Contact Us
Department of Psychology
Univ. of Central Florida
4000 Central Florida Blvd.
Orlando, FL 32816-1390
407-823-4344
Fax: 407-823-5862
psyinfo@mail.ucf.edu
Jeffrey S. Bedwell
Clinical Cognitive Neuroscience

Jeffrey S. Bedwell

Assistant Professor, Clinical Ph.D. Program
Ph.D. (Clinical Psychology), University of Georgia, 2004
Office: Main Campus (Orlando) Psychology Bldg. Rm. 332
Phone: 407-823-5858
Email: jbedwell@mail.ucf.edu
Website: Clinical Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory (CCNL)

  • Licensed Clinical Psychologist (Florida - PY 7264)
  • Editorial Board: Journal of Anxiety Disorders
  • Member, American Psychological Association
  • Member, Society of Biological Psychiatry
  • Member, Schizophrenia International Research Society
  • Member, Society for Research in Psychopathology

View Full Curriculum Vita

Recent Publications

  • Bedwell, J. S., Brown, J. M., & Orem, D. M. (2008). The effect of a red background on location backward masking by structure. Perception and Psychophysics, 70(3), 503-507
  • Bedwell, J. S., Kamath, V., & Baksh, E. J. (2006). Comparison of thre computer-administered cognitive tasks as putative endophenotypes of schizophrenia. Schizophrenia Research, 88(1-3), 36-46.
  • Bedwell, J. S., Miller, L. S., Brown, J. M., & Yanasak, N. E. (2006). Schizophrenia and red light: fMRI evidence for a novel biobehavioral marker. International Journal of Neuroscience, 116(8), 881-894.
  • Bedwell, J. S., & Donnelly, R. S. (2005). Schizotypal personality disorder or prodromal symptoms of schizophrenia. Schizophrenia Research, 80(2-3), 263-269.
  • Bedwell, J. S., Horner, M. D., Yamanaka, K., Li, X., Myrick, H., & George, M. S. (2005). Functional neuroanatomy of subcomponent cognitive processes involved in verbal working memory. International Journal of Neuroscience, 115, 1017-1032.
  •    


    Dr. Jeffrey Bedwell joined UCF in 2004 after completing his doctoral degree in Clinical Psychology at the University of Georgia, with a predoctoral clinical internship at the Medical University of South Carolina/Dept. of Veterans Affairs Consortium in Charleston, SC. Prior to his graduate studies, Dr. Bedwell received his B.S. in Psychology from James Madison University and then worked for several years in the Child Psychiatry Branch of the National Institutes of Mental Health conducting research on childhood-onset schizophrenia. Dr. Bedwell's research lab, the Clinical Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory, has a primary focus on neurobiological and genetic components of schizophrenia. Additional research currently conducted in the laboratory includes cognitive/neurobiological correlates of social anxiety, chronic stress, and deception. For more information on Dr. Bedwell's research, please see the lab website at: Clinical Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory (CCNL) .