Experts in: Affect regulation
HODGINS, Sheilagh
Professeure associée, Professeure honoraire
- Delinquency
- Genes
- Behavioral Problems
- Mental Health and Psychopathology in Children and Youth
- Mental Health and Society
- Schizophrenia
- Behavioral Disorders in Children and Adolescents
- Biological and Biochemical Mechanisms
- Severe mental illness
- Social and Cultural Psychiatry
- Socio-emotional development
- Social neuroscience
- Psychopathology
- Emotions
- Affect regulation
- Life Cycles ( Childhood, Adolescence, Adulthood, etc.)
- Cognitive Development in Children
- Crime
- Preventing psychosocial problems
LECOURS, Serge
Professeur titulaire
- Psychopathology
- Depression
- Alexithymia
- Assessment and treatment of mental functioning
- Affect mentalization
- Affect regulation
- Borderline personality disorder
I essentially try to better understand the links between affect regulation and psychopathology, mainly by studying mental functioning (mentalization, alexithymia). Part of my work bears on the theoretical analysis of these themes, using a mainly psychoanalytical approach that integrates elements of theories of emotion. I also conduct empirical research using a number of methodological strategies: discourse analysis (quantitative and qualitative), creation and use of questionnaires, experimental tasks, etc. I created a grid for verbal elaboration of affect (GÉVA), a verbal measurement of affect mentalization, a central part of many research projects.
Research themes:
- Mentalization and affect regulation
- Exploration of forms of alexithymia
- Study of affect mentalization in psychopathology, particularly depression and borderline personality disorder
- Analysis of the role of sadness and positive emotions in mentalization
- Assessment and treatment of mental functioning
SULTAN, Serge
Professeur titulaire
- Quality of life
- Psychologie de la santé
- Psychosocial oncology
- Emotional distress
- Empathy
- Psychosomatics
- Chronic disease
- Affect regulation
- Psychological assessment
- Depression
My research lies at the crossroads of health psychology and clinical psychology.
In my current work, two lines of research can be distinguished. First, I am trying to identify the psychological repercussions of disease, taking account of the central aspects of quality of life and adjustment to the illness.
I am interested in measuring and detecting the emotional distress and psychopathological repercussions of disease. This modelling and the subsequent measurement are an essential step leading to psychological intervention. Second, I study relations between patients and caregivers, through concepts like empathetic understanding. I am trying to define and measure clinical empathy, to understand the factors promoting and inhibiting empathy, and to assess the health effects of clinical empathy.
In particular, I am developing research in the field of cancer and psychosocial oncology, taking account of the impact of and adjustment to illness for the individual, couples and family. Accordingly, my work concerns both child and adult psychology.
My work is based on a constant back and forth between research and practice, so as to ask clinically relevant research questions and to enrich clinical activity with new data.
My laboratory is based at the CHU Sainte-Justine research centre, where I am responsible for the quality of life theme of the Centre of Excellence in Immunology-Hematology-Oncology. This team also welcomes doctoral candidates, post-doctoral fellows, and MSc and honours thesis students.