Research from our Centre



  • Pain Catastrophizing: Controversies and Misconceptions
  • Post-Injury Perceptions of Injustice: Implications for Intervention
  • Pain Catastrophizing: A Transdiagnostic Risk Factor
  • Depression, Positive Expectancies and Pain Reduction
  • Perceptions of injustice predict the onset of post-traumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) following occupational injury.
  • Treatment of Co-morbid Pain and Depression
  • Increasing our Understanding of the Role of Fatigue in Persistent Pain.
  • Reducing Alarmist Thinking can Help Recovery from PTSD.
  • Do Perceptions of Injustice Cause Depression?
  • Reducing Fatigue Improves Return to Work Outcomes
  • Does ‘injustice’ lie in the ‘eye’ of the perceiver?
  • Pain Catastrophizing and Mental Health Problems
  • Catastrophic thinking reduces quality of life in individuals with osteoarthritis
  • Targeting disability and depression to reduce perceptions of injustice
  • A treatment approach to promote return to work in individuals with PTSD
  • Returning to work following injury actually promotes recovery from whiplash injury
  • Expectancies, perceived injustice and return to work following whiplash injury
  • A measure of catastrophic thinking suitable for individuals with mental health problems
  • A brief measure of perceived injustice
  • Perceived injustice impacts negatively on the working alliance
  • Reducing psychosocial risk factors helps maintain gains made in pain rehabilitation
  • The multidimensional nature of pain experience