Chapel Hill Conference on Depression, Bipolar Disorder, and Suicidality/2016

Welcome And Introduction edit

Mitchell J. Prinstein, Ph.D. & Eric A. Youngstrom, Ph.D. University Of North Carolina At Chapel Hill

Discussion Of Flipped Keynote #1 edit

Circadian Rhythm Pathways In Bipolar Disorder View before the meeting here. Greg Murray, Ph.D.

Data Blitz #1: Three Fast Talks, Followed By Q&A edit

Talk #1: Rewards, Rhythms, And The Mood Rollercoaster: An Integration Of The Reward And Social/Circadian Rhythm Dysregulation Models Of Bipolar Spectrum Disorders edit

Lauren Alloy, Ph.D., Temple University

Talk #2: A System For Measuring Circadian Disruption As It Might Improve Mental Health Outcomes edit

Mark Rea, Ph.D., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

Talk #3: Tailored Lighting Intervention To Improve Mood And Behavior edit

Mariana Figueiro, Ph.D., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

Poster Viewing edit

Click "Expand" for list of posters

1. Adolescent Sex Differences in Default Mode and Cognitive Control Network Functional Coupling During Cognitive Control: A Potential Risk Factor for Major Depressive Disorder

Gabriela Alarcon

2. Relations between Multi-informant Reports of Depressive Symptoms and Explicit Suicidal Ideation in an Adolescent Inpatient Population

Tara Augenstein

3. Trait Sensitivity to Reward Moderates Effects of Negative Evaluative Stress on Reward Learning in Males

Brad Avery

4. Morningness/Eveningness as an Endophenotype for Bipolar Disorder

Lara Baez, Lihong Cui, Kathleen Merikangas

5. Temperamental Differences in Childhood Predict Depression-linked Neural Processing of Emotion in Adolescence

Megan Davis

6. Using Ecological Momentary Assessment to Study the Impact of Colored Glasses on Sleep Quality, Energy Level, and Mood

Lindsay Freeman

7. Physiological Markers for Stress Generation in Depression among High-Risk Late Adolescents

Jessica Hamilton

8. Parental Reports of Early Psychopathology in Children and Adolescents with Bipolar Disorder

Mariely Hernandez

9. Biomarkers of Vulnerability in a Sample of Suicidal Adolescents and Their First-degree Family Members

Erin Kaufman

10. Physiological Effects of Rumination: Rumination is Associated with Blunted Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmi (RSA) Reactivity

Casey May

11. Patterns of Adolescent Emotional Clarity and Cognitive Response Styles Predict Young Adult Depression, Anxiety and Well-Being: A Latent Class Analysis

Brae Ann McArthur

12. Associations Between Emotional Invalidation and Adolescent Nonsuicidal Self-Injury

Meaghan McCallum

13. Family Functioning as a Moderator of Anxiety Outcomes in a Treatment Trial for Depression

Allison Meyer

14. Is Low IQ Associated with Depression Per Se? An Examination of Cognitive Impairment in the Context of Major Depressive Disorder Using Data From Two Longitudinal Birth Cohort

Jon Schaefer

15. Reduced Habituation to Familial Threat in Adolescents with Low Family Connectedness: A Novel Use of MVPA

Paul Sharp

16. Longitudinal Changes in Depression Predict Changes in Medial Prefrontal Cortex Response to Sad Faces in Late Adolescent Girls

Veronika Vilgis

17. Comorbidity and Patterns of Familial Aggregation of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder and Mood Disorders: Results from the National Institute of Mental Health Family Study

Rachel Walsh, Brooke Sheppard, Lihong Cui, Cortlyn Brown, Kathleen Merikangas

Current NIMH Priorities & Discussion edit

Julia L. Zehr, Ph.D., National Institute Of Mental Health, Division Of Translational Research

Data Blitz #2 edit

Talk #1: Solving Problems And Scaling The Solutions: How Artificial Intelligence And Mobile Apps Can Reduce The National Suicide Rate edit

Joseph C. Franklin, Ph.D., University Of South Florida

Talk #2: Cognitive Development And Cognitive Therapy: W Hat Do Children Need To Know? edit

Judy Garber, Ph.D., Vanderbilt University

Discussion Of Flipped Keynote #2 edit

Mind And Metabolism View before the meeting here. Bonnie J. Kaplan, Ph.D., Cumming School Of Medicine, University Of Calgary

Data Blitz #3: Three Fast Talks, Followed Q&A edit

Talk #1: Depression And The Changing Adolescent Brain edit

Amanda Guyer, Ph.D., University Of California, Davis

Talk #2: Domain-General Intrinsic Networks Support Emotional Experiences edit

Kristen Lindquist, Ph.D., University Of North Carolina At Chapel Hill

Talk #3: Depression And Suicide In Adolescents edit

Randy Auerbach, Ph.D., Mclean Hospital