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Magnus Jørgensen's picture

Magnus Jørgensen

PhD Candidate
  • E-mailmagnus.jorgensen@uib.no
  • Phone+47 55 58 86 54
  • Visitor Address
    Alrek helseklynge, Årstadveien 17
    5009 Bergen
  • Postal Address
    Postboks 7807
    5020 Bergen

My research is focused on adolescence as a critical period and how socioeconomic disadvantage in adolescence can shape adult mental health through common life transitions, social support and health behaviors. 

I am associated with the longtrends project that investigates how adolescent social inequality impacts disparities in mental health throughout the life course. 

Academic article
  • Show author(s) (2024). Social inequality in the association between life transitions into adulthood and depressed mood: a 27-year longitudinal study. Frontiers in Public Health.
  • Show author(s) (2024). I want to play a game: Examining sex differences in the effects of pathological gaming, academic self-efficacy, and academic initiative on academic performance in adolescence. Education and Information Technologies : Official Journal of the IFIP technical committee on Education.
  • Show author(s) (2023). Up in smoke? Limited evidence of a smoking harm paradox in 17-year cohort study. BMC Public Health.
  • Show author(s) (2023). Tracking of depressed mood from adolescence into adulthood and the role of peer and parental support: A partial test of the Adolescent Pathway Model. SSM - Population Health. 9 pages.
  • Show author(s) (2023). The effect of teacher, parental, and peer support on later grade point average: The mediating roles of self-beliefs. Psychology in the Schools. 2342-2359.
  • Show author(s) (2023). Scar, vulnerability, or both? A longitudinal study of the association between depressive tendencies and global negative self-esteem from early adolescence to young adulthood with gender as a moderating factor. Personality and Individual Differences. 9 pages.
  • Show author(s) (2022). Factors influencing UK residents’ preferences in how psychologists present themselves online: a conjoint analysis during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic. BMC Health Services Research.
Lecture
  • Show author(s) (2023). Depressed mood from early adolescence to mid-adulthood: A life course perspective focused on social inequality, gender, and the role of adolescent pathways.
Academic lecture
  • Show author(s) (2021). The associations between early life transitions and depressed mood over time: A 27-year longitudinal study of a Norwegian cohort from age 13 to 40.
Popular scientific article
  • Show author(s) (2022). Hvorfor hænger vores sociale status sammen med vores sundhed? videnskab.dk.
Poster
  • Show author(s) (2022). Associations between early life transitions and depressed mood over time: A 27-year study.

More information in national current research information system (CRIStin)

Jørgensen, M., Makransky, G. Factors influencing UK residents’ preferences in how psychologists present themselves online: a conjoint analysis during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic. BMC Health Serv Res 22, 957 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-022-08356-w