We are delighted to feature the work of two talented early career investigators, Dr. Stephen Smagula and Dr. Marta Pecina, as part of the Researchers on the Rise lecture series.
Dr. Stephen Smagula’s research focuses on the role of behavioral disruption in the development of late-life depression, and how behavioral (rest-activity rhythm and sleep-wake characteristics) and neurobiological (brain structural pathology) factors inter-relate to cause depression. He earned his PhD in neuroepidemiology from the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health. Dr. Smagula obtained additional training as a postdoctoral scholar in the Pitt Department of Psychiatry’s T32 training programs focusing on Translational Research Training in Sleep Medicine and Clinical and Translational Late-Life Mood Research. With funding from an NIMH-funded K01 award, he is currently investigating depression in dementia caregivers and linking brain structure and sleepwake risks.
Dr. Peciña’s research examines the complex interaction between a patient’s beliefs, the specific properties of antidepressant medications, and the neurobiology of depression. Dr. Peciña earned her MD and PhD from University of Navarra and completed her psychiatry residency at the University of Navarra Medical Center. As a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Michigan faculty, she developed expertise in structural and functional magnetic resonance imaging and positron emission tomography. With support from a K23 career development award from the NIMH and a NARSAD Young Investigator Award, Dr. Peciña is working to identify imaging-biomarkers of treatment response that can be used in clinical practice.
Location: Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic Auditorium
For More Information: Please contact Frances Patrick (patrickfm@upmc.edu).
Learning Objectives: At the conclusion of these lectures, participants will be able to:
Apply the public health significance of developing targeted depression prevention approaches for stressed family caregivers of dementia patients.
Identify the key caregiver stressors that affect depression risk in caregivers.
Examine the potential mechanisms linking caregiving stressors with depression risk.
Summarize previous knowledge about the biological mechanisms implicated in placebo analgesia.
Explain the mechanisms through which placebos modulate emotional responses.
Recognize the neural correlates of antidepressant placebo effects.