982 results on '"Forbes, Erika E."'
Search Results
2. Hooked on a thought: Associations between rumination and neural responses to social rejection in adolescent girls
- Author
-
Yoon, Leehyun, Keenan, Kate E, Hipwell, Alison E, Forbes, Erika E, and Guyer, Amanda E
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Psychology ,Mental Health ,Mind and Body ,Neurosciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Neurological ,Mental health ,Female ,Humans ,Adolescent ,Social Status ,Emotions ,Cerebral Cortex ,Gyrus Cinguli ,Parietal Lobe ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Brain Mapping ,Rumination ,Adolescence ,Social rejection ,fMRI ,sgACC ,Default mode network ,Clinical Sciences ,Cognitive Sciences ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
Rumination is a significant risk factor for psychopathology in adolescent girls and is associated with heightened and prolonged physiological arousal following social rejection. However, no study has examined how rumination relates to neural responses to social rejection in adolescent girls; thus, the current study aimed to address this gap. Adolescent girls (N = 116; ages 16.95-19.09) self-reported on their rumination tendency and completed a social evaluation fMRI task where they received fictitious feedback (acceptance, rejection) from peers they liked or disliked. Rejection-related neural activity and subgenual anterior cingulate cortex (sgACC) connectivity were regressed on rumination, controlling for rejection sensitivity and depressive symptoms. Rumination was associated with distinctive neural responses following rejection from liked peers including increased neural activity in the precuneus, inferior parietal gyrus, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, and supplementary motor area (SMA) and reduced sgACC connectivity with multiple regions including medial prefrontal cortex, precuneus and ventrolateral prefrontal cortex. Greater precuneus and SMA activity mediated the effect of rumination on slower response time to report emotional state after receiving rejection from liked peers. These findings provide clues for distinctive cognitive processes (e.g., mentalizing, conflict processing, memory encoding) following the receipt of rejection in girls with high levels of rumination.
- Published
- 2023
3. Adolescents’ neural reactivity to parental criticism is associated with diminished happiness during daily interpersonal situations
- Author
-
James, Kiera M, Sequeira, Stefanie L, Dahl, Ronald E, Forbes, Erika E, Ryan, Neal D, Hooley, Jill, Ladouceur, Cecile D, and Silk, Jennifer S
- Subjects
Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Neurosciences ,Brain Disorders ,Mental health ,Humans ,Adolescent ,Happiness ,Emotions ,Anxiety ,Anger ,Parents ,neuroimaging ,affective salience network ,parental criticism ,ecological momentary assessment ,emotion ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Experimental Psychology - Abstract
The goal of this study was to examine the relation between real-world socio-emotional measures and neural activation to parental criticism, a salient form of social threat for adolescents. This work could help us understand why heightened neural reactivity to social threat consistently emerges as a risk factor for internalizing psychopathology in youth. We predicted that youth with higher reactivity to parental criticism (vs neutral comments) in the subgenual anterior cingulate cortex (sgACC), amygdala and anterior insula would experience (i) less happiness in daily positive interpersonal situations and (ii) more sadness and anger in daily negative interpersonal situations. Participants (44 youth aged 11-16 years with a history of anxiety) completed a 10-day ecological momentary assessment protocol and a neuroimaging task in which they listened to audio clips of their parents' criticism and neutral comments. Mixed-effects models tested associations between neural activation to critical (vs neutral) feedback and emotions in interpersonal situations. Youth who exhibited higher activation in the sgACC to parental criticism reported less happiness during daily positive interpersonal situations. No significant neural predictors of negative emotions (e.g. sadness and anger) emerged. These findings provide evidence of real-world correlates of neural reactivity to social threat that may have important clinical implications.
- Published
- 2023
4. Physical and Social Anhedonia in Female Adolescents: A Factor Analysis of Self-Report Measures
- Author
-
Yang, Xi, Casement, Melynda D, Keenan, Kate E, Hipwell, Alison E, Guyer, Amanda E, and Forbes, Erika E
- Subjects
Psychology ,Clinical and Health Psychology ,Social and Personality Psychology ,Applied and Developmental Psychology ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Depression ,Brain Disorders ,Mental Health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Female ,Humans ,Young Adult ,Adult ,Anhedonia ,Self Report ,Pleasure ,Emotions ,Factor Analysis ,Statistical ,anhedonia ,adolescent ,factor analysis ,female ,PGS ,Cognitive Sciences ,Experimental Psychology - Abstract
Anhedonia is a transdiagnostic symptom of psychopathology that includes diminished positive emotions and anticipation and enjoyment of reward, with particular salience during adolescence. However, the construct validity of anhedonia dimensions is not well established, thus limiting operationalization and generalization of the construct. We applied exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses to identify latent dimensions of anhedonia across four commonly used self-report measures covering different facets of anhedonic experience within a nonclinical sample of female adolescents across two waves of data collection (N = 173, Mage = 19.25; N = 147, Mage = 20.23). Factor analyses yielded a two-factor model with a physical anhedonia factor emphasizing enjoyment from physical sensations and a social anhedonia factor focusing on emotional connections with other people. These results have implications for the measurement of anhedonia in women's emotional well-being and mental health research, including research designed to identify facets of anhedonia that predict the onset, severity, and persistence of psychopathology. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2022
5. The late positive potential during affective picture processing: Associations with daily life emotional functioning among adolescents with anxiety disorders
- Author
-
Bylsma, Lauren M, Tan, Patricia Z, Silk, Jennifer S, Forbes, Erika E, McMakin, Dana L, Dahl, Ronald E, Ryan, Neal D, and Ladouceur, Cecile D
- Subjects
Anxiety Disorders ,Depression ,Pediatric ,Mind and Body ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Brain Disorders ,Clinical Research ,Mental health ,Adolescent ,Child ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Electroencephalography ,Emotions ,Anxiety ,Evoked Potentials ,Adolescence ,Late positive potential ,Emotion regulation ,Emotion reactivity ,Ecological momentary assessment ,Brain -behavior relationships ,Brain-behavior relationships ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Experimental Psychology - Abstract
Pediatric anxiety disorders are characterized by potentiated threat responses and maladaptive emotion regulation (ER). The Late Positive Potential (LPP) is a neural index of heightened attention to emotional stimuli. Anxious individuals typically exhibit a larger LPP to unpleasant stimuli, but the LPP may also be blunted to unpleasant and pleasant stimuli for those with co-morbid depression. While a larger LPP is thought to reflect greater emotional reactivity, it is unknown to what extent variation in the LPP to laboratory stimuli corresponds to daily emotional functioning. We assessed the LPP in the laboratory in response to unpleasant, pleasant, and neutral images in combination with ecological momentary assessment of emotional reactivity and regulation in daily life among youth (9-14 years old; 55 % female) with anxiety disorders (ANX, N = 130) and no psychiatric diagnoses (ND, N = 47). We tested whether LPP amplitudes to unpleasant and pleasant stimuli (vs. neutral) are greater in ANX (vs. ND) youth and whether LPP amplitudes inversely correlate with co-morbid depression symptoms. We also examined associations between the LPP and daily life emotional functioning among ANX and ND youth. We found no group-by-valence effects on LPP amplitudes. Within ANX youth, higher depression symptoms were associated with smaller LPP amplitudes to unpleasant, but not pleasant, stimuli relative to neutral stimuli. Larger LPP amplitudes to emotional (relative to neutral) stimuli were correlated with use of specific ER strategies among ANX and ND youth but not emotional reactivity. While the LPP may reflect initial emotional reactivity to laboratory stimuli, it is associated with ER behaviors, and not emotional reactivity, in daily life.
- Published
- 2022
6. Negative emotion differentiation buffers against intergenerational risk for social anxiety in at-risk adolescent girls
- Author
-
Seah, T. H. Stanley, Silk, Jennifer S., Forbes, Erika E., and Ladouceur, Cecile D.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Neural indices of performance monitoring are associated with daily emotional functioning in youth with anxiety disorders: An ERP and EMA study
- Author
-
Tan, Patricia Z, Bylsma, Lauren M, Silk, Jennifer S, Siegle, Greg J, Forbes, Erika E, McMakin, Dana L, Dahl, Ronald E, Ryan, Neal D, and Ladouceur, Cecile D
- Subjects
Mental Health ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mind and Body ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Neurosciences ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Mental health ,Adolescent ,Anxiety Disorders ,Child ,Ecological Momentary Assessment ,Electroencephalography ,Evoked Potentials ,Humans ,Individuality ,Infant ,Error-related negativity ,Correct-related negativity ,Pediatric anxiety disorders ,EEG ,Emotion regulation ,Cognitive control ,Ecological momentary assessment ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Experimental Psychology - Abstract
Excessive monitoring of one's performance is a characteristic of anxiety disorders that has been linked to alterations in implicit emotion regulation (ER), including elevations in neural measures of performance monitoring (i.e., error- and correct-related negativity; ERN and CRN). Elevations in ERN and CRN amplitudes have been reported consistently in anxiety disorders, suggesting that an overactive performance monitoring system is linked to ER difficulties in anxiety. Yet, the relevance of these lab-based neural measures for day-to-day emotional functioning remains poorly understood. This study examined the degree to which ERN and CRN amplitudes are associated with measures of daily ER difficulties in youth with anxiety disorders. Youth (N = 100, Mage = 11.14, SDage = 1.46) completed a computerized flanker task assessing the ERN and CRN. They then completed a 5-day ecological momentary assessment (EMA) protocol assessing their daily ER (i.e., intensity of momentary and peak negative affect, intensity of worry, reliance on maladaptive ER strategies). Results showed that more negative mean CRN amplitudes were associated with higher levels of negative emotional reactivity and more intense worries. There were no significant associations between ERN amplitude and EMA measures. Furthermore, elevations in CRN were linked to more frequent use of maladaptive ER strategies (i.e., rumination, physiological reactivity, avoidance). Together, results indicate that among youth with anxiety, individual differences in CRN, but not ERN, amplitudes are related to daily ER difficulties. Findings highlight the clinical utility of a lab-based neural measure of ER, suggesting that the CRN, rather than the ERN, reflects individual ER differences in the context of daily life among youth with pediatric anxiety disorders. As such, the CRN might serve as an important dimensional index of a treatment target that can be tracked with a validated, multi-method measure.
- Published
- 2022
8. Continuous theta burst stimulation to dorsomedial prefrontal cortex in young adults with depression: Changes in resting frontostriatal functional connectivity relevant to positive mood
- Author
-
Gupta, Tina, Karim, Helmet T., Jones, Neil P., Ferrarelli, Fabio, Nance, Melissa, Taylor, Stephan F., Rogers, David, Pogue, Ashley M., Seah, T.H. Stanley, Phillips, Mary L., Ryan, Neal D., and Forbes, Erika E.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Associations between brain structure and sleep patterns across adolescent development
- Author
-
Jalbrzikowski, Maria, Hayes, Rebecca, Scully, Kathleen E, Franzen, Peter L, Hasler, Brant P, Siegle, Greg J, Buysse, Daniel J, Dahl, Ron E, Forbes, Erika E, Ladouceur, Cecile D, McMakin, Dana L, Ryan, Neal D, Silk, Jennifer S, Goldstein, Tina R, and Soehner, Adriane M
- Subjects
Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Pediatric ,Neurosciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Sleep Research ,Prevention ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Mental health ,Neurological ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adolescent Development ,Adult ,Brain ,Child ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Gray Matter ,Humans ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Sleep ,Young Adult ,sleep ,gray matter structure ,actigraphy ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Study objectivesStructural brain maturation and sleep are complex processes that exhibit significant changes over adolescence and are linked to many physical and mental health outcomes. We investigated whether sleep-gray matter relationships are developmentally invariant (i.e. stable across age) or developmentally specific (i.e. only present during discrete time windows) from late childhood through young adulthood.MethodsWe constructed the Neuroimaging and Pediatric Sleep Databank from eight research studies conducted at the University of Pittsburgh (2009-2020). Participants completed a T1-weighted structural MRI scan (sMRI) and 5-7 days of wrist actigraphy to assess naturalistic sleep. The final analytic sample consisted of 225 participants without current psychiatric diagnoses (9-25 years). We extracted cortical thickness and subcortical volumes from sMRI. Sleep patterns (duration, timing, continuity, regularity) were estimated from wrist actigraphy. Using regularized regression, we examined cross-sectional associations between sMRI measures and sleep patterns, as well as the effects of age, sex, and their interaction with sMRI measures on sleep.ResultsShorter sleep duration, later sleep timing, and poorer sleep continuity were associated with thinner cortex and altered subcortical volumes in diverse brain regions across adolescence. In a discrete subset of regions (e.g. posterior cingulate), thinner cortex was associated with these sleep patterns from late childhood through early-to-mid adolescence but not in late adolescence and young adulthood.ConclusionsIn childhood and adolescence, developmentally invariant and developmentally specific associations exist between sleep patterns and gray matter structure, across brain regions linked to sensory, cognitive, and emotional processes. Sleep intervention during specific developmental periods could potentially promote healthier neurodevelopmental outcomes.
- Published
- 2021
10. Prospective associations between cognitive flexibility and eating disorder symptoms in anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa
- Author
-
Dougherty, Elizabeth N., Bottera, Angeline R., Forester, Glen, Schaefer, Lauren M., Forbes, Erika E., and Wildes, Jennifer E.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Current maternal depression associated with worsened children's social outcomes during middle childhood: Exploring the role of positive affect socialization
- Author
-
Vanwoerden, Salome, Silk, Jennifer S., Forbes, Erika E., and Morgan, Judith K.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Targeted Sleep Enhancement Reduces Residual Anxiety Symptoms in Peri-Adolescents Previously Treated for Anxiety Disorders
- Author
-
Akbar, Saima A., Hayes, Timothy, Valente, Matthew J., Milbert, Melissa M., Cousins, Jennifer C., Siegle, Greg J., Ladouceur, Cecile D., Silk, Jennifer S., Forbes, Erika E., Ryan, Neal D., Harvey, Allison G., Dahl, Ronald E., and McMakin, Dana L.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Reward-related predictors of symptom change in behavioral activation therapy for anhedonic adolescents: a multimodal approach
- Author
-
Webb, Christian A., Murray, Laura, Tierney, Anna O., Forbes, Erika E., and Pizzagalli, Diego A.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Association of Neural Reward Circuitry Function With Response to Psychotherapy in Youths With Anxiety Disorders
- Author
-
Sequeira, Stefanie L, Silk, Jennifer S, Ladouceur, Cecile D, Hanson, Jamie L, Ryan, Neal D, Morgan, Judith K, McMakin, Dana L, Kendall, Philip C, Dahl, Ronald E, and Forbes, Erika E
- Subjects
Brain Disorders ,Neurosciences ,Depression ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Pediatric ,Mind and Body ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,6.6 Psychological and behavioural ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Anxiety Disorders ,Brain ,Child ,Cognitive Behavioral Therapy ,Corpus Striatum ,Female ,Functional Neuroimaging ,Gyrus Cinguli ,Humans ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Male ,Nucleus Accumbens ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Psychotherapy ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Reward ,Treatment Outcome ,Child/Adolescent Psychiatry ,Neuroimaging ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry - Abstract
ObjectiveIdentifying neural correlates of response to psychological treatment may inform targets for interventions designed to treat psychiatric disorders. This study examined the extent to which baseline functioning in reward circuitry is associated with response to psychotherapy in youths with anxiety disorders.MethodsA randomized clinical trial of cognitive-behavioral therapy compared with supportive therapy was conducted in youths with anxiety disorders. Before treatment, 72 youths (9-14 years old) with anxiety disorders and 37 group-matched healthy comparison youths completed a monetary reward functional MRI task. Treatment response was defined categorically as at least a 35% reduction in diagnostician-rated anxiety severity from pre- to posttreatment assessment. Pretreatment neural activation in the striatum and medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) during monetary wins relative to losses was examined in relation to treatment response.ResultsResponders, nonresponders, and healthy youths differed significantly in mPFC activation to rewards versus losses at baseline. Youths with anxiety exhibited higher mPFC activity relative to healthy youths, although this may have been driven by differences in depressive symptoms. Planned comparisons between treatment responders (N=48) and nonresponders (N=24) also revealed greater pretreatment neural activation in a cluster encompassing the subgenual anterior cingulate cortex and nucleus accumbens among responders.ConclusionsStriatal activation to reward receipt may not differentiate youths with anxiety from healthy youths. However, higher striatal responsivity to rewards may allow youths with anxiety to improve during treatment, potentially through greater engagement in therapy. Function in reward circuitry may guide development of treatments for youths with anxiety.
- Published
- 2021
15. Hypothalamic–Pituitary–Adrenal Axis Activity in Childhood Predicts Emotional Memory Effects and Related Neural Circuitry in Adolescent Girls
- Author
-
Shields, Grant S, Hostinar, Camelia E, Vilgis, Veronika, Forbes, Erika E, Hipwell, Alison E, Keenan, Kate, and Guyer, Amanda E
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Neurosciences ,Mind and Body ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,1.2 Psychological and socioeconomic processes ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Mental health ,Adolescent ,Child ,Emotions ,Female ,Humans ,Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System ,Longitudinal Studies ,Pituitary-Adrenal System ,Stress ,Psychological ,Cognitive Sciences ,Experimental Psychology ,Biological psychology ,Cognitive and computational psychology - Abstract
Negative emotional experiences can be more difficult to forget than neutral ones, a phenomenon termed the "emotional memory effect." Individual differences in the strength of the emotional memory effect are associated with emotional health. Thus, understanding the neurobiological underpinnings of the emotional memory effect has important implications, especially for individuals at risk for emotional health problems. Although the neural basis of emotional memory effects has been relatively well defined, less is known about how hormonal factors that can modulate emotional memory, such as glucocorticoids, relate to that neural basis. Importantly, probing the role of glucocorticoids in the stress- and emotion-sensitive period of late childhood to adolescence could provide actionable points of intervention. We addressed this gap by testing whether hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis activity during a parent-child conflict task at 11 years of age predicted emotional memory and its primary neural circuitry (i.e., amygdala-hippocampus functional connectivity) at 16 years of age in a longitudinal study of 147 girls (104 with complete data). Results showed that lower HPA axis activity predicted stronger emotional memory effects, r(124) = -.236, p < .01, and higher emotional memory-related functional connectivity between the right hippocampus and the right amygdala, β = -.385, p < .001. These findings suggest that late childhood HPA axis activity may modulate the neural circuitry of emotional memory effects in adolescence, which may confer a potential risk trajectory for emotional health among girls.
- Published
- 2021
16. Mental Health and Clinical Psychological Science in the Time of COVID-19: Challenges, Opportunities, and a Call to Action
- Author
-
Gruber, June, Prinstein, Mitchell J, Clark, Lee Anna, Rottenberg, Jonathan, Abramowitz, Jonathan S, Albano, Anne Marie, Aldao, Amelia, Borelli, Jessica L, Chung, Tammy, Davila, Joanne, Forbes, Erika E, Gee, Dylan G, Hall, Gordon C Nagayama, Hallion, Lauren S, Hinshaw, Stephen P, Hofmann, Stefan G, Hollon, Steven D, Joormann, Jutta, Kazdin, Alan E, Klein, Daniel N, La Greca, Annette M, Levenson, Robert W, MacDonald, Angus W, McKay, Dean, McLaughlin, Katie A, Mendle, Jane, Miller, Adam Bryant, Neblett, Enrique W, Nock, Matthew, Olatunji, Bunmi O, Persons, Jacqueline B, Rozek, David C, Schleider, Jessica L, Slavich, George M, Teachman, Bethany A, Vine, Vera, and Weinstock, Lauren M
- Subjects
Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mind and Body ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Behavioral Symptoms ,COVID-19 ,Child ,Delivery of Health Care ,Humans ,Mental Disorders ,Mental Health Services ,Middle Aged ,Psychology ,Clinical ,Suicide ,Young Adult ,clinical psychological science ,clinical psychology ,mental health ,treatment ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Social Psychology - Abstract
COVID-19 presents significant social, economic, and medical challenges. Because COVID-19 has already begun to precipitate huge increases in mental health problems, clinical psychological science must assert a leadership role in guiding a national response to this secondary crisis. In this article, COVID-19 is conceptualized as a unique, compounding, multidimensional stressor that will create a vast need for intervention and necessitate new paradigms for mental health service delivery and training. Urgent challenge areas across developmental periods are discussed, followed by a review of psychological symptoms that likely will increase in prevalence and require innovative solutions in both science and practice. Implications for new research directions, clinical approaches, and policy issues are discussed to highlight the opportunities for clinical psychological science to emerge as an updated, contemporary field capable of addressing the burden of mental illness and distress in the wake of COVID-19 and beyond. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2021
17. Parents still matter! Parental warmth predicts adolescent brain function and anxiety and depressive symptoms 2 years later
- Author
-
Butterfield, Rosalind D, Silk, Jennifer S, Lee, Kyung Hwa, Siegle, Greg S, Dahl, Ronald E, Forbes, Erika E, Ryan, Neal D, Hooley, Jill M, and Ladouceur, Cecile D
- Subjects
Pediatric Research Initiative ,Neurosciences ,Mind and Body ,Depression ,Clinical Research ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Anxiety Disorders ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Brain Disorders ,Mental Health ,6.6 Psychological and behavioural ,Aetiology ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Mental health ,Neurological ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Anxiety ,Brain ,Child ,Humans ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Parents ,adolescence ,anxiety ,depression ,fMRI ,parental warmth ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
Anxiety is the most prevalent psychological disorder among youth, and even following treatment, it confers risk for anxiety relapse and the development of depression. Anxiety disorders are associated with heightened response to negative affective stimuli in the brain networks that underlie emotion processing. One factor that can attenuate the symptoms of anxiety and depression in high-risk youth is parental warmth. The current study investigates whether parental warmth helps to protect against future anxiety and depressive symptoms in adolescents with histories of anxiety and whether neural functioning in the brain regions that are implicated in emotion processing and regulation can account for this link. Following treatment for anxiety disorder (Time 1), 30 adolescents (M age = 11.58, SD = 1.26) reported on maternal warmth, and 2 years later (Time 2) they participated in a functional neuroimaging task where they listened to prerecorded criticism and neutral statements from a parent. Higher maternal warmth predicted lower neural activation during criticism, compared with the response during neutral statements, in the left amygdala, bilateral insula, subgenual anterior cingulate (sgACC), right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex, and anterior cingulate cortex. Maternal warmth was associated with adolescents' anxiety and depressive symptoms due to the indirect effects of sgACC activation, suggesting that parenting may attenuate risk for internalizing through its effects on brain function.
- Published
- 2021
18. Girls' brain structural connectivity in late adolescence relates to history of depression symptoms
- Author
-
Chahal, Rajpreet, Weissman, David G, Marek, Scott, Rhoads, Shawn A, Hipwell, Alison E, Forbes, Erika E, Keenan, Kate, and Guyer, Amanda E
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Psychology ,Neurosciences ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,Depression ,Mind and Body ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Serious Mental Illness ,Brain Disorders ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Mental health ,Adolescent ,Brain ,Child ,Female ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,White Matter ,Young Adult ,Adolescence ,depression ,connectomics ,brain imaging ,development ,Clinical Sciences ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Clinical sciences ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
BackgroundGirls' depressive symptoms typically increase in adolescence, with individual differences in course and severity being key risk factors for impaired emotional functioning in young adulthood. Given the continued brain white matter (WM) maturation that occurs in adolescence, the present study tested whether structural connectivity patterns in late adolescence are associated with variation in the course of depression symptom severity throughout adolescence.MethodParticipants were girls (N = 115) enrolled in a multiyear prospective cohort study of risk for depression. Initial depression severity (intercept) at age 10 and change in severity (linear slope) across ages 10-19 were examined in relation to WM tractography collected at age 19. Network-based statistic analyses were used to identify clusters showing variation in structural connectivity in association with depressive symptom intercept, slope, and their interaction.ResultsHigher initial depressive severity and steeper positive slope (separately) were associated with greater structural connectivity between temporal, subcortical socioaffective, and occipital regions. Intercept showed more connectivity associations than slope. The interaction effect indicated that higher initial symptom severity and a steeper negative slope (i.e., alleviating symptoms) were related to greater connectivity between cognitive control regions. Moderately severe symptoms that worsened over time were followed by greater connectivity between self-referential and cognitive regions (e.g., posterior cingulate and frontal gyrus).ConclusionsHigher depressive symptom severity in early adolescence and increasing symptom severity over time may forecast structural connectivity differences in late adolescence, particularly in pathways involving cognitive and emotion-processing regions. Understanding how clinical course relates to neurobiological correlates may inform new treatment approaches to adolescent depression.
- Published
- 2020
19. Direct replication of task‐dependent neural activation patterns during sadness introspection in two independent adolescent samples
- Author
-
Vilgis, Veronika, Rhoads, Shawn A, Weissman, David G, Gelardi, Kristina L, Forbes, Erika E, Hipwell, Alison E, Keenan, Kate, Hastings, Paul D, and Guyer, Amanda E
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Cognitive and Computational Psychology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Brain Disorders ,Pediatric ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Neurosciences ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,1.2 Psychological and socioeconomic processes ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Underpinning research ,Mental health ,Neurological ,Adolescent ,Cerebral Cortex ,Emotional Regulation ,Facial Recognition ,Female ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Male ,Memory ,Episodic ,Sadness ,Social Cognition ,adolescence ,attention ,emotional faces ,fMRI ,introspection ,replication ,Cognitive Sciences ,Experimental Psychology ,Biological psychology ,Cognitive and computational psychology - Abstract
Functional neuroimaging results need to replicate to inform sound models of human social cognition and its neural correlates. Introspection, the capacity to reflect on one's thoughts and feelings, is one process required for normative social cognition and emotional functioning. Engaging in introspection draws on a network of brain regions including medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), posterior cingulate cortex (PCC), middle temporal gyri (MTG), and temporoparietal junction (TPJ). Maturation of these regions during adolescence mirrors the behavioral advances seen in adolescent social cognition, but the neural correlates of introspection in adolescence need to replicate to confirm their generalizability and role as a possible mechanism. The current study investigated whether reflecting upon one's own feelings of sadness would activate and replicate similar brain regions in two independent samples of adolescents. Participants included 156 adolescents (50% female) from the California Families Project and 119 adolescent girls from the Pittsburgh Girls Study of Emotion. All participants completed the Emotion Regulation Questionnaire (ERQ) and underwent a functional magnetic resonance imaging scan while completing the same facial emotion-processing task at age 16-17 years. Both samples showed similar whole-brain activation patterns when engaged in sadness introspection and when judging a nonemotional facial feature. Whole-brain activation was unrelated to ERQ scores in both samples. Neural responsivity to task manipulations replicated in regions recruited for socio-emotional (mPFC, PCC, MTG, TPJ) and attention (dorsolateral PFC, precentral gyri, superior occipital gyrus, superior parietal lobule) processing. These findings demonstrate robust replication of neural engagement during sadness introspection in two independent adolescent samples.
- Published
- 2020
20. Attention to Peer Feedback Through the Eyes of Adolescents with a History of Anxiety and Healthy Adolescents
- Author
-
Rosen, Dana, Price, Rebecca B, Ladouceur, Cecile D, Siegle, Greg J, Hutchinson, Emily, Nelson, Eric E, Stroud, Laura R, Forbes, Erika E, Ryan, Neal D, Dahl, Ronald E, and Silk, Jennifer S
- Subjects
Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Pediatric ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental health ,Adolescent ,Adolescent Behavior ,Anxiety ,Attentional Bias ,Emotions ,Feedback ,Psychological ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Peer Group ,Psychological Distance ,Pupil ,Attention bias ,Social feedback ,Pupillometry ,Adolescent anxiety ,Clinical Sciences ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Psychology ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
During adolescence, youth may experience heightened attention bias to socially relevant stimuli; however, it is unclear if attention bias toward social threat may be exacerbated for adolescents with a history of anxiety. This study evaluated attentional bias during the Chatroom-Interact task with 25 adolescents with a history of anxiety (18F, Mage = 13.6) and 22 healthy adolescents (13F, Mage = 13.8). In this task, participants received feedback from fictional, virtual peers who either chose them (acceptance) or rejected them (rejection). Overall, participants were faster to orient toward and spent longer time dwelling on their own picture after both rejection and acceptance compared to non-feedback cues. Social feedback was associated with greater pupillary reactivity, an index of cognitive and emotional neural processing, compared to non-feedback cues. During acceptance feedback (but not during rejection feedback), anxious youth displayed greater pupil response compared to healthy youth, suggesting that positive feedback from peers may differentially influence youth with a history of an anxiety disorder.
- Published
- 2019
21. Naturalistic Sleep Patterns are Linked to Global Structural Brain Aging in Adolescence
- Author
-
Soehner, Adriane M., Hayes, Rebecca A., Franzen, Peter L., Goldstein, Tina R., Hasler, Brant P., Buysse, Daniel J., Siegle, Greg J., Dahl, Ronald E., Forbes, Erika E., Ladouceur, Cecile D., McMakin, Dana L., Ryan, Neal D., Silk, Jennifer S., and Jalbrzikowski, Maria
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Changes in Affective Network Variability Among Youth Treated for Anxiety Disorders
- Author
-
Carper, Matthew M., Silk, Jennifer S., Ladouceur, Cecile D., Forbes, Erika E., McMakin, Dana, Ryan, Neal, and Kendall, Philip C.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. The late positive potential during affective picture processing: Associations with daily life emotional functioning among adolescents with anxiety disorders
- Author
-
Bylsma, Lauren M., Tan, Patricia Z., Silk, Jennifer S., Forbes, Erika E., McMakin, Dana L., Dahl, Ronald E., Ryan, Neal D., and Ladouceur, Cecile D.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Medial Prefrontal Cortex Activity to Reward Outcome Moderates the Association Between Victimization Due to Sexual Orientation and Depression in Youth
- Author
-
Eckstrand, Kristen L., Silk, Jennifer S., Nance, Melissa, Wallace, Meredith L., Buckley, Nicole, Lindenmuth, Morgan, Flores, Luis, Alarcón, Gabriela, Quevedo, Karina, Phillips, Mary L., Lenniger, Carly J., McLean Sammon, M., Brostowin, Alyssa, Ryan, Neal, Jones, Neil, and Forbes, Erika E.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Anxiety Treatment and Targeted Sleep Enhancement to Address Sleep Disturbance in Pre/Early Adolescents with Anxiety
- Author
-
McMakin, Dana L, Ricketts, Emily J, Forbes, Erika E, Silk, Jennifer S, Ladouceur, Cecile D, Siegle, Greg J, Milbert, Melissa, Trubnick, Laura, Cousins, Jennifer C, Ryan, Neal D, Harvey, Allison G, and Dahl, Ronald E
- Subjects
Sleep Research ,Mental Health ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Brain Disorders ,Anxiety Disorders ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Mind and Body ,Clinical Research ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Child ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Sleep Wake Disorders ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
Sleep disturbance is prevalent in anxious youth and prospectively predicts poor emotional adjustment in adolescence. Study 1 examined whether anxiety treatment improves subjective and objective sleep disturbance in anxious youth. Study 2 examined whether a sleep intervention called Sleeping TIGERS can further improve sleep following anxiety treatment. Study 1 examined 133 youth (ages 9-14; 56% female; 11% ethnic/racial minority) with generalized, social, or separation anxiety over the course of anxiety treatment (cognitive behavioral treatment or client-centered treatment). Sleep-related problems (parent-, child-report) and subjective (diary) and objective (actigraphy) sleep patterns were assessed across treatment in an open trial design. Study 2 included 50 youth (ages 9-14; 68% female; 10% ethnic/racial minority) who continued to report sleep-related problems after anxiety treatment and enrolled in an open trial of Sleeping TIGERS. Pre- and postassessments duplicated Study 1 and included the Focal Interview of Sleep to assess sleep disturbance. Study 1 demonstrated small reductions in sleep problems and improvements in subjective sleep patterns (diary) across anxiety treatment, but outcomes were not deemed clinically significant, and 75% of youth stayed above clinical cutoff. Study 2 showed clinically significant, large reductions in sleep problems and small changes in some subjective sleep patterns (diary). Anxiety treatment improves, but does not resolve, sleep disturbance in peri-pubertal youth, which may portend risk for poor emotional adjustment and mental health. The open trial provides preliminary support that Sleeping TIGERS can improve sleep in anxious youth to a clinically significant degree.
- Published
- 2019
26. Help me Feel Better! Ecological Momentary Assessment of Anxious Youths’ Emotion Regulation with Parents and Peers
- Author
-
Stone, Lindsey B, Mennies, Rebekah J, Waller, Jennifer M, Ladouceur, Cecile D, Forbes, Erika E, Ryan, Neal D, Dahl, Ronald E, and Silk, Jennifer S
- Subjects
Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,Mind and Body ,Mental Health ,Brain Disorders ,Adolescent ,Adolescent Behavior ,Affect ,Anxiety Disorders ,Child ,Child Behavior ,Ecological Momentary Assessment ,Emotional Regulation ,Female ,Humans ,Interpersonal Relations ,Male ,Parent-Child Relations ,Peer Group ,Rumination ,Cognitive ,Sex Factors ,Social Support ,EcologicalMomentaryAssessment ,Social support ,Emotion regulation ,Child anxiety ,Coping strategies ,Ecological Momentary Assessment - Abstract
Anxious youth often have trouble regulating negative affect (NA) and tend to over-rely on parents when faced with challenges. It is unclear how social interactions with parents or peers actually helps or hinders anxious youths' success in regulating NA. The aim of this study was to examine whether the success of anxious youths' emotion regulation strategies differed according to social context. We compared the effectiveness of co-ruminating, co-problem solving and co-distracting with parents/peers for regulating anxious youth's NA in response to stress in their daily lives. We also examined the benefit of attempting each strategy socially vs. non-socially (e.g., co-ruminating vs. ruminating). One-hundred-seventeen youth (9-14) with a current diagnosis of Separation Anxiety Disorder, Generalized Anxiety Disorder, and/or Social Phobia completed an ecological momentary assessment (14 calls over 5 days), reporting on recent stressors, their affective state, presence of others, and emotion regulation strategies within the prior hour. Mixed linear models revealed that co-distracting was the most effective social strategy for reducing NA, but only for boys. Co-rumination was the least effective social strategy for regulating NA. Regarding social context, only co-distracting was more effective for regulating NA over distracting alone, but only among anxious boys. Results suggest that co-rumination is an ineffective use of social support for regulating NA. Anxious boys may benefit from social support by co-distracting with parents/peers, but improper use may reflect avoidance and contribute to long-term anxiety maintenance. Results extend research on gender differences in interpersonal relationships and emotion regulation.
- Published
- 2019
27. Young adolescent sleep is associated with parental monitoring
- Author
-
Gunn, Heather E, O'Rourke, Flannery, Dahl, Ronald E, Goldstein, Tina R, Rofey, Dana L, Forbes, Erika E, and Shaw, Daniel S
- Subjects
Sleep Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Actigraphy ,Adolescent ,Child ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Parent-Child Relations ,Parenting ,Self Report ,Sleep ,Time Factors ,Adolescent sleep ,Parent monitoring ,Low socioeconomic status ,High risk ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology - Abstract
ObjectivesInsufficient sleep can increase risk for adverse psychological and physical outcomes. Parental monitoring of daily activities is associated with youth health behaviors. We examined parental monitoring of waking and bedtime behaviors and sleep in a community sample of high-risk youth.MethodsOne-hundred sixty-five 10- to 14-year-olds from low-socioeconomic status families participated (11.8 years ±1.16, 52% female; 78% Black/African American). Parents and youth evaluated parental monitoring of waking activities. Parent expectations about bedtime and parent knowledge about adolescent's bedtime and sleep routine were independently rated. Youth sleep was assessed via parent report and actigraphy over 7 days.ResultsMore parental knowledge about bedtime was associated with longer parent-reported sleep duration (β = .18, P .05). Parental monitoring of waking and bedtime behaviors was not associated with sleep duration variability (P values > .05).ConclusionsParental monitoring of waking activities may indirectly influence adolescent sleep via increased structure and felt security in the parent-adolescent relationship. Youth perception of monitoring may be particularly relevant for youth sleep duration.
- Published
- 2019
28. Vigilant attention to threat, sleep patterns, and anxiety in peripubertal youth
- Author
-
Ricketts, Emily J, Price, Rebecca B, Siegle, Greg J, Silk, Jennifer S, Forbes, Erika E, Ladouceur, Cecile D, Harvey, Allison G, Ryan, Neal D, Dahl, Ronald E, and McMakin, Dana L
- Subjects
Neurosciences ,Sleep Research ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental health ,Actigraphy ,Adolescent ,Anxiety ,Arousal ,Case-Control Studies ,Child ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Sleep ,Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders ,anxiety ,adolescence ,Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
BACKGROUND:Vigilant attention to threat is commonly observed in anxiety, undergoes developmental changes in early adolescence, and has been proposed to interfere with sleep initiation and maintenance. We present one of the first studies to use objective measures to examine associations between vigilant attention to threat and difficulties initiating and maintaining sleep in an early adolescent anxious sample. We also explore the moderating role of development (age, puberty) and sex. METHODS:Participants were 66 peripubertal youth (ages 9-14) with a primary anxiety disorder and 24 healthy control subjects. A dot-probe task was used to assess attentional bias to fearful relative to neutral face stimuli. Eye-tracking indexed selective attentional bias to threat, and reaction time bias indexed action readiness to threat. Sleep was assessed via actigraphy (e.g. sleep onset delay, wake after sleep onset, etc.), parent report (Children's Sleep Habits Questionnaire), and child report (Sleep Self-Report). The Pediatric Anxiety Rating Scale assessed anxiety severity. RESULTS:Eye-tracking initial threat fixation bias (β = .33, p = .001) and threat dwell time bias (β = .22, p = .041) were positively associated with sleep onset latency. Reaction time bias was positively associated with wake after sleep onset (β = .24, p = .026) and parent-reported sleep disturbance (β = .25, p = .019). Anxiety (severity, diagnosis) was not associated with these outcomes. Sex (β = -.32, p = .036) moderated the relation between initial threat fixation bias and sleep onset latency, with a positive association for males (p = .005), but not for females (p = .289). Age and pubertal status did not moderate effects. CONCLUSIONS:Vigilant attention to threat is related to longer sleep onset and reduced sleep maintenance. These associations are not stronger in early adolescents with anxiety. Implications for early intervention or prevention that targets vigilant attention to threat to impact sleep disturbance, and vice versa, are discussed.
- Published
- 2018
29. Beyond Family-Level Adversities: Exploring the Developmental Timing of Neighborhood Disadvantage Effects on the Brain
- Author
-
Gard, Arianna M., Maxwell, Andrea M., Shaw, Daniel S., Mitchell, Colter, Brooks-Gunn, Jeanne, McLanahan, Sara S., Forbes, Erika E., Monk, Christopher S., and Hyde, Luke W.
- Abstract
A growing literature suggests that adversity is associated with later altered brain function, particularly within the corticolimbic system that supports emotion processing and salience detection (e.g., amygdala, prefrontal cortex [PFC]). Although neighborhood socioeconomic disadvantage has been shown to predict maladaptive behavioral outcomes, particularly for boys, most of the research linking adversity to corticolimbic function has focused on family-level adversities. Moreover, although animal models and studies of normative brain development suggest that there may be sensitive periods during which adversity exerts stronger effects on corticolimbic development, little prospective evidence exists in humans. Using two low-income samples of boys (n = 167; n = 77), Census-derived neighborhood disadvantage during early childhood, but not adolescence, was uniquely associated with greater amygdala, but not PFC, reactivity to ambiguous neutral faces in adolescence and young adulthood. These associations remained after accounting for several family-level adversities (e.g., low family income, harsh parenting), highlighting the independent and developmentally specific neural effects of the neighborhood context. Furthermore, in both samples, indicators measuring income and poverty status of neighbors were predictive of amygdala function, suggesting that neighborhood economic resources may be critical to brain development.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Neural indices of performance monitoring are associated with daily emotional functioning in youth with anxiety disorders: An ERP and EMA study
- Author
-
Tan, Patricia Z., Bylsma, Lauren M., Silk, Jennifer S., Siegle, Greg J., Forbes, Erika E., McMakin, Dana L., Dahl, Ronald E., Ryan, Neal D., and Ladouceur, Cecile D.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Maternal Response to Positive Affect Moderates the Impact of Familial Risk for Depression on Ventral Striatal Response to Winning Reward in 6- to 8-Year-Old Children
- Author
-
Morgan, Judith K., Eckstrand, Kristen L., Silk, Jennifer S., Olino, Thomas M., Ladouceur, Cecile D., and Forbes, Erika E.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Positive valence systems in youth anxiety development: A scoping review
- Author
-
Sequeira, Stefanie L., Forbes, Erika E., Hanson, Jamie L., and Silk, Jennifer S.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Neural substrates of rewarding and punishing self representations in depressed suicide-attempting adolescents
- Author
-
Quevedo, Karina, Teoh, Jia Yuan, Liu, Guanmin, Santana-Gonzalez, Carmen, Forbes, Erika E., and Engstrom, Maggie
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Girls' pubertal development is associated with white matter microstructure in late adolescence
- Author
-
Chahal, Rajpreet, Vilgis, Veronika, Grimm, Kevin J, Hipwell, Alison E, Forbes, Erika E, Keenan, Kate, and Guyer, Amanda E
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Contraception/Reproduction ,Mental Health ,Pediatric ,Mind and Body ,Clinical Research ,Neurosciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Child ,Diffusion Tensor Imaging ,Female ,Human Development ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Puberty ,White Matter ,Young Adult ,DTI ,White matter ,Adolescence ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
Patterns of pubertal maturation have been linked to vulnerability for emotion dysregulation disorders in girls, as well as white matter (WM) development, suggestive of a potential mechanism between pubertal maturation and emotional health. Because pubertal processes begin at varying ages (i.e., status, timing) and proceed at varying rates (i.e., tempo), identifying individual differences in the pubertal course associated with subsequent WM microstructure development may reveal clues about neurobiological mechanisms of girls' emotional well-being. In a prospective cohort study of 107 girls, we examined associations between pubertal status at age 9, pubertal timing and tempo from ages 9-15, and WM microstructure at age 19. Tract-based spatial statistics revealed that girls with more advanced pubertal status at age 9, specific to gonadal-related physical changes, had higher fractional anisotropy, and lower mean diffusivity (MD) and radial diffusivity in tracts relevant to cognitive control and emotion regulation (e.g., the superior longitudinal fasciculus, external capsule, and uncinate fasciculus). Additionally, girls with earlier pubertal timing showed lower MD in the left anterior cingulum bundle. Tempo was unrelated to WM measures. These findings implicate specific aspects of pubertal maturation in subsequent neural signatures, suggesting possible neuroendocrine mechanisms relevant to emotional development. Future work incorporating longitudinal neuroimaging in parallel with pubertal measures may contribute to the understanding of individual variation in pubertal course and WM development.
- Published
- 2018
35. Error‐related brain activity in pediatric anxiety disorders remains elevated following individual therapy: a randomized clinical trial
- Author
-
Ladouceur, Cecile D, Tan, Patricia Z, Sharma, Vinod, Bylsma, Lauren M, Silk, Jennifer S, Siegle, Greg J, Forbes, Erika E, McMakin, Dana L, Dahl, Ronald E, Kendall, Phillip C, Mannarino, Anthony, and Ryan, Neal D
- Subjects
Pediatric ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Mind and Body ,Mental Health ,Clinical Research ,Brain Disorders ,Behavioral and Social Science ,6.6 Psychological and behavioural ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Mental health ,Adolescent ,Anxiety Disorders ,Brain ,Case-Control Studies ,Child ,Cognitive Behavioral Therapy ,Electroencephalography ,Evoked Potentials ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Error-related negativity ,pediatric anxiety disorders ,cognitive-behavioral therapy ,child-centered therapy ,electroencephalography ,Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
BACKGROUND:Anxiety disorders are associated with an overactive action monitoring system as indexed by a larger error-related negativity (ERN). This study tests whether ERN magnitude changes following treatment, predicts response to treatment, and varies by treatment type. METHODS:The sample included 130 youth (9-14 years): youth with an anxiety disorder (ANX; n = 100) and healthy control (HC; n = 30) youth with no lifetime DSM-IV disorders. ANX youth were randomized to either a manualized cognitive-behavior therapy (CBT) or a comparison child-centered therapy (CCT). The ERN was assessed before and after 16 sessions of treatment and within a comparable interval for HC. Subjective ratings about making errors on the task were obtained following each testing session. The ClinicalTrials.gov identifier is NCT00774150. RESULTS:The ERN was larger in ANX than HC youth but ERN magnitude did not significantly change following treatment in the ANX youth, regardless of treatment type, and baseline ERN did not predict treatment response. Post-task ratings revealed that ANX youth worried more about task performance feedback than HC. Like the ERN, mean ratings did not significantly change following treatment. However, these ratings were not correlated with ERN amplitude. CONCLUSIONS:Findings of greater ERN in pediatric anxiety disorders are replicated in a larger sample. More importantly, findings from this randomized control trial show that a larger ERN and feeling worried about performance feedback remain unchanged following treatment and are unrelated to treatment response. Such findings suggest that action monitoring systems remain overactive in anxious youth treated with psychotherapy, suggesting the need for future investigation of whether novel complimentary cognitive and emotional training programs can modify these systems would be warranted.
- Published
- 2018
36. Amygdala functional connectivity during socioemotional processing prospectively predicts increases in internalizing symptoms in a sample of low-income, urban, young men
- Author
-
Gard, Arianna M, Waller, Rebecca, Swartz, Johnna R, Shaw, Daniel S, Forbes, Erika E, and Hyde, Luke W
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mind and Body ,Clinical Research ,Mental Health ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Neurosciences ,Depression ,Underpinning research ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Amygdala ,Brain Mapping ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Emotions ,Facial Expression ,Humans ,Image Processing ,Computer-Assisted ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Male ,Neural Pathways ,Poverty ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Social Behavior ,Urban Population ,Young Adult ,Functional connectivity ,Emotional processing ,Internalizing ,Structural equation modeling ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
Functional connectivity between the amygdala and the prefrontal cortex is critical for socioemotional processing, particularly during face processing. Though processing others' emotions is important for a myriad of complex social behaviors, more research is needed to understand how different types of emotional facial expressions differentially elicit connectivity of the amygdala with widespread neural regions. Moreover, though prior studies have reported cross-sectional associations between altered amygdala-prefrontal cortex functional connectivity and internalizing symptoms (e.g., depression, anxiety), few studies have examined whether amygdala functional connectivity is prospectively related to changes in these symptoms, with little work focusing on low-income men living in stressful contexts. The current study used psycho-physiological interaction analyses at the within-subjects level to examine how amygdala connectivity differed while participants viewed fearful, angry, and neutral faces. We used structural equation modeling at the between-subjects level, using extracted parameter estimates, to test whether amygdala connectivity during face processing predicted increases in internalizing psychopathology over time, controlling for earlier symptoms. An urban sample of 167 young men from low-income families was employed. Results indicated that negative connectivity between the amygdala and prefrontal regions was modulated by emotional face type. Neuronal activity in the cingulate and frontal cortices was connected to amygdala reactivity during fearful and neutral, but not angry, face processing. Moreover, weaker left amygdala-left middle frontal gyrus negative connectivity when viewing fearful faces and stronger right amygdala-left inferior frontal gyrus negative connectivity when viewing neutral faces at age 20 both predicted increases in internalizing behaviors from age 20 to age 22. Our findings show that amygdala-prefrontal cortex connectivity can predict the persistence of internalizing symptoms among high-risk participants over time but suggest that these patterns may differ depending on the emotional stimuli examined.
- Published
- 2018
37. A Randomized Clinical Trial Comparing Individual Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and Child-Centered Therapy for Child Anxiety Disorders
- Author
-
Silk, Jennifer S, Tan, Patricia Z, Ladouceur, Cecile D, Meller, Suzanne, Siegle, Greg J, McMakin, Dana L, Forbes, Erika E, Dahl, Ronald E, Kendall, Philip C, Mannarino, Anthony, and Ryan, Neal D
- Subjects
Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Mental Health ,Pediatric ,Rehabilitation ,Anxiety Disorders ,Mind and Body ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,6.6 Psychological and behavioural ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Child ,Cognitive Behavioral Therapy ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Treatment Outcome ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
This study compared individual cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and a supportive child-centered therapy (CCT) for child anxiety disorders on rates of treatment response and recovery at posttreatment and 1-year follow-up, as well as on real-world measures of emotional functioning. Youth (N = 133; ages 9-14) with anxiety disorders (generalized, separation, and/or social anxiety) were randomized using a 2:1 ratio to CBT (n = 90) or CCT (n = 43), which served as an active comparison. Treatment response and recovery at posttreatment and 1-year follow-up were assessed by Independent Evaluators, and youth completed ecological momentary assessment of daily emotions throughout treatment. The majority of youth in both CBT and CCT were classified as treatment responders (71.1% for CBT, 55.8% for CCT), but youth treated with CBT were significantly more likely to fully recover, no longer meeting diagnostic criteria for any of the targeted anxiety disorders and no longer showing residual symptoms (66.7% for CBT vs. 46.5% for CCT). Youth treated with CBT also reported significantly lower negative emotions associated with recent negative events experienced in daily life during the latter stages of treatment relative to youth treated with CCT. Furthermore, a significantly higher percentage of youth treated with CBT compared to CCT were in recovery at 1-year follow-up (82.2% for CBT vs. 65.1% for CCT). These findings indicate potential benefits of CBT above and beyond supportive therapy on the breadth, generalizability, and durability of treatment-related gains.
- Published
- 2018
38. Maternal Affective Expression and Adolescents' Subjective Experience of Positive Affect in Natural Settings
- Author
-
Griffith, Julianne M, Silk, Jennifer S, Oppenheimer, Caroline W, Morgan, Judith K, Ladouceur, Cecile D, Forbes, Erika E, and Dahl, Ronald E
- Subjects
Clinical Research ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adolescent Behavior ,Adult ,Affect ,Ecological Momentary Assessment ,Female ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Mother-Child Relations ,Mothers ,Reward ,Social Work ,Psychology ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
This study investigated the association between maternal affective expression during laboratory-based interaction tasks and adolescents' experience of positive affect (PA) in natural settings. Participants were 80 healthy adolescents and their mothers. Durations of maternal positive (PA) and negative affective (NA) expressions were observed during a conflict resolution task and a positive event planning interaction task. Ecological momentary assessment (EMA) procedures were employed to assess adolescents' momentary and peak experience of PA in daily life. Results indicated that maternal NA, but not maternal PA, was related to adolescents' EMA-reported PA. Adolescents whose mothers expressed more NA experienced less PA in daily environments. Results suggest that adolescents' exposure to maternal negative affective behavior is associated with adolescents' subjective daily well-being.
- Published
- 2018
39. Dorsomedial Prefrontal Activity to Sadness Predicts Later Emotion Suppression and Depression Severity in Adolescent Girls
- Author
-
Vilgis, Veronika, Gelardi, Kristina L, Helm, Jonathan L, Forbes, Erika E, Hipwell, Alison E, Keenan, Kate, and Guyer, Amanda E
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Psychology ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Brain Disorders ,Depression ,Neurosciences ,Mind and Body ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,Mental Health ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Underpinning research ,Mental health ,Adolescent ,Adolescent Behavior ,Affective Symptoms ,Brain Mapping ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Humans ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Sadness ,Severity of Illness Index ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Specialist studies in education ,Applied and developmental psychology - Abstract
The present study used cross-lagged panel analyses to test longitudinal associations among emotion regulation, prefrontal cortex (PFC) function, and depression severity in adolescent girls. The ventromedial and dorsomedial PFC (vmPFC and dmPFC) were regions of interest given their roles in depression pathophysiology, self-referential processing, and emotion regulation. At ages 16 and 17, seventy-eight girls completed a neuroimaging scan to assess changes in vmPFC and dmPFC activation to sad faces, and measures of depressive symptom severity and emotion regulation. The 1-year cross-lagged effects of dmPFC activity at age 16 on expressive suppression at age 17 and depressive symptomatology at age 17 were significant, demonstrating a predictive relation between dmPFC activity and both suppression and depressive severity.
- Published
- 2018
40. Associations Between Neural Reward Processing and Binge Eating Among Adolescent Girls
- Author
-
Bodell, Lindsay P, Wildes, Jennifer E, Goldschmidt, Andrea B, Lepage, Rachel, Keenan, Kate E, Guyer, Amanda E, Hipwell, Alison E, Stepp, Stephanie D, and Forbes, Erika E
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Paediatrics ,Psychology ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Nutrition ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Brain Disorders ,Neurosciences ,Mental Health ,Eating Disorders ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Aetiology ,Mental health ,Adolescent ,Binge-Eating Disorder ,Brain ,Cues ,Depression ,Female ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Reward ,Adolescents ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Binge eating ,Disordered eating ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Education ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Public Health ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
PURPOSE:Neuroimaging studies suggest that altered brain responses to food-related cues in reward-sensitive regions characterize individuals who experience binge-eating episodes. However, the absence of longitudinal data limits the understanding of whether reward-system alterations increase vulnerability to binge eating, as theorized in models of the development of this behavior. METHODS:Adolescent girls (N = 122) completed a functional magnetic resonance imaging monetary reward task at age 16 years as part of an ongoing longitudinal study. Self-report of binge eating was assessed using the Eating Attitudes Test at ages 16 and 18 years. Regression analyses examined concurrent and longitudinal associations between the blood-oxygenation-level-dependent response to anticipating and winning monetary rewards and the severity of binge eating while controlling for age 16 depressive symptoms and socioeconomic status. RESULTS:Greater ventromedial prefrontal cortex and caudate responses to winning money were correlated with greater severity of binge eating concurrently but not prospectively. CONCLUSIONS:This study is the first to examine longitudinal associations between reward responding and binge eating in community-based, mostly low-socioeconomic status adolescent girls. Ventromedial prefrontal cortex response to reward outcome-possibly reflecting an enhanced subjective reward value-appears to be a state marker of binge-eating severity rather than a predictor of future severity.
- Published
- 2018
41. Interactions between empathy and resting heart rate in early adolescence predict violent behavior in late adolescence and early adulthood
- Author
-
Galán, Chardée A, Choe, Daniel Ewon, Forbes, Erika E, and Shaw, Daniel S
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Applied and Developmental Psychology ,Clinical and Health Psychology ,Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Violence Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Youth Violence ,Pediatric ,Aetiology ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Peace ,Justice and Strong Institutions ,Adolescent ,Adolescent Behavior ,Child ,Conduct Disorder ,Empathy ,Follow-Up Studies ,Heart Rate ,Humans ,Juvenile Delinquency ,Male ,Violence ,Young Adult ,Antisocial behavior ,psychophysiology ,resting heart rate ,violence ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Clinical sciences ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
BackgroundAlthough resting heart rate (RHR) and empathy are independently and negatively associated with violent behavior, relatively little is known about the interplay between these psychophysiological and temperament-related risk factors.MethodsUsing a sample of 160 low-income, racially diverse men followed prospectively from infancy through early adulthood, this study examined whether RHR and empathy during early adolescence independently and interactively predict violent behavior and related correlates in late adolescence and early adulthood.ResultsControlling for child ethnicity, family income, and child antisocial behavior at age 12, empathy inversely predicted moral disengagement and juvenile petitions for violent crimes, while RHR was unrelated to all measures of violent behavior. Interactive effects were also evident such that among men with lower but not higher levels of RHR, lower empathy predicted increased violent behavior, as indexed by juvenile arrests for violent offenses, peer-reported violent behavior at age 17, self-reported moral disengagement at age 17, and self-reported violent behavior at age 20.ConclusionsImplications for prevention and intervention are considered. Specifically, targeting empathic skills among individuals at risk for violent behavior because of specific psychophysiological profiles may lead to more impactful interventions.
- Published
- 2017
42. Mother-Adolescent Neural Concordance in Response to Distress is Related to Greater Mother-Adolescent Concordance of Perceived Adolescent Anxiety
- Author
-
Zollman, Joshua W., Forbes, Erika E., Cyranowski, Jill M., Woods, Brittany K., and Morgan, Judith K.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Pathways to adolescent social anxiety: Testing interactions between neural social reward function and perceived social threat in daily life
- Author
-
Sequeira, Stefanie L., primary, Silk, Jennifer S., additional, Jones, Neil P., additional, Forbes, Erika E., additional, Hanson, Jamie L., additional, Hallion, Lauren S., additional, and Ladouceur, Cecile D., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. The longitudinal stability of fMRI activation during reward processing in adolescents and young adults
- Author
-
Baranger, David A.A., Lindenmuth, Morgan, Nance, Melissa, Guyer, Amanda E., Keenan, Kate, Hipwell, Alison E., Shaw, Daniel S., and Forbes, Erika E.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Mind-Wandering in Adolescents Predicts Worse Affect and Is Linked to Aberrant Default Mode Network–Salience Network Connectivity
- Author
-
Webb, Christian A., Israel, Elana S., Belleau, Emily, Appleman, Lindsay, Forbes, Erika E., and Pizzagalli, Diego A.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The interaction between monoamine oxidase A and punitive discipline in the development of antisocial behavior: Mediation by maladaptive social information processing
- Author
-
Galán, Chardée A, Choe, Daniel Ewon, Forbes, Erika E, and Shaw, Daniel S
- Subjects
Social and Personality Psychology ,Psychology ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Mental Health ,Violence Research ,Aetiology ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Adolescent ,Aggression ,Alleles ,Antisocial Personality Disorder ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Gene Frequency ,Gene-Environment Interaction ,Genotype ,Humans ,Infant ,Male ,Monoamine Oxidase ,Parent-Child Relations ,Parenting ,Punishment ,Young Adult ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
Previous studies demonstrate that boys' monoamine oxidase A (MAOA) genotype interacts with adverse rearing environments in early childhood, including punitive discipline, to predict later antisocial behavior. Yet the mechanisms by which MAOA and punitive parenting interact during childhood to amplify risk for antisocial behavior are not well understood. In the present study, hostile attributional bias and aggressive response generation during middle childhood, salient aspects of maladaptive social information processing, were tested as possible mediators of this relation in a sample of 187 low-income men followed prospectively from infancy into early adulthood. Given racial-ethnic variation in MAOA allele frequencies, analyses were conducted separately by race. In both African American and Caucasian men, those with the low-activity MAOA allele who experienced more punitive discipline at age 1.5 generated more aggressive responses to perceived threat at age 10 relative to men with the high-activity variant. In the African American subsample only, formal mediation analyses indicated a marginally significant indirect effect of maternal punitiveness on adult arrest records via aggressive response generation in middle childhood. The findings suggest that maladaptive social information processing may be an important mechanism underlying the association between MAOA × Parenting interactions and antisocial behavior in early adulthood. The present study extends previous work in the field by demonstrating that MAOA and harsh parenting assessed in early childhood interact to not only predict antisocial behavior in early adulthood, but also predict social information processing, a well-established social-cognitive correlate of antisocial behavior.
- Published
- 2017
47. Altered Positive Affect in Clinically Anxious Youth: the Role of Social Context and Anxiety Subtype
- Author
-
Morgan, Judith K, Lee, Grace E, Wright, Aidan GC, Gilchrist, Danielle E, Forbes, Erika E, McMakin, Dana L, Dahl, Ronald E, Ladouceur, Cecile D, Ryan, Neal D, and Silk, Jennifer S
- Subjects
Pediatric ,Brain Disorders ,Mental Health ,Anxiety Disorders ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Aetiology ,Mental health ,Adolescent ,Affect ,Anxiety ,Child ,Ecological Momentary Assessment ,Female ,Humans ,Interpersonal Relations ,Male ,Phobia ,Social ,Emotion ,Social environment ,Positive affect - Abstract
Anxious youth may experience altered positive affect (PA) relative to healthy youth, perhaps because of greater sensitivity to social experiences. Altered PA may be especially evident during the transition to adolescence, a period in which positive social events increase in salience and value. The current study evaluated whether anxious youth show differences in baseline PA, rate of return to baseline, and variability around baseline PA and tested whether these differences would depend on social context and anxiety subtype. Participants were 176 9- to 14-year-old youth, including 130 clinically anxious (with Social Anxiety Disorder, Generalized Anxiety Disorder, and/or Separation Anxiety Disorder) and 46 healthy youth. Youth reported their current PA, peak PA in the past hour, and social context in natural settings using ecological momentary assessment. Hierarchical linear models showed that both socially anxious and other anxious youth showed greater variability of PA relative to healthy youth. Youth with other anxiety disorders showed higher peak PA to a positive event relative to healthy youth. Feeling close to a friend was associated with higher peak PA, especially for socially anxious youth. Socially anxious youth showed significantly lower peak PA relative to both healthy and other anxious youth when interacting with a less close peer, but similar levels to these youth when interacting with a close friend. These findings suggest that clinically anxious youth may more sensitive to positive events and social interactions than healthy youth. Findings provide potential treatment targets for anxious youth, including applying regulatory strategies to positive events.
- Published
- 2017
48. The role of day-to-day emotions, sleep, and social interactions in pediatric anxiety treatment.
- Author
-
Wallace, Meredith L, McMakin, Dana L, Tan, Patricia Z, Rosen, Dana, Forbes, Erika E, Ladouceur, Cecile D, Ryan, Neal D, Siegle, Greg J, Dahl, Ronald E, Kendall, Philip C, Mannarino, Anthony, and Silk, Jennifer S
- Subjects
Humans ,Treatment Outcome ,Medical Records ,Emotions ,Interpersonal Relations ,Sleep ,Anxiety Disorders ,Psychotherapy ,Adolescent ,Child ,Female ,Male ,Actigraphy ,Ecological Momentary Assessment ,Cognitive Behavioral Therapy ,Client-centered therapy ,Cognitive behavioral therapy ,Ecological momentary assessment ,Optimal combined moderator ,Sleep diary ,Clinical Psychology ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences - Abstract
Do day-to-day emotions, social interactions, and sleep play a role in determining which anxious youth respond to supportive child-centered therapy (CCT) versus cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT)? We explored whether measures of day-to-day functioning (captured through ecological momentary assessment, sleep diary, and actigraphy), along with clinical and demographic measures, were predictors or moderators of treatment outcome in 114 anxious youth randomized to CCT or CBT. We statistically combined individual moderators into a single, optimal composite moderator to characterize subgroups for which CCT or CBT may be preferable. The strongest predictors of better outcome included: (a) experiencing higher positive affect when with one's mother and (b) fewer self-reported problems with sleep duration. The composite moderator indicated that youth for whom CBT was indicated had: (a) more day-to-day sleep problems related to sleep quality, efficiency, and waking, (b) day-to-day negative events related to interpersonal concerns, (c) more DSM-IV anxiety diagnoses, and (d) college-educated parents. These findings illustrate the value of both day-to-day functioning characteristics and more traditional sociodemographic and clinical characteristics in identifying optimal anxiety treatment assignment. Future studies will need to enhance the practicality of real-time measures for use in clinical decision making and evaluate additional anxiety treatments.
- Published
- 2017
49. A Social Affective Neuroscience Model of Risk and Resilience in Adolescent Depression: Preliminary Evidence and Application to Sexual and Gender Minority Adolescents
- Author
-
Forbes, Erika E., Eckstrand, Kristen L., Rofey, Dana L., and Silk, Jennifer S.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. A single dose of escitalopram blunts the neural response in the thalamus and caudate during monetary loss
- Author
-
Lewis, Carolin A., Mueller, Karsten, Zsido, Rachel G., Reinelt, Janis, Regenthal, Ralf, Okon-Singer, Hadas, Forbes, Erika E., Villringer, Arno, and Sacher, Julia
- Subjects
Thalamus -- Physiological aspects ,Neurons -- Physiological aspects ,Caudate nucleus -- Physiological aspects ,Health ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Background: Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) show acute effects on the neural processes associated with negative affective bias in healthy people and people with depression. However, whether and how SSRIs also affect reward and punishment processing on a similarly rapid time scale remains unclear. Methods: We investigated the effects of an acute and clinically relevant dose (20 mg) of the SSRI escitalopram on brain response during reward and punishment processing in 19 healthy participants. In a double-blind, placebo-controlled study using functional MRI, participants performed a well-established monetary reward task at 3 time points: at baseline; after receiving placebo or escitalopram; and after receiving placebo or escitalopram following an 8-week washout period. Results: Acute escitalopram administration reduced blood-oxygen-level-dependent (BOLD) response during punishment feedback in the right thalamus (family-wise error corrected [FWE] p = 0.013 at peak level) and the right caudate head ([p.sub.FWE] = 0.011 at peak level) compared to placebo. We did not detect any significant BOLD changes during reward feedback. Limitations: We included only healthy participants, so interpretation of findings are limited to the healthy human brain and require future testing in patient populations. The paradigm we used was based on monetary stimuli, and results may not be generalizable to other forms of reward. Conclusion: Our findings extend theories of rapid SSRI action on the neural processing of rewarding and aversive stimuli and suggest a specific and acute effect of escitalopram in the punishment neurocircuitry., Introduction How our brain responds to reward and loss is a critical aspect of mood regulation. A blunted hedonic response to rewards or an enhanced sensitivity to loss can underlie [...]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.