The Contribution of Stressful Life Events and Insufficient Sleep to Reward-Related Brain Function and Depression in Adolescent Girls
压力生活事件和睡眠不足对青春期女孩奖励相关的大脑功能和抑郁的影响
基本信息
- 批准号:8934153
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 15.61万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:
- 财政年份:2014
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2014-09-25 至 2018-07-31
- 项目状态:已结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:19 year old20 year oldAccountingAddressAdolescenceAdolescentAdolescent and Young AdultAffectiveAgeAmygdaloid structureAnhedoniaBehaviorBehavior assessmentBehavioralBrainBrain regionBuffersCharacteristicsChildChronicCircadian RhythmsClinicCommunitiesCorpus striatum structureDataData AnalysesDevelopmentDimensionsDiseaseEmotionsEnvironmentEventFemale AdolescentsFunctional Magnetic Resonance ImagingFutureHealthHourIncidenceInterventionLifeLife StressLinkMeasuresMedialMediatingMental DepressionMental disordersMentored Research Scientist Development AwardMentorsMentorshipModelingNational Institute of Mental HealthNeurobiologyNeurosciencesNeurosciences ResearchParticipantPerformancePhasePhysiologicalPositive ValencePrefrontal CortexPsychopathologyPubertyRecruitment ActivityRelative (related person)ReportingResearchResearch Domain CriteriaResearch MethodologyResearch PersonnelResearch PriorityResearch TrainingRewardsRiskRisk FactorsRoleSamplingScheduleSleepStimulusStressSystemTestingTimeTrainingUniversitiesactigraphyaffective neurosciencebehavioral responsebiological adaptation to stresscognitive neurosciencecognitive processcollegedepressive symptomsemerging adultexperiencegirlsinterestneural circuitneurodevelopmentnovelpleasurepreventprospectiverelating to nervous systemresponsereward circuitryreward processingskillsstress reactivitystressor
项目摘要
DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): This Mentored Research Scientist Development Award (K01) will provide the candidate with advanced training in developmental affective neuroscience and psychopathology. The proposed research will test a novel neurodevelopmental model of depression in which stressful life events and insufficient sleep increase risk for depression in adolescents by disrupting the development of reward-related neural circuitry. Two studies are proposed to test this model of depression. The first study will evaluate whether neural and behavioral response to rewards and depressive symptoms are associated with daily stressful life events and sleep duration from the previous week. Participants for this study will be recruited from an ongoing longitudinal fMRI study of neural reward circuitry and risk for depression in adolescent girls. The second study will evaluate whether increasing sleep duration can increase neural and behavioral response to rewards and decrease depressive symptoms in 18- to 20-year-old girls with insufficient sleep and depressive symptoms. Participants for this study will be recruited from university and college health clinics and the surrounding community. In combination, these studies will help characterize reward processing as a putative mechanism of depression onset and provide data on the efficacy of sleep extension as an intervention for depressive symptoms in late adolescent girls. The candidate has expertise in several domains relevant to the proposed project, including affective bias in depression, the role of sleep in cognitive processing and psychopathology, and cognitive neuroscience research methods. She will build on this experience through her K01 by developing expertise in: 1) reward circuit neurodevelopment in late adolescence; 2) stressful life events and physiological stress-reactivity; 3) sleep and circadian rhythms; and 4) advanced skills for longitudinal data analysis. The University of Pittsburgh is an ideal environment to accomplish these research and training aims for two reasons. First, the applicant's selected mentors, Drs. Erika Forbes and Martica Hall, are both highly successful independent investigators with extensive mentorship experience and collective expertise in stress and sleep as risk factors for aberrant development of reward-related neural circuitry and depressive symptoms. Second, the University of Pittsburgh is one of the premier centers for affective developmental neuroscience and sleep research. The proposed research and training plan will contribute to a future R01 application that will examine neural and behavioral response to rewards and neural and physiological response to stress longitudinally as mechanisms of psychopathology in adolescents. This application is consistent with priorities outlined by the National Institute of Mental Health for research on the development and function of neural circuits, mechanisms and modifiers of aberrant developmental trajectories with a focus on periods of sensitivity to disruption, and Research Domain Criteria standards for research on basic dimensions of functioning (e.g., positive valence systems) that are relevant to psychopathology.
描述(由申请人提供):这个指导研究科学家发展奖(K 01)将为候选人提供发展情感神经科学和精神病理学的高级培训。这项拟议中的研究将测试一种新的抑郁症神经发育模型,其中压力生活事件和睡眠不足通过破坏与奖励相关的神经回路的发展来增加青少年抑郁症的风险。两项研究被提出来测试这种抑郁模型。第一项研究将评估对奖励和抑郁症状的神经和行为反应是否与前一周的日常压力生活事件和睡眠时间有关。这项研究的参与者将从一项正在进行的关于青春期女孩神经奖励回路和抑郁风险的纵向fMRI研究中招募。第二项研究将评估增加睡眠时间是否可以增加对奖励的神经和行为反应,并减少18至20岁睡眠不足和抑郁症状的女孩的抑郁症状。这项研究的参与者将从大学和学院的健康诊所和周围社区招募。结合起来,这些研究将有助于表征奖励处理作为抑郁症发作的一种假定机制,并提供有关睡眠延长作为青春期后期女孩抑郁症状干预措施的有效性的数据。候选人在与拟议项目相关的几个领域具有专业知识,包括抑郁症的情感偏见,睡眠在认知过程和精神病理学中的作用,以及认知神经科学研究方法。她将通过她的K 01发展专业知识来建立这种经验:1)青少年后期的奖励回路神经发育; 2)压力生活事件和生理压力反应; 3)睡眠和昼夜节律;和4)纵向数据分析的高级技能。匹兹堡大学是实现这些研究和培训目标的理想环境,原因有两个。首先,申请人选择的导师Erika福布斯博士和Martica Hall博士都是非常成功的独立调查人员,他们在压力和睡眠方面拥有丰富的指导经验和集体专业知识,这些都是奖励相关神经回路和抑郁症状异常发展的风险因素。其次,匹兹堡大学是情感发育神经科学和睡眠研究的主要中心之一。拟议的研究和培训计划将有助于未来的R 01应用程序,将检查神经和行为反应的奖励和神经和生理反应的压力纵向作为青少年的精神病理学机制。该申请与国家精神卫生研究所概述的关于神经回路的发展和功能、异常发育轨迹的机制和修饰剂的研究优先事项一致,重点是对中断的敏感期,以及研究功能基本维度的研究领域标准(例如,正效价系统),与精神病理学有关。
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
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Melynda D Casement其他文献
Melynda D Casement的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('Melynda D Casement', 18)}}的其他基金
Mechanisms of Depression and Anhedonia in Adolescents: Linking Sleep Duration and Timing to Reward- and Stress-Related Brain Function
青少年抑郁和快感缺失的机制:将睡眠持续时间和时间与奖励和压力相关的大脑功能联系起来
- 批准号:
10364517 - 财政年份:2022
- 资助金额:
$ 15.61万 - 项目类别:
Mechanisms of Depression and Anhedonia in Adolescents: Linking Sleep Duration and Timing to Reward- and Stress-Related Brain Function
青少年抑郁和快感缺失的机制:将睡眠持续时间和时间与奖励和压力相关的大脑功能联系起来
- 批准号:
10570250 - 财政年份:2022
- 资助金额:
$ 15.61万 - 项目类别:
Mechanisms of Risky Alcohol Use in Young Adults: Linking Sleep Duration and Timing to Reward- and Stress-Related Brain Function
年轻人危险饮酒的机制:将睡眠持续时间和时间与奖励和压力相关的大脑功能联系起来
- 批准号:
10599260 - 财政年份:2022
- 资助金额:
$ 15.61万 - 项目类别:
Mechanisms of Risky Alcohol Use in Young Adults: Linking Sleep Duration and Timing to Reward- and Stress-Related Brain Function
年轻人危险饮酒的机制:将睡眠持续时间和时间与奖励和压力相关的大脑功能联系起来
- 批准号:
10364087 - 财政年份:2022
- 资助金额:
$ 15.61万 - 项目类别:
The Contribution of Stressful Life Events and Insufficient Sleep to Reward-Related Brain Function and Depression in Adolescent Girls
压力生活事件和睡眠不足对青春期女孩奖励相关的大脑功能和抑郁的影响
- 批准号:
8819876 - 财政年份:2014
- 资助金额:
$ 15.61万 - 项目类别:
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