Steven D. Hollon | |
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Born | 1949 Washington, D.C. |
Nationality | American |
Occupation(s) | Psychologist and academic researcher |
Title | Gertrude Conaway Vanderbilt Professor of Psychology |
Spouse | Judy Garber |
Academic background | |
Education | BA, Psychology and Anthropology (1971) MSc, Clinical Psychology (1974) PhD, Clinical Psychology (1977) |
Alma mater | George Washington University Florida State University |
Doctoral advisor | Aaron Beck |
Academic work | |
Institutions | University of Minnesota Vanderbilt University |
Steven D. Hollon (born 1949) is an American psychologist, academic and researcher. He is the Gertrude Conaway Vanderbilt Professor of Psychology at Vanderbilt University.
Hollon's research focuses on the treatment and prevention of depression with a particular emphasis on cognitive therapy in comparison to antidepressant medications. His research (mostly in collaboration with Robert J. DeRubeis) has found that cognitive therapy is as efficacious and more enduring than antidepressant medications in the treatment of unipolar depression.[1] That cognitive therapy has an enduring effect is perhaps his major contribution; studies dating to the early 1980s have found that treating patients with cognitive therapy cuts risk for relapse by more than half following relative to medication treatment following treatment termination and is at least as efficacious as keeping patients on antidepressant medications.[2] He has over 300 publications and has mentored over 20 doctoral and post-doctoral advisees.[3]