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Christen M. Deveney
Researcher at Wellesley College
Publications - 43
Citations - 1663
Christen M. Deveney is an academic researcher from Wellesley College. The author has contributed to research in topics: Irritability & Bipolar disorder. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 42 publications receiving 1368 citations. Previous affiliations of Christen M. Deveney include Harvard University & Boston University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Neural mechanisms of frustration in chronically irritable children
Christen M. Deveney,Megan E. Connolly,Catherine T. Haring,Brian L. Bones,Richard C. Reynolds,Pilyoung Kim,Daniel S. Pine,Ellen Leibenluft +7 more
TL;DR: In response to negative feedback received in the context of frustration, children with severe, chronic irritability showed abnormally reduced activation in regions implicated in emotion, attention, and reward processing.
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A preliminary investigation of cognitive flexibility for emotional information in major depressive disorder and non-psychiatric controls.
TL;DR: Investigating the impact of emotional stimuli on cognitive flexibility performance through a novel emotional modification of the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test found that controls were less flexible when stimuli were positive and individuals with MDD were more flexible when stimulus were negative relative to the controls.
Journal ArticleDOI
Enhanced negative feedback responses in remitted depression.
Diane L. Santesso,Katherine T. Steele,Ryan Bogdan,Avram J. Holmes,Christen M. Deveney,Tiffany M. Meites,Diego A. Pizzagalli +6 more
TL;DR: The present findings suggest that abnormal responses to negative feedback extend to samples at increased risk for depressive episodes in the absence of current symptoms.
Journal Article
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy and the Treatment of Panic Disorder: Efficacy and Strategies
TL;DR: Research supports CBT as an effective first-line treatment of panic disorder that offers relatively quick onset of action and long-term maintenance of treatment benefits, plus the acceptability, tolerability, and cost-efficacy of CBT make it an especially attractive treatment option for panic disorder.
Journal ArticleDOI
Brain Mechanisms of Attention Orienting Following Frustration: Associations With Irritability and Age in Youths
Wan-Ling Tseng,Christen M. Deveney,Joel Stoddard,Katharina Kircanski,Anna E. Frackman,Jennifer Y. Yi,Derek Hsu,Elizabeth Moroney,Laura Machlin,Laura M. Donahue,Alexandra Roule,Gretchen Perhamus,Richard C. Reynolds,Roxann Roberson-Nay,John M. Hettema,Kenneth E. Towbin,Argyris Stringaris,Daniel S. Pine,Melissa A. Brotman,Ellen Leibenluft +19 more
TL;DR: Following frustration, levels of irritability correlated with activity in neural systems mediating attention orienting, top-down regulation of emotions, and motor execution.