Eiko Fried
Eiko is a psychologist, methodologist, and nearly photographer. He obtained his PhD in clinical psychology in 2014, and, after a lot of traveling and moving, now settled as Associate Professor at Leiden University. He works at the intersection of clinical psychology, psychiatry, epidemiology, methodology, and complexity science, and enjoys dabbling in philosophy of science. His interests are how to best understand, measure, model, and classify mental health problems. He loves burnt coffee and fast computers, and is humbled to get to work with many fantastic researchers from all over the world.
Elsevier, Data Kraken
Studying mental health problems as systems, not syndromes
Psychedelic treatments for mental health problems: promises and pitfalls
Using network models and theories to understand, predict, and treat mental health problems
Introduction to psychological network theories and models
WARN-D onderzoeksproject
WARN-D research project
Lack of theory building and testing impedes progress in the factor and network literature
Measurement matters: why assessment of mental disorders poses a barrier to clinical progress
Depression is a problematic phenotype: The potential benefits of studying symptoms over syndromes
1 minute science-communication challenge ... with legos