Deidre Anglin

Associate Professor

Main Affiliation

Psychology

Building

North Academic Center

Office

8/125

Fax

212-650-5675

Deidre Anglin

Biography & Education

Deidre Anglin, PhD is an Associate Professor of Clinical Psychology in the Department of Psychology and in the Doctoral Clinical Program at The City College of New York (CCNY). She received her postdoctoral research training in psychiatric epidemiology at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health. Generally, Dr. Anglin’s work has focused on reducing mental health racial disparities and studying the social epidemiology of psychosis. She is the lead investigator of a study funded by Columbia University’s Center for Excellence and Cultural Competence, to study social and cultural determinants of psychosis risk. She is also the principal investigator of an NIH-funded study that utilizes experimental methods to study the physiologic effects of racial exclusion among racial minority young adults presenting with attenuated psychotic symptoms. She is one of the First 100 doctoral scholars in the Leadership Alliance and a member of NIH’s National Research Mentoring Network (NRMN). Dr. Anglin has several first-author publications in well-recognized journals such as Schizophrenia Research and Psychiatric Services and has presented her work all over the country.

Degree/Date: Ph.D. 2003

Institution: Fordham University, Bronx

Specialization: Clinical Psychology

 

Degree/Date: M.S. 2000

Institution: Fordham University, Bronx

Specialization: Clinical Psychology

 

Degree/Date: B.S. 1998

Institution: Cornell University, College of Human Ecology

Specialization: Human Development and Family Studies

 

 

 

Licensure: New York State Licensed Psychologist

 

Research Interests

Dr. Anglin's research interest lies primarily in the social epidemiology of psychosis. Namely her work examines explanations for the relationship between race/ethnicity and endorsement of psychotic-like symptoms in both clinical and non-clinical populations. In addition, her research focuses on the stigma of mental health service utilization in African American populations and explanations for underutilization. She has published in these areas.

Publications

DeVylder, J. E., Cogburn, C., Oh, H. Y., Anglin, D., Smith, M. E., Sharpe, T., ... & Link, B. (2017). Psychotic experiences in the context of police victimization: data from the survey of police–public encounters. Schizophrenia Bulletin, sbx038.
 
Espinosa, A., Tikhonov, A., Ellman, L. M., Kern, D. M., Lui, F., & Anglin, D. (2016). Ethnic identity and perceived stress among ethnically diverse immigrants. Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health, 1-9.
 
Anglin, D., M., Lighty, Q., Greenspoon, M., Ellman, L. (2014). Racial discrimination is associated with subthreshold psychotic symptoms in US urban ethnic minority young adults. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology DOI 10.1007/s00127-014-0870-8.
 
Anglin, D. M., Lighty, Q., Greenspoon, M., Yang, L., Slonim, T., Miles, R., Isaac, K. & Brown, M. (2014). Arrest history, discrimination, and major depressive disorder in the U.S. Black population. Psychiatry ResearchDOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2014.05.020
 
Yang, L.H., Anglin, D.M., Wonpat-Borja, A.J., Opler, M.G., Greenspoon, M., Corcoran, C.M. (2013). Public stigma of the psychosis risk syndrome in a college population: Implications for peer stigma intervention Psychiatric Services DOI: 10.1176/appi.ps.003782011 
 
Anglin, D. M., Corcoran C. M., Brown A. S., Chen H., Brook J., Lighty, Q., & Cohen, P. (2012). Early cannabis use and Schizotypal Personality Disorder symptoms from adolescence to middle adulthood.  Schizophrenia Research 137:45-49
 


Selected Presentations

Anglin, D., Fertuck, E., Tikhonov, A., Deokinanan, S., Grinband, J., & Wilson, S. (2017). SA59. The Psychophysiological Effects of Racially Primed Social Exclusion Among Ethnic Minorities With Attenuated Psychotic Symptoms. Schizophrenia Bulletin, 43(suppl_1), S134-S134.
 
Saint-Fleur, A., & Anglin, D. M. (2017). Does perceived racial discrimination and degree of ethnic identity predict changes in substance use over time? An examination of black emerging adults. Drug & Alcohol Dependence, 171, e180.
 
Anglin, D. M., Carlson, E.,  Espinosa, A, Waelde, L., Polanco-Roman, L.,  Macia, K.,  Palmieri, P.,  Smith, S. (2016). The Structure of the Dissociative Symptoms Scale Across Race and Ethnicity: A Test of Measurement Invariance Using Latent Class Analysis in a Non-clinical Sample. Symposium presented at The 32nd  ISTSS Annual Meeting, Dallas, TX
 
Anglin, D. M. (2016). Developing New Methods to Assess the Psychological and Physiological Impact of Everyday Racial Discrimination, Paper Presentation. Annual International Conference of the National Association of Black Psychologists, Arlington, VA.
 
Anglin, D., Tikhonov, A., & Magloire, S. (2015).  Race and Immigration Status Influence Attenuated Psychotic Symptomatology, Symposium Presentation. The international Society for Psychological and Social Approaches to Psychosis Conference, New York, NY.

 

 

 

 

 

Additional Information

 

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Complete CV can be found