BJ Casey, Ph.D. The Sackler Professor and Director Sackler Institute for Developmental Psychobiology and Neuroscience Graduate Program Weill Cornell Medical College New York, NY NIH 2011 Annual Science of Behavioral Change Meeting Emotion Regulation and Self Control
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BJ Casey, Ph.D. The Sackler Professor and Director Sackler Institute for Developmental Psychobiology and Neuroscience Graduate Program Weill Cornell Medical.
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BJ Casey, Ph.D.
The Sackler Professor and DirectorSackler Institute for Developmental
Psychobiologyand Neuroscience Graduate Program
Weill Cornell Medical CollegeNew York, NY
NIH 2011 Annual Science of Behavioral Change Meeting
Emotion Regulation and Self Control
Sackler Institute, Weill Cornell Medical College
Current or Past FellowsDima Amso & Kevin Bath (Brown) Matt Davidson (U
Mass)Stephanie Duhoux Sarah Durston * (Utrecht)
Inge Marie Eigsti (U Conn) Helena Frielingsdorf Adriana Galvan* (UCLA)
Barbara Ganzel (at Cornell) Todd Hare * (Zurich) Rebecca Jones
Vicki Libby Conor Liston Sumit NiogiMatt Malter Cohen Nick Franklin Fatima Soliman
Siobhan Pattwell Alisa Powers Sarah Getz (at Princeton)
Alex Millner (at Harvard) Erika Ruberry Theresa Teslovich Leah Somerville*
Liat Levita (at York) Katie Thomas (at U Minn)Nim Tottenham * (now at UCLA)
FacultyDoug BallonGary GloverIan Gotlib
Walter Mischel Yuichi Shoda
Henning Voss
FUNDING SOURCES: P50 MH62196, R01 MH63255, R21 DA15882, R01 DA018879, NSF 06-509, R01 HD069178, the Mortimer D. Sackler, M.D. family
Dewitt-Wallace Fund, WCMC Department of Psychiatry and CBIC Imaging Core.
Special thanks to
THE FAMILIES.
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) allows us to visualize and measure deep, primitive brain
regions involved in desire and emotion.
Source: PBS graphic based on Galvan et al 2006, Hare et al 2008, Sackler Institute
Individual differences in brain activity (High Anxiety vs Low Anxiety)
SOURCE:Hare et al
2008Sackler Institute
And during brain developmentfrom childhood to adulthood
SOURCE: Gogtay et al 2004 PNAS, NIMH
and in Social
and Psychological
Contexts
SOURCE: National Geographic: A Beautiful Brain based on Casey et al Neuron 2010
Key Areas
1) Development. Age-specific changes in regional brain development can impact behavioral choices.
2) Contexts. Emotionally charged contexts may lead to emotional brain regions “hijacking” prefrontal control circuitry leading to poor behavioral choices.