APS

31st APS Annual Convention · 2019

Cognitive Control-Related Brain Activation Patterns Predict Adolescent Anhedonia Symptoms

Washington, DC · May 2019

Poster · Clinical Science

  • Nicholas Hubbard
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Nicole Lo
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Matthias Goncalves
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Isabelle Frosch
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Viviana Siless
    Harvard Medical School
  • Clemens Bauer
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Kristina Conroy
    Boston University
  • Elizabeth Cosby
    Harvard Medical School
  • Aleena Hay
    Boston University
  • Robert Jones
    Harvard Medical School
  • Megan Pinaire
    Boston University
  • Flavia Vaz De Souza
    Harvard Medical School
  • Genesis Vergara
    Harvard Medical School
  • Aude Henin
    Harvard Medical School
  • Dina Hirshfeld-Becker
    Harvard Medical School
  • Stefan Hofmann
    Boston University
  • Diego Pizzagalli
    Harvard Medical School
  • Anastasia Yendiki
    Harvard Medical School
  • Randy Auerbach
    Columbia University Medical Center
  • Satrajit Ghosh
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • John Gabrieli
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Susan Whitfield-Gabrieli
    Northeastern University

Abstract

Psychiatric symptoms can be difficult to distinguish from typical adolescent thoughts and behaviors. Objective markers of these symptoms could provide a useful clinical tool. Brain imaging and machine-learning was used in adolescents to predict the extent teens were experiencing a cardinal symptom of depression—anhedonia.

Adolescent

← Poster Session VIII