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| Contact
Information
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| T:
613.533-2886 |
| E:
harkness@queensu.ca |
| Craine
222 |
| Psychology
Department |
| Queen's University |
| Kingston, ON
K7L 3N6 |
WEBSITE
| LAB
SITE |
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| Kate
Harkness |
| B.Sc., (Hon.) University
of Toronto, 1993 |
| M.S., University
of Oregon, 1995 |
| Ph.D., University
of Oregon, 1998 |
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| Monroe, S. M., Guillaumot,
J., Torres, L., Harkness,
K. L., Roberts,
J. E., Frank, E., & Kupfer, D. (in press).
Life stress and the long-term treatment course
of recurrent depression: III. Non-severe
life events predict recurrence over 3 years. Journal
of Consulting & Clinical Psychology. |
| Harkness,
K. L., & Monroe,
S. M. (2006). Severe Melancholic Depression
is More Vulnerable than Non-Melancholic Depression
To Minor Precipitating Life Events. Journal
of Affective Disorders, 91, 257-263. |
| Lee, L., Harkness,
K. L., Sabbagh, M. A., & Jacobson, J. A.
(2005). Mental state decoding abilities in
clinical depression. Journal of Affective
Disorders, 86, 247-258. |
| Harkness,
K. L., Sabbagh,
M. A., Jacobson, J., Chowdrey, N., & Chen,
T. (2005). Sensitivity to Subtle Social Information
in Dysphoric College Students: Evidence for
an Enhanced “Theory of Mind”. Cognition
and Emotion, 19, 999-1026. |
| Monroe, S. M. & Harkness,
K. L. (2005).
Life stress, the ‘kindling’ hypothesis,
and the recurrence of depression: Considerations
from a life stress perspective. Psychological
Review, 112, 417-445. |
| Harkness,
K. L., Frank,
E., Anderson, B. P., Luther, J., Houck, P.,
Rucci, P. & Kupfer, D. (2002). Does interpersonal
psychotherapy protect women from depression
in the face of stressful life events? Journal
of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 70, 908-915.
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Harkness,
K.L., & Monroe,
S. M. (2002). Childhood adversity and the
endogenous versus non-endogenous distinction
in women with major depression. American
Journal of Psychiatry, 159, 387-393. |
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