
Predicting Risk and Resilience for Depression in Childhood and Adolescence
November 19 @ 10:00 am - 11:00 am PST

Deanna M. Barch, PhD
Professor of Psychological & Brain Sciences, Psychiatry, and Radiology
Vice Dean of Research, Arts & Sciences
Gregory B. Couch Professor of Psychiatry
Washington University
This talk with overview research on the psychological and neurobiological risk factors related to emotion processing and regulation that are associated with early onset depression, with onset as early as preschool. These factors include reduced responses to rewarding outcomes associated with impaired activation of striatal and insular regions, increased responses to negatively valenced outcomes, also associated with disrupted amygdala, striatal and insular activation, impaired emotion regulation associated with decreased prefrontal activity, and disrupted connectivity between emotion reactivity and emotion regulation regions. I will also present results of a novel emotion regulation focused treatment for early onset depression and evidence for modulation of hypothesized neural targets as a function of treatment. Together, these data support the validity of early onset depression, and provide evidence for the emotion relevant psychological and neural factors that can be targeted by treatments and which may serve to identify children at risk for the development of early onset depression.