I'm very happy to announce the new Cambridge Handbook of Research Methods in Clinical Psychology co-edited with Michael Hallquist (soon to start at UNC-Chapel Hill).

With everything that's happened over the last 2+ weeks, I totally forgot this came out.

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We tried to make it up to date, but we also tried to weave together theory/conceptualization, data collection, and statistical models, as an integrated whole.

Our perspective is that clinical science requires a sharp focus on all three and how they interdigitate.

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Our focus is much more on psychopathology per se, as opposed to generic experimental designs.

Describing & explaining what we should study is the largest task in front of the field today. So, we emphasize descriptive, experimental, developmental, and longitudinal methods.

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We also spend much more time on quant methods than other similar books; this isn't just a rehash of Latin squares.

We hope the field finds this useful, and that it might help with grad education as well as serve as a good desk ref.

Here's a 20% discount.

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This is an edited volume, so many contributed to it. Michael and I are very grateful.

Some on twitter: @ent3c @NoahCVenables @lensimms @trevfw @DBsamuel_phd @MeredithABucher @takakunisuzuki @AvramHolmes @AlexDombrovski1 @brentdpsy @SauerZavala @crowell_sheila

and...

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even more: @HopwoodChris @siminevazire @njrockwood @dmcneish18 @curran_unc @MarcCoutanche @LaurenHallion

And many more not on twitter (or maybe they are and I just don't know - sorry!)

Again, we think this group produced a great set of chapters.

Check it out!

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