Richard McNally explained

Richard McNally
Birth Date:17 April 1954
Birth Place:Detroit, Michigan, U.S.
Fields:Psychology Pathology Psychopathology
Workplaces:Harvard University
Alma Mater:Wayne State University (BS)
University of Illinois at Chicago (PhD)
Known For:Research into anxiety disorders

Richard McNally (born April 17, 1954) is an American psychologist and director of clinical training at Harvard University's department of psychology. As a clinical psychologist and experimental psycho-pathologist, McNally studies anxiety disorders and related syndromes, such as post-traumatic stress disorder, obsessive–compulsive disorder, and complicated grief.[1]

Biography

McNally was born April 17, 1954, in Detroit, Michigan. McNally attended Edsel Ford High School and graduated in 1972. After graduating, he pursued a degree in journalism at Henry Ford Community College in Dearborn, Michigan. He later transferred to Wayne State University in his hometown of Detroit to study psychology.

He received his B.S. in psychology from Wayne State University in 1976, and his Ph.D. in clinical psychology from the University of Illinois at Chicago in 1982. While studying, he was mentored by Steven Reiss.

McNally received his clinical internship and postdoctoral fellowship at Temple University's behavioral therapy unit. McNally's clinical and research mentor was fellow University of Illinois alumni Edna B. Foa. He also received clinical supervision from Ford fellowship recipient Joseph Wolpe. In 1984, he was appointed as an assistant professor in the department of psychology at the University of Health Sciences/the Chicago Medical School, where he established the Anxiety Disorders Clinic and directed the university counseling center. In 1991, he took a new position at the department of psychology of Harvard University, where he currently serves as a professor and director of clinical training.

McNally is a licensed clinical psychologist, a fellow of the Association for Psychological Science and the Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies, winner of the 2005 Distinguished Scientist Award from the Society for the Science of Clinical Psychology, and the winner of the 2010 Outstanding Mentor Award from the Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies.

He has been an associate editor for the journal Behavior Therapy, and has served on the editorial boards of Clinical Psychology Review, Journal of Anxiety Disorders, Behavior Research and Therapy, Journal of Abnormal Psychology, and Psychological Science. McNally also served on the specific phobia and post-traumatic stress disorder committees of the DSM-IV task force. McNally is on the Institute for Scientific Information's "highly cited" list for psychology and psychiatry (top 0.5% of authors worldwide in terms of citation impact).

McNally has over 430 publications, most concerning anxiety disorders, including the books Panic Disorder: A Critical Analysis[2] (1994), Remembering Trauma[3] (2003), and What is Mental Illness?[4] (2011). He has also conducted laboratory studies concerning cognitive functioning in adults reporting histories of childhood sexual abuse (including those reporting recovered memories of abuse). Based upon his research on the controversial topic of recovered memories of childhood sexual abuse in adulthood, he concluded that there is no scientifically convincing evidence that people can repress or dissociate memories of truly traumatic events that they have experienced. A recent research emphasis is the application of network analysis to the understanding of psychopathology.

Research

McNally's early research revolved much around psycho-physiological experiments involving Pavlovian fear conditioning tests of the preparedness theory of phobias. This work fostered the reformulation of central ideas concerning the evolutionary background of specific phobias.

A second early emphasis concerned conceptual, empirical, and psychometric work on the Anxiety Sensitivity Index (ASI), a dispositional measure of the fear of anxiety-related symptoms. Anxiety sensitivity is a risk factor for panic disorder and related syndromes.[5]

McNally was among the first investigators to apply information-processing paradigms to elucidate biases in attention, memory, and interpretation in patients with panic disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and PTSD. More recent work concerns social anxiety disorder and complicated grief, including experiments designed to attenuate cognitive biases in people with social anxiety.

Other publications on various controversies concern the epidemiology of PTSD, psychological debriefing following trauma recovered memories of childhood sexual abuse, cognitive and psychophysiology studies on people reporting having been abducted by space aliens or claiming to have memories from their “past lives”, and research on the emotional impact of “trigger warnings” akin to those increasingly common in academia.

Current research includes network analytic studies on psychopathology, including PTSD, OCD, social anxiety disorder, complicated grief, rumination, and post-traumatic growth.

Publications

Books

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Richard J. McNally . 2022-06-13 . psychology.fas.harvard.edu . en.
  2. Book: McNally . Richard . Panic Disorder: A Critical Analysis . 1994 . Guilford Press . New York . 978-0898622638 . registration .
  3. Book: McNally . Richard . Remembering Trauma . registration . 2003 . Harvard University Press . Cambridge, MA . 978-0674018020.
  4. Book: McNally . Richard . What is Mental Illness . registration . 2011 . Harvard University Press . Cambridge, MA.
  5. Reiss . Steven . Peterson . Rolf A. . Gursky . David M. . McNally . Richard J. . Anxiety sensitivity, anxiety frequency and the prediction of fearfulness . Behaviour Research and Therapy . 1986 . 24 . 1 . 1–8 . 10.1016/0005-7967(86)90143-9 . 3947307 . Science Direct.