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Anna Weinberg

Academic title(s): 

Associate Professor

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Contact Information:

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Office: 2001 Ã山ǿ¼é College, 1407
Phone: 514.398.4672
Email:Ìýanna.weinberg[at]mcgill.ca

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Mailing Address:
Department of Psychology
2001 Ã山ǿ¼é College, 7th floor
Montreal, QC
H3A 1G1

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Anna Weinberg
Biography: 

Research Areas:

Clinical Psychology | Developmental ScienceÌý|ÌýBehavioural Neuroscience

Research Summary:

My research focuses on identifying biological pathways that give rise to disordered emotional experience. This involves using multiple methodologies, most often event-related potentials (ERPs) to examine the activity of neural systems devoted to processing errors, emotional stimuli, and rewards, and working to establish reliable links between the function of these systems and behavior in healthy populations. With this basic research as a foundation, I seek to identify multiple abnormalities in these systems that characterize emotional dysfunction in a range of mood and anxiety (i.e., internalizing) disorders. In particular, I am interested in patterns of neural response that respect diagnostic boundaries between anxiety and unipolar mood disorders, and those which reflect more general liabilities that cut across disorders. However, it is not clear whether abnormalities in these systems contribute to the initial occurrence of an illness or emerge following onset. My recent efforts aim to establish whether these biological correlates of anxiety and depression represent stable vulnerability factors, or whether variation is instead linked to fluctuations in symptom severity.

Selected References:

Sandre, A. †, Ethridge, P. †, Kim, I. †, &ÌýWeinberg, A.ÌýÌý(2018) Childhood maltreatment is associated with increased neural response to ambiguous threatening expressions in adulthood: Evidence from the Late Positive Potential.ÌýCognitive Affective and Behavioral Neuroscience, 18, 143- 154.

Weinberg, A.,Ìý& Sandre, A. † (2018) Distinct associations between low positive affect, panic, and neural responses to reward and threat during late stages of affective picture processing.ÌýBiological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging, 3, 59-68

Weinberg, A.*, May, Alexis M.*, Klonsky, E.D., Kotov, R., & Hajcak, G. (2017) Decreased neural response to threat differentiates patients who have attempted suicide from non-attempters with current ideation.ÌýClinical Psychological Science, 5, 952-963.

* Co-First Authors

Ethridge, P. †, Kujawa, A.J., Dirks, M.A., Arfer, K.B., Kessel, E.M., Klein, D.N., &ÌýWeinberg, A. (2017) Neural Responses to Social and Monetary Reward in Early Adolescence and Emerging Adulthood.ÌýPsychophysiology, 54, 1786-1799

Weinberg, A., & Shankman, S.A., (2017) Blunted reward processing in remitted melancholic depression.ÌýClinical Psychological Science, 5, 14-25.

Weinberg, A.,ÌýPerlman, G., Kotov, R., & Hajcak, G., (2016) Depression and neural response to emotional images: Distinction from anxiety, and importance of subdimensions and age of onset.ÌýJournal of Abnormal Psychology, 125, 26-32.

Weinberg, A., Liu, H., Hajcak, G. & Shankman, S.A., (2015). Blunted neural response to rewards as a vulnerability factor for anhedonic depression: Results from a family study.ÌýJournal of Abnormal Psychology,Ìý124, 878.

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