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Diego A. Pizzagalli

Researcher at Harvard University

Publications -  393
Citations -  27176

Diego A. Pizzagalli is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anhedonia & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 74, co-authored 327 publications receiving 21846 citations. Previous affiliations of Diego A. Pizzagalli include Stanford University & McLean Hospital.

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Differential Effects of Acute Stress on Anticipatory and Consummatory Phases of Reward Processing

TL;DR: Stress-induced striatal blunting was similar to the profile observed in clinical depression under baseline (no-stress) conditions in prior studies, and offers insight to better understand the etiology of this prevalent disorder.
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Evidence-based umbrella review of 162 peripheral biomarkers for major mental disorders

TL;DR: Overall the vast literature of peripheral biomarkers for major mental disorders is affected by bias and is underpowered, and no convincing evidence supported the existence of a trans-diagnostic biomarker.
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Acute Stress Selectively Reduces Reward Sensitivity

TL;DR: Findings provide preliminary evidence that stress-reactive individuals show diminished sensitivity to reward, but not punishment, under stress, and highlight the possibility that Stress-induced anhedonia might be an important mechanism linking stress to affective disorders.
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Dopaminergic Enhancement of Striatal Response to Reward in Major Depression.

TL;DR: The results suggest that targeted pharmacological treatments may normalize neural correlates of reward processing in depression; despite such acute effects on neural function, behavioral modification may require more chronic exposure.
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Dissociable recruitment of rostral anterior cingulate and inferior frontal cortex in emotional response inhibition

TL;DR: It is confirmed that distinct regional dynamics characterize neural responses to affective valence and affective response-inhibition, and implications for understanding psychiatric pathologies characterized by a detrimental susceptibility to emotional cues are discussed, with an emphasis on major depressive disorder.