Personal profile
Biography
I am trained as a clinical psychologist and clinical neuropsychologist. I received my PhD in clinical psychology and neuroscience from Vanderbilt Universtiy before completing an APA-approved internship in clinical psychology and cliincal neuropsychology at the Long Island Jewish Medical Centre, Albert Einstien College of Medicine in New York. I then spent two years as a postdoctoral fellow at the Rotman Research Institute, University of Toronto, studying neuropsychology, cognitive neuroscience and experimental psychopathology. I spent the first nine years of my academic career as a clinician-scientist at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Univeristy of Toronto, with adjunct appointments to the Program in Neuroscience (University of Toronto), Institute of Medical Sciences (University of Toronto) and the Department of Psychology at the University of Waterloo. In 2007 I moved to the Departments of Psychiatry and Psychology at McMaster University before accepting a faculty position in the Research School of Psychology at the ANU in 2014. I also was a Visiting Scholar at the Clare Hall Centre for Advanced Study, Cambridge University, in 2010-11. Across these settings I have directed research laboratories primarily aimed at investigating the cognitive and neurobiological mechanisms of mental illness. In addition, I have established and directed two separate university-hospital-based psychological assessment clincs and served in senior university administrative positions (e.g., Associate Chair for Resarch, Associate Director-Clinical). I have also been an Associate Editor for the journal Assessment and a reviewer for the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. I also spent several years ast the Co-chair of the Professional Advisory Committee and a Board Member at Healthy Minds Canada. In my spare time I enjoy cooking, reading, jazz and downhill skiing.
Qualifications
Clinical Psychologist, Clinical Neuropsychologist
Research Interests
My research can be described as "cognitive psychopathology”. In broad terms, I am interested in the cognitive and neurobiological mechanisms of mental illness, with an emphasis on psychotic and affective disorders. However, my lab has also studied participants with anxiety disorders, traumatic brain injuries, eating disorders and forensic histories. Several of our studies rely on evolutionary models of functional brain organization to generate neurocognitive hypotheses, which we then test using both cognitive science and psychophysical methods. In addition, when possible, we include neuroimaging techniques (including MRI, PET, EEG/ERP, TMS) to investigate hypothesized neural correlates. In this context, we have studied the impact of mental illness on visual-perception, attention, memory/meta -memory, face processing, judgment/decision making, and cognition-emotion interactions and whether these abnormalities underwrite the clinical symptoms or functional disability associated with mental illness. I am also an active clinician (clinical psychology and neuropsychology) and devote some of my time to studying psychometric and pragmatic issues relating to clinical assessment. More recently, I have used a set of multivariate statistical tools borrowed from market research (Discrete Conjoint Analysis) to better understand the needs and preferences of mental health clients in relation to service delivery. We have also used these same techniques to study the characteristics that students prefer in academic supervisors and which aspects of mental illness most influence prejudice from others.
Education/Academic qualification
Clinical Psychology, Neuropsychology, Cognitive Neuroscience, PhD
Sept 1998 → Aug 2007
Award Date: 11 Dec 1997
Research student supervision
- Registered to supervise
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Collaborations and top research areas from the last five years
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Mental health, wellbeing, and burnout among practicing psychologists following Australian weather disasters and COVID-19
Macleod, E., Curll, S. L., Walker, I., Cruwys, T., Greenwood, L.-M., Reynolds, J., Lane, J., Galati, C., Christensen, B. & Calear, A. L., 1 Feb 2025, In: International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction. 117, 12 p., 105195.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access1 Citation (Scopus) -
The effect of state anxiety on jumping-to-conclusions bias in social anxiety: An experimental and computational modelling study
Tan, N., Shou, Y., Chen, J. & Christensen, B. K., Nov 2025, In: Behaviour Research and Therapy. 194, p. 1-12 12 p., 104859.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access1 Citation (Scopus) -
A Bayesian model of the jumping-to-conclusions bias and its relationship to psychopathology
Tan, N., Shou, Y., Chen, J. & Christensen, B. K., 2 Apr 2024, In: Cognition and Emotion. 38, 3, p. 315-331 17 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access2 Citations (Scopus) -
Meta-analysis of Face Perception in Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders: Evidence for Differential Impairment in Emotion Face Perception
Mewton, P., Dawel, A., Miller, E. J., Shou, Y. & Christensen, B. K., 20 Dec 2024, In: Schizophrenia Bulletin. 51, 1, p. 17-36 20 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access2 Citations (Scopus) -
Solastalgia following the Australian summer of bushfires: Qualitative and quantitative insights about environmental distress and recovery
Stanley, S. K., Heffernan, T., Macleod, E., Lane, J., Walker, I., Evans, O., Greenwood, L. M., Kurz, T., Calear, A. L., Reynolds, J., Cruwys, T., Christensen, B. K., Sutherland, S. & Rodney, R. M., May 2024, In: Journal of Environmental Psychology. 95, 102273.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access16 Citations (Scopus)
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Enhancing safe telehealth for all in high risk consultations: a multiperspective, mixed-methods study
Phillips, C. (PI), Butler, D. (CoI), Christensen, B. (CoI), Desborough, J. (CoI), Hall Dykgraaf, S. (CoI), Macqueen, S. (CoI) & Newman, E. (CoI)
1/07/24 → 30/06/27
Project: Research
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Addressing unmet mental health service needs in rural/regional New South Wales: Assessing the impact of a university-based e-therapy training clinic
Christensen, B. (PI), Banfield, M. (CoI), Barnard, A. (CoI), Batterham, P. (CoI), Hall Dykgraaf, S. (CoI), Nicholson, L. (CoI), Olsen, A. (CoI), Parker, E. (CoI), Phillips, C. (CoI), Reynolds, J. (CoI), Steiner, H. (CoI) & Williams, G. (CoI)
1/06/22 → 15/06/23
Project: Research
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High spatial and temporal resolution eye-tracking for psychology
Goodhew, S. (PI), Aimola Davies, A. (CoI), Axelsson, E. (CoI), Christensen, B. (CoI) & McKone, E. (CoI)
31/03/17 → 31/12/17
Project: Research
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What lurks beneath: using electroencephalography (EEG) to study psychological processes in special populations.
Kidd, E. (PI), Apthorp, D. (CoI), Christensen, B. (CoI), Kyrios, M. (CoI) & Mahony, R. (CoI)
12/04/16 → 31/12/16
Project: Research