
About Me
Jamie is a full-time lecturer at Staffordshire University in Sport and Exercise Psychology. He completed both an undergraduate degree and MSc degree in Sport and Exercise Psychology at Staffordshire University. Currently, Jamie is undertaking a PhD entitled “The role of social identification in psychophysiological responses to stress”. The PhD is examining the relationship between social identity and social support on the stress response. Jamie has also been involved in a number of research projects within the area of stress, including looking at hair cortisol of working adults, stress appraisal in football coaches, and exam stress in students.
Research Interests
- Performance under pressure
- Stress and the psychophysiological response
- Social identity and social support
- Challenge and threat states
Personal Contact
Email: jamie.gillman@staffs.ac.uk
Twitter: @jamiegillman
t: 01782 295986
ResearchGate/scholar/ORCiD URL
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Jamie_Gillman
Papers
Turner, M. J., Aspin, G., & Gillman, J. (2019). Maladaptive schemas as a potential mechanism through which irrational beliefs relate to psychological distress in athletes. Psychology of Sport and Exercise, 44, 9-16.
Dixon, M., Turner, M. J., & Gillman, J. (2017). Examining the relationships between challenge and threat cognitive appraisals and coaching behaviours in football coaches. Journal of sports sciences, 35(24), 2446-2452.
Gidlow, C. J., Randall, J., Gillman, J., Silk, S., & Jones, M. V. (2016). Hair cortisol and self-reported stress in healthy, working adults. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 63, 163-169.
Gidlow, C. J., Randall, J., Gillman, J., Smith, G. R., & Jones, M. V. (2016). Natural environments and chronic stress measured by hair cortisol. Landscape and Urban Planning, 148, 61-67.