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Katherine R. Luking

Researcher at Stony Brook University

Publications -  32
Citations -  1097

Katherine R. Luking is an academic researcher from Stony Brook University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anhedonia & Major depressive disorder. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 30 publications receiving 845 citations. Previous affiliations of Katherine R. Luking include Florida State University & University of Washington.

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Book ChapterDOI

Mechanisms Underlying Motivational Deficits in Psychopathology: Similarities and Differences in Depression and Schizophrenia

TL;DR: The literature strongly suggests the presence of impairments in in-the-moment hedonics or "liking" in individuals with depressive pathology, particularly among those who experience anhedonia, and provides much evidence for impairment in other components involved in translating reward to action selection.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reward Processing and Risk for Depression Across Development

TL;DR: These parallel lines of inquiry demonstrate that although typically developing adolescents show robust striatal response to reward, adolescents with major depressive disorder (MDD) and those at high risk for MDD show a blunted response to Reward.
Journal ArticleDOI

Functional Connectivity of the Amygdala in Early-Childhood-Onset Depression.

TL;DR: The finding of an attenuated relationship between the amygdala, a region affected in MDD and involved in emotion processing, and cognitive control regions is consistent with a hypothesis of altered regulation of emotional processing in C-MDD, suggesting developmental continuity of this alteration into early childhood.
Journal ArticleDOI

Depression Risk Predicts Blunted Neural Responses to Gains and Enhanced Responses to Losses in Healthy Children

TL;DR: High-risk children showed blunted ventral striatal activation to gain feedback, but ventralstriatal deactivation to loss was a stronger predictor of MDD risk, and relationships between response to loss and elevated depressive symptoms within the ventral Striatum and cingulate differed depending on the type of depressive symptom.