matthias Knefel,Brigitte Lueger-Schuster,Thanos Karatzias,Thanos Karatzias,Mark Shevlin,Philip Hyland +5 more
TL;DR: Overall results indicate that the path from child maltreatment to PTSD is a direct one, while the path to DSO is indirectly mediated by ER, which indicates the potentially beneficial effect of treatment protocols for CPTSD explicitly aiming at reducing ER difficulties.