David Smailes

1.1k total citations
21 papers, 655 citations indexed

About

David Smailes is a scholar working on Psychiatry and Mental health, Cognitive Neuroscience and Experimental and Cognitive Psychology. According to data from OpenAlex, David Smailes has authored 21 papers receiving a total of 655 indexed citations (citations by other indexed papers that have themselves been cited), including 14 papers in Psychiatry and Mental health, 9 papers in Cognitive Neuroscience and 8 papers in Experimental and Cognitive Psychology. Recurrent topics in David Smailes's work include Psychosomatic Disorders and Their Treatments (11 papers), Schizophrenia research and treatment (9 papers) and Mental Health and Psychiatry (7 papers). David Smailes is often cited by papers focused on Psychosomatic Disorders and Their Treatments (11 papers), Schizophrenia research and treatment (9 papers) and Mental Health and Psychiatry (7 papers). David Smailes collaborates with scholars based in United Kingdom, Australia and Ireland. David Smailes's co-authors include Charles Fernyhough, Ben Alderson‐Day, Peter Moseley, Simon McCarthy‐Jones, Robert Dudley, Nick Heather, Paul Cassidy, Kenneth Hugdahl, Daniel Collerton and Charlotte Aynsworth and has published in prestigious journals such as Psychological Science, Cognition and Behaviour Research and Therapy.

In The Last Decade

David Smailes

20 papers receiving 644 citations

Peers — A (Enhanced Table)

Peers by citation overlap · career bar shows stage (early→late) cites · hero ref

Name h Career Trend Papers Cites
David Smailes United Kingdom 13 363 341 155 154 75 21 655
Marieke Pijnenborg Netherlands 11 433 1.2× 547 1.6× 218 1.4× 182 1.2× 123 1.6× 23 940
Christine-Vanessa Cuervo-Lombard France 12 203 0.6× 216 0.6× 91 0.6× 107 0.7× 32 0.4× 39 493
Maria Pontillo Italy 18 237 0.7× 321 0.9× 97 0.6× 97 0.6× 83 1.1× 62 831
Emma Palmer‐Cooper United Kingdom 8 132 0.4× 233 0.7× 114 0.7× 106 0.7× 54 0.7× 26 543
K. Daalman Netherlands 9 515 1.4× 537 1.6× 174 1.1× 145 0.9× 45 0.6× 10 869
Nora Silvana Vigliecca Argentina 9 328 0.9× 247 0.7× 57 0.4× 46 0.3× 88 1.2× 23 532
Maud Champagne‐Lavau France 13 391 1.1× 177 0.5× 106 0.7× 237 1.5× 124 1.7× 43 630
Katarzyna Prochwicz Poland 14 101 0.3× 308 0.9× 118 0.8× 156 1.0× 59 0.8× 49 596
Clara Mucci Italy 13 282 0.8× 209 0.6× 60 0.4× 174 1.1× 114 1.5× 35 629
Devvarta Kumar India 12 135 0.4× 235 0.7× 74 0.5× 156 1.0× 101 1.3× 48 524

Countries citing papers authored by David Smailes

Since Specialization
Citations

This map shows the geographic impact of David Smailes's research. It shows the number of citations coming from papers published by authors working in each country. You can also color the map by specialization and compare the number of citations received by David Smailes with the expected number of citations based on a country's size and research output (numbers larger than one mean the country cites David Smailes more than expected).

Fields of papers citing papers by David Smailes

Since Specialization
Physical SciencesHealth SciencesLife SciencesSocial Sciences

This network shows the impact of papers produced by David Smailes. Nodes represent research fields, and links connect fields that are likely to share authors. Colored nodes show fields that tend to cite the papers produced by David Smailes. The network helps show where David Smailes may publish in the future.

Co-authorship network of co-authors of David Smailes

This figure shows the co-authorship network connecting the top 25 collaborators of David Smailes. A scholar is included among the top collaborators of David Smailes based on the total number of citations received by their joint publications. Widths of edges represent the number of papers authors have co-authored together. Node borders signify the number of papers an author published with David Smailes. David Smailes is excluded from the visualization to improve readability, since they are connected to all nodes in the network.

All Works

20 of 20 papers shown
1.
Smailes, David, et al.. (2025). Associations between sleep health, cognitive control, and hallucinations. Royal Society Open Science. 12(12).
2.
Smailes, David, Ben Alderson‐Day, Cassie M. Hazell, Abigail C. Wright, & Peter Moseley. (2021). Measurement practices in hallucinations research. Cognitive Neuropsychiatry. 27(2-3). 183–198. 4 indexed citations
3.
Moseley, Peter, André Alemán, Paul Allen, et al.. (2021). Correlates of Hallucinatory Experiences in the General Population: An International Multisite Replication Study. Psychological Science. 32(7). 1024–1037. 21 indexed citations
4.
Dodgson, Guy, et al.. (2020). Tailoring cognitive behavioural therapy to subtypes of voice-hearing using a novel tabletised manual: a feasibility study. Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy. 49(3). 287–301. 11 indexed citations
5.
6.
Bruce, Vicki, et al.. (2018). The effect of arousal and eye gaze direction on trust evaluations of stranger's faces: A potential pathway to paranoid thinking. Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry. 60. 29–36. 8 indexed citations
7.
Dudley, Robert, Charlotte Aynsworth, Urs P. Mosimann, et al.. (2018). A comparison of visual hallucinations across disorders. Psychiatry Research. 272. 86–92. 22 indexed citations
8.
McCarthy‐Jones, Simon, David Smailes, Aiden Corvin, et al.. (2017). Occurrence and co-occurrence of hallucinations by modality in schizophrenia-spectrum disorders. Psychiatry Research. 252. 154–160. 102 indexed citations
9.
Aynsworth, Charlotte, et al.. (2017). Reality monitoring performance and the role of visual imagery in visual hallucinations. Behaviour Research and Therapy. 97. 115–122. 35 indexed citations
10.
Garrison, Jane, Peter Moseley, Ben Alderson‐Day, et al.. (2016). Testing continuum models of psychosis: No reduction in source monitoring ability in healthy individuals prone to auditory hallucinations. Cortex. 91. 197–207. 35 indexed citations
11.
Jardri, Renaud, Kenneth Hugdahl, Matthew Hughes, et al.. (2016). Are Hallucinations Due to an Imbalance Between Excitatory and Inhibitory Influences on the Brain?. Schizophrenia Bulletin. 42(5). 1124–1134. 117 indexed citations
12.
Moseley, Peter, David Smailes, Amanda Ellison, & Charles Fernyhough. (2015). The effect of auditory verbal imagery on signal detection in hallucination-prone individuals. Cognition. 146. 206–216. 26 indexed citations
13.
Smailes, David, Ben Alderson‐Day, Charles Fernyhough, Simon McCarthy‐Jones, & Guy Dodgson. (2015). Tailoring Cognitive Behavioral Therapy to Subtypes of Voice-Hearing. Frontiers in Psychology. 6. 1933–1933. 35 indexed citations
14.
Smailes, David, Peter Moseley, & Sam Wilkinson. (2015). A commentary on: Affective coding: the emotional dimension of agency. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. 9. 142–142. 3 indexed citations
15.
Greer, Joseph A., David Smailes, Helen Spencer, Mark H. Freeston, & Robert Dudley. (2015). Recall of threat material is modulated by self or other referencing in people with high or low levels of non-clinical paranoia. Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry. 50. 1–7. 3 indexed citations
16.
Alderson‐Day, Ben, Susanne Weis, Simon McCarthy‐Jones, et al.. (2015). The brain’s conversation with itself: neural substrates of dialogic inner speech. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience. 11(1). 110–120. 50 indexed citations
17.
Woods, Alisa G., Nev Jones, Felicity Callard, et al.. (2014). Interdisciplinary Approaches to the Phenomenology of Auditory Verbal Hallucinations. Schizophrenia Bulletin. 40(Suppl 4). S246–S254. 59 indexed citations
18.
Smailes, David, Elizabeth Meins, & Charles Fernyhough. (2014). The impact of negative affect on reality discrimination. Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry. 45(3). 389–395. 8 indexed citations
19.
Smailes, David, Elizabeth Meins, & Charles Fernyhough. (2014). Associations between intrusive thoughts, reality discrimination and hallucination-proneness in healthy young adults. Cognitive Neuropsychiatry. 20(1). 72–80. 7 indexed citations
20.
Heather, Nick, David Smailes, & Paul Cassidy. (2008). Development of a Readiness Ruler for use with alcohol brief interventions. Drug and Alcohol Dependence. 98(3). 235–240. 61 indexed citations

Rankless uses publication and citation data sourced from OpenAlex, an open and comprehensive bibliographic database. While OpenAlex provides broad and valuable coverage of the global research landscape, it—like all bibliographic datasets—has inherent limitations. These include incomplete records, variations in author disambiguation, differences in journal indexing, and delays in data updates. As a result, some metrics and network relationships displayed in Rankless may not fully capture the entirety of a scholar's output or impact.

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