Professor Chris Brewin FBA

Clinical psychology; phenomenology, diagnosis, neural basis, & treatment of depression & post-traumatic stress disorder; psychological care following major incidents
Fellow type
UK Fellow
Year elected
2012
Subjects
Psychology
Sections
Psychology

Summary

I am a Professor of Psychology at University College London and a practising clinical psychologist treating patients with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) using cognitive-behavioural methods. Our theory of PTSD claims that people lay down traumatic memories in both an image-based form (underlying involuntary flashbacks) and a more abstract, contextualised form (underlying narrative memories of trauma). The theory is supported with clinical, experimental and neuroscientific data. More recent research has used immersive virtual reality to treat depression. As an expert on memory and trauma I have since the 1990s been a prominent advocate for a balanced, scientifically grounded position on the false/recovered memory debate and I continue to act as an expert witness in such cases. After the London bombings I was involved in designing a unique outreach programme to ensure survivors recovered and I continue to advise Government on mental health after major incidents. I also contributed to recent international changes to the diagnosis of PTSD and to mental health provision for military veterans as honorary Consultant Advisor in Clinical Psychology to the British Army. I am a trustee of the Centre for Emotion and Law, a charity that informs the legal system about psychological evidence on memory.

Current post

Emeritus Professor of Clinical Psychology, University College London

Publications

Embodying self-compassion within virtual reality and its effects on patients with depression

Chris BrewinCaroline J. FalconerAitor RoviraJohn A. KingPaul GilbertAngus AntleyPasco FearonNeil RalphMel Slater - Published in 2016 by British Journal of Psychiatry Open

2, 74-80

Intrusive images and memories in psychological disorders: Characteristics, neural basis, and treatment implications

Chris BrewinJames GregoryMichelle LiptonNeil Burgess - Published in 2010 by Psychological Review

117, 210-232

Imagery rescripting as a brief stand-alone treatment for depressed patients with intrusive memories

Chris BrewinAdrian WellsJon WheatleyTrishna PatelPasco FearonAnn HackmannPeter FisherSamuel Myers - Published in 2009 by Behaviour Research and Therapy

47, 569-576

Posttraumatic stress disorder: Malady or myth?

Chris Brewin - Published in 2003 by Yale University Press

Psychopathology and early experience - a reappraisal of retrospective reports

Chris BrewinBernice AndrewsIan H. Gottlib - Published in 1993 by Psychological Bulletin

113, 82-98.

Other Fellows of the British Academy

Professor Charles Nelson III FBA

Development and neural bases of processing social information (eg facial emotion); trajectories to autism, with a particular focus on populations at high risk for developing autism (eg, infants with an older sibling with autism; children with various single gene mutations that appear to confer risk for developing autism); effects of early adversity on brain and behavioral development, including exposure to both psychosocial adversities and biological adversities

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Professor Mark Williams FBA

Psychological models and treatment of recurrent depression; experimental cognitive psychology of the processes that increase risk of suicidality; prevention of suicidal depression through mindfulness-based treatments

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Professor Ian Deary FBA

Developmental and Educational Psychology Cognitive and Perceptual Psychology Clinical Psychology

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