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Chapel Hill Conference on Depression, Bipolar Disorder, and Suicidality/2014

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Welcome And Introduction

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

Discussion Of Flipped Keynote #1

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Depression From A Socialneuroimmunologic Perspective View before the meeting here. George M. Slavich, Ph.D., University Of California, Los Angeles

RDoD Presentation & Discussion

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Holly Garriock, Ph.D., National Institute Of Mental Health

Poster Viewing

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Click "Expand" for list of posters

1) Bress, J. N., & Hajcak, G. (2014, October). Reliability of the feedback negativity and its relationship with depressive symptoms across adolescence.

2) Busso, D. S., McLaughlin, K. A., & Sheridan, M.A. (2014, October). Media exposure and sympathetic nervous system reactivity predict PTSD symptoms after the Boston marathon bombings.

3) Casement, M. D., Keenan, K. E., Hipwell, A. E., Guyer, A. E., McAloon, R., Hoffmann, A., & Forbes, E. E.

(2014, October). Insomnia symptoms in early adolescence predict neural reward processing and de- pressive symptoms in mid-adolescence.

4) Cha, C.B., Glenn, J.J., Deming, C.A., Hooley, J.M., Teachman, B.A., & Nock, M.K. (2014, October). Ex- amining potential iatrogenic effects of viewing suicide and self-injury stimuli.

5) Davis, S., Silk, J. S., Dietz, L. J, McMakin, D. L., Dahl, R. E., & Ryan, N. D. (2014, October). Differences

in global and discrete emotions among anxious and depressed youth: An ecological momentary assess- ment study.

6) Heleniak, C., McLaughlin, K.A., King, K.M., & Monahan, K. (2014, October). Disruptions in emotion reg- ulation: A pathway from community violence exposure to depression in adolescents.

7) Kerestes, R., Harrison, B.J., Whittle, S., Dandash, O., & Davey, C.G. (2014, October). Abnormal striatal connectivity in young people with depression.

8) Kujawa, A., Proudfit, G. H., Laptook, R. & Klein, D. N. (2014, October). Early parenting moderates the association between parental depression and neural reactivity to rewards and losses in offspring.

9) Lameira et al. (2014, October). Activity, sleep and mood regulation in offspring of parent with mood disor- ders.

10) Metcalfe, A.W., MacIntosh, B.J., Scavone, A., Ou, X., Crane, D.E., & Goldstein, B.I. (2014, October). Acute bout of aerobic exercise decreases medial frontal cortex activation and post-error reactivity on sustained attention to response task among adolescents with and without bipolar disorder.

11) Meyer, A.E, Silva, S.G., & Curry, J.F. (2014, October). Predictors of anxiety disorder in a longitudinal study of adolescents treated for depression.

12) Nelson, B.D., Perlman, G., Proudfit, G.H., Klein, D.N., & Kotov, R. (2014, October). Familial risk for dis- tress and fear disorders and emotional reactivity in adolescence: An event-related potential investiga- tion.

13) Schmidt, S. M., Bradley, B., Jovanovic, T., Stevens, J., Mokdad, D., & Tone, E. B. (2014, Octo- ber). Attention bias for same- and other-race emotional cues in African American youths: Associations

with depression and anxiety. The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Department of Psychology


14) Shapero, B. G., Black, C. L., Hamlat, E. J., & Alloy, L. B. (October, 2014). Combined risk of biological stress reactivity and cognitive vulnerability for depressive symptoms in adolescence.

15) Turpyn, C., Poon, J., & Chaplin, T.M. (2014, October). Latent profile analysis of adolescent emotion regu- lation in a conflict interaction.

16) Vergara-Lopez, C. Lopez-Vergara, H. I., & Roberts, J. E. (2014, October). A prospective examination of the relationship between negative content, cognitive control, rumination, and depressive symptoms.

17) Webb, C. A., Auerbach, R. P., Stanton, C., Soulitious, E. & Pizzagalli, D. A. (2014, October). Differential neural response to feedback in depressed adolescents: A high-density ERP study.

Data Blitz #1: Four Talks, Followed By Discussant And Q&A

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Discussant: Gabriel S. Dichter, Ph.D., University Of North Carolina At Chapel Hill

Talk #1: Pa With A Bff: Is Neural Response To Personally Relevant Social Reward

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Meaningful For Adolescent Depression? Erika E. Forbes, Ph.D., University Of Pittsburgh

Talk #2: Stuff We Do And Think Is Neat

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Brandon E. Gibb, Ph.D., Binghamton University == Talk #3: Connecting Molecular Genetic Risk And Intermediate Processes Related To Negative Valence Systems In Youth: Stress Physiology And Attention To Emotion == Benjamin L. Hankin, Ph.D., University Of Denver == Talk #4: Adding Insult To Injury: Neural Reactivity To Exclusion Is Associated With Depression In Chronically Peer-Victimized Girls == Karen D. Rudolph, Ph.D., University Of Illinois


Discussion Of Flipped Keynote #2 =

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Contribution Of Epidemiology To Our Understanding Of The Mood Disorder Spectrum View before the meeting here. Kathleen R. Merikangas, Ph.D., National Institute Of Mental Health


Data Blitz #2: Five Talks, Followed By Discussant And Q&A

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Discussant: Jean A. Frazier, M.D., University Of Massachusetts Medical School

Talk #1: Adolescent Bipolar Disorder As A Vascular Disease

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Benjamin I. Goldstein, M.D., Ph.D., Frcpc, Sunnybrook Research Institute == Talk #2: Of Minds, Mouths, Monitors And Mothers: Neurobiology, Context, And Depression In Adolescence == Paul D. Hastings, Ph.D., University Of California, Davis

Talk #3: Environmental Experience And Neural Systems Underlying Emotion Regulation

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Katie A. Mclaughlin, Ph.D., University Of Washington == Talk #4: Using RDoC To Examine The Effects Of Early Life Stress On Pediatric Neurodevelopment == Manpreet K. Singh, M.D., M.S., Stanford School Of Medicine == Talk #5: Incorporating “Risky Strengths” And “Empowering Liabilities” Into Neurocognitive Models Of Youth Depression == Erin B. Tone, Ph.D., Georgia State University

Keynote Address

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The Role Of Stress In Past And Future Models Of Depression In Children And Adults Constance Hammen, Ph.D., University Of California Los Angeles