TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
16Total items
11ePosters
5Seminars

Latest

SeminarNeuroscience

The Picower Institute Spring 2023 Symposium "Environmental and Social Determinants of Child Mental Health

Cecile Richards (Keynote - fmr President of Planned Parenthood), Gregory Bratman, PhD, Annie Belcourt, PhD, Paul Dworkin, MD, Byungkook Lim, PhD, Sarah Milligan-Toffler, Catherine Jensen Peña, PhD, Ravi Raju, MD. PhD, Robert Sege, MD, PhD, Marc Weisskopf, PhD, ScD, Nsedu Obot Witherspoon, MPH
May 11, 2023

Studies show that abuse, neglect or trauma during childhood can lead to lifelong struggles including with mental health. Fortunately research also indicates that solutions and interventions at various stages of life can be developed to help. But even among people who remain resilient or do not experience acute stresses, a lack of opportunity early in life due to poverty or systemic racism can still constrain their ability to realize their full potential. In what ways are health and other outcomes affected by early life difficulty? What can individuals and institutions do to enhance opportunity?" "This daylong event will feature talks by neuroscientists, policy experts, physicians, educators and activists as they discuss how our experiences and biology work together to affect how our minds develop and what can be accomplished in helping people overcome early disadvantages.

SeminarNeuroscience

Early life adversity, inflammation, and depression-onset: Results from the Teen Resilience Project

Kate Ryan Kuhlman
University of California
Nov 15, 2022

My research focuses broadly on the lifelong health disparities associated with experiences of adversity early in life. In this talk I will present the results of our recently completed Teen Resilience Project, a prospective and longitudinal study of first onset depression during adolescence. First, I will present the results on whether and how inflammatory processes may be shaped by early life adversity. Second, I will present data on the role of stress-induced inflammation in reward-related psychological processes. Finally, I will discuss the biobehavioral predictors of first-onset depression in this sample.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Brain and behavioural impacts of early life adversity

Jeff Dalley
Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge
Apr 26, 2022

Abuse, neglect, and other forms of uncontrollable stress during childhood and early adolescence can lead to adverse outcomes later in life, including especially perturbations in the regulation of mood and emotional states, and specifically anxiety disorders and depression. However, stress experiences vary from one individual to the next, meaning that causal relationships and mechanistic accounts are often difficult to establish in humans. This interdisciplinary talk considers the value of research in experimental animals where stressor experiences can be tightly controlled and detailed investigations of molecular, cellular, and circuit-level mechanisms can be carried out. The talk will focus on the widely used repeated maternal separation procedure in rats where rat offspring are repeatedly separated from maternal care during early postnatal life. This early life stress has remarkably persistent effects on behaviour with a general recognition that maternally-deprived animals are susceptible to depressive-like phenotypes. The validity of this conclusion will be critically appraised with convergent insights from a recent longitudinal study in maternally separated rats involving translational brain imaging, transcriptomics, and behavioural assessment.

SeminarNeuroscience

Growing Up in Academia with Onur Güntürkün

Onur Güntürkün
Professor in Biopsychology, Psychology Department, Ruhr-Universität Bochum
Feb 28, 2022

There are stories of resilience, passion, braveness and determination and the one of Onur Güntürkün. He has managed to beat the odds in so many ways, from moving countries, surviving the polio, establishing a new field against the advice of a senior professor and much more, all the while keeping a positive spirit, an endless curiosity and the braveness to keep going despite adversities. Join me on Monday, February 28, 2022, 6 p.m. (CET) for a Growing Up in Academia with Onur Güntürkün.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Unpacking Nature from Nurture: Understanding how Family Processes Affect Child and Adolescent Mental Health

Gordon Harold
Faculty of Education, University of Cambridge
Apr 27, 2021

Mental Health problems among youth constitutes an area of significant social, educational, clinical, policy and public health concern. Understanding processes and mechanisms that underlie the development of mental health problems during childhood and adolescence requires theoretical and methodological integration across multiple scientific domains, including developmental science, neuroscience, genetics, education and prevention science. The primary focus of this presentation is to examine the relative role of genetic and family environmental influences on children’s emotional and behavioural development. Specifically, a complementary array of genetically sensitive and longitudinal research designs will be employed to examine the role of early environmental adversity (e.g. inter-parental conflict, negative parenting practices) relative to inherited factors in accounting for individual differences in children’s symptoms of psychopathology (e.g. depression, aggression, ADHD ). Examples of recent applications of this research to the development of evidence-based intervention programmes aimed at reducing psychopathology in the context of high-risk family settings will also be presented.

ePosterNeuroscience

Characterization of disease-associated microglia in social deficits linked to early life adversity

A. Catarina Rodrigues-Neves, Rita Gaspar, Patrícia Patrício, Luísa Pinto, João Bessa, António F. Ambrósio, Catarina A. Gomes
ePosterNeuroscience

Early life adversity perturbs mitostasis and drives inflammaging in the rat hippocampus

Pratik R. Chaudhari, Aastha Singla, Sashaina E. Fanibunda, Kowshik Kukkemane, Praachi Tiwari, Shital Suryavanshi, Ullas Kolthur-Seetharam, Carmen Sandi, Ashok D. Vaidya, Vidita A. Vaidya
ePosterNeuroscience

Early life adversity and a sex-specific polygenic risk score for altered fasting insulin are associated with executive functioning

Aashita Batra, Guillaume Elgbeili, Eamon Fitzgerald, Sachin Patel, Darina Czamara, Irina Pokhvisneva, Michael J. Meaney, Elisabeth B. Binder, Patricia P. Silveira
ePosterNeuroscience

Early social adversity in non-human primates interferes with the developmental trajectory of amygdalo-cortical functional connectivity

Simon Clavagnier, Holly Rayson, Mathilda Froesel, Maëva Gacoin, Alice Massera, Pier Francesco Ferrari, Suliann Ben Hamed
ePosterNeuroscience

Early-life adversity induces sex-specific dysfunction of the mOFC and leads to impulsive, hyperactive, and risk-taking behaviors in juvenile male mice

Jéssica Costa, Solange Martins, Carolina Kunicki, Pedro Ferreira, Joana R. Guedes, João Peça, Ana Luísa Cardoso
ePosterNeuroscience

FKBP51 in glutamatergic forebrain neurons mediates beneficial effects of moderate early life adversity on hippocampal structure and function

Lotte Van Doeselaar, Huanqing Yang, Shiladitya Mitra, Joeri Bordes, Clara Engelhardt, Lea Brix, Benoit Boulet, Tibor Stark, Juan Pablo Lopez, Jan M. Deussing, Michael Czisch, Danusa Menegaz, Matthias Eder, Mathias V. Schmidt
ePosterNeuroscience

Investigating the role of oxytocin in early adversity-induced vulnerability to rewarding stimuli

Diana Municchi, Camilla Mancini, Sebastian Luca D'Addario, Matteo Di Segni, Lucy Babicola, Rossella Ventura
ePosterNeuroscience

The role of early life adversity in a mouse model for Alzheimer’s disease pathology

Niek Brosens, Sascha Weggen, Paul J. Lucassen, Harm Krugers
ePosterNeuroscience

Sex-specific alterations in δ opioid receptor expression and function after early-life adversity

Sophia C. Levis, Matthew T. Birnie, Noriko Kamei, Tallie Z. Baram, Stephen V. Mahler
ePosterNeuroscience

Depression related to early life adversity: What preclinical models can tell us?

Alice Passeri, Lucy Babicola, Camilla Mancini, Matteo Di Segni, Diana Municchi, Carlo Cifani, Rossella Ventura

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Early life adversity and the impact of glucocorticoids on NG2-glia: A potential mechanism for stress-related psychiatric disorders

Katrin Becker, Lorenzo Mattioni, Maja Papic, Andrea Conrad, Beat Lutz, Ari Waisman, Michael J. Schmeisser, Marianne B. Müller, Giulia Treccani

FENS Forum 2024

adversity coverage

16 items

ePoster11
Seminar5

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