R. Alison Adcock, MD, PhD

CURRICULUM VITAE R. Alison Adcock, MD, PhD February 8, 2016 Assistant Professor, Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Associate Director, Center for Co...
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CURRICULUM VITAE

R. Alison Adcock, MD, PhD February 8, 2016 Assistant Professor, Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Associate Director, Center for Cognitive Neuroscience Secondary Faculty, Psychology and Neuroscience Secondary Faculty, Neurobiology Faculty Affiliate, Brain Imaging and Analysis Center Faculty Affiliate, Duke Center for Interdisciplinary Decision Sciences Faculty Affiliate, Duke Institute for Brain Sciences Office Address Duke University Levine Science Research Center B253 Box 90999 Durham, NC 27708-0999 T: (919) 681-7486 F: (919) 681-0815 E: [email protected] http://web.duke.edu/adcocklab/ EDUCATION 1999 MD, Yale University, New Haven, CT 1999 PhD, Neurobiology, Yale University, New Haven, CT 1987 BA, Psychology, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 1985-86 Psychology, Philosophy and Physiology, University of Oxford, UK POSTGRADUATE TRAINING 1999-2003 Resident, General Adult Psychiatry, Langley Porter Psychiatric Institute, University of California San Francisco 2003-2006 Postdoctoral Fellow, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE Primary Faculty Appointments 2007- present 2007- present

Assistant Professor, Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Assistant Professor, Center for Cognitive Neuroscience

Secondary Faculty Appointments 2008- present 2009- present

Assistant Professor, Neurobiology Assistant Professor, Psychology and Neuroscience

Specialty Certification American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, 2007 Medical Licensure

California, North Carolina

R. Alison Adcock, MD, PhD Clinical Experience 2012-present 2007-present 2003-2006 2002-2006 2002-2003 2001-2003

Attending, Duke Psychiatry Outpatient Clinic Duke University Medical Center Private Diagnostic Clinic Acting Attending, San Francisco VAMC Outpatient Psychiatry Service Staff Psychiatrist, Schuman-Liles Clinic, Oakland, CA Staff Psychiatrist, Walden House Adolescent, San Francisco Group Leader, Eating Disorders Group, Langley Porter Psychiatric Institute, University of California San Francisco

AWARDS, HONORS AND HONORARY LECTURES 2015 2012 2012 2012 2011 2011 2010 2010 2008 2008 2008 2008 2006 2002 2003 2002 2002 2001 1988 1987 1983

1982

BF Skinner Lectureship, Association for Behavior Analysis International National Academy of Sciences Seymour Benzer Lectureship Kavli Fellow of the National Academy of Sciences James S. McDonnell Foundation Understanding Human Cognition Award Nominee NIMH BRAINS Award for Innovative Biobehavioral Research Kavli Fellow of the National Academy of Sciences Kavli Fellow of the National Academy of Sciences Memory Disorders Research Society (elected) Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship Klingenstein Fellowship Award in the Neurosciences APIRE/Merck Early Academic Career Research Award Future Leaders in Psychiatry Award Young Investigator Award, National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression Gianini Family Postdoctoral Fellowship Creative Resident Award for Outstanding Research, UCSF Veteran’s Administration Special Fellowship in the Neurosciences Young Investigator Award, National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression NIMH Outstanding Resident Award NIH Medical Scientist Training Program Fellowship, Yale University Magna cum Laude, Emory University Phi Beta Kappa, Emory University United States Presidential Scholarship Robert W. Woodruff Scholarship National Merit Scholarship American Academy of Achievement Fellow Valedictory, Chattanooga Central High School Telluride Association Summer Fellow

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R. Alison Adcock, MD, PhD

RESEARCH Funding Extramural (as PI unless otherwise indicated) Current 2016-2021 2016-2019

2014-2019 2014-2019 2014-2019 2014-2016 2014-2017 2013-2018 2011-2017

R21MH104422-01 Increasing Motivation in ADHD Via Self-activation of VTA (Adcock PI, Kollins Co-PI) $850,000 NIH Clinical and Translational Science Award KL-2 Instructed Activation of the Human Dopaminergic Midbrain using Real-Time fMRI and PET Neuroimaging (Dickerson PI, Adcock Mentor) $118,324 2K24-DA023464 Smoking/Nicotine Dependence in Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (Kollins PI, Adcock Collaborator) $  666,147 R01DA038442 Environment Cue-Reactivity: Brain, Behavior and Clinical Outcomes in Tobacco Use (McCLernon PI, Adcock Co-I) $1,606,671 R01-MH087610 Characterizing Neural Mechanisms of Cognitive Control (Egner PI, Adcock Co-I) $1,000,000 NSF BRAIN EAGER: Integrative Cross-Modal and Cross-Species Brain Models: Motivation and Reward (Heller PI, Adcock Collaborator) $189,277 Canadian Institutes of Health Research Reward Network Connectivity During Volitional Motivation (Chiew PI, Adcock Mentor) $135,000 NIH KAcute and Chronic Nicotine Modulation of Reinforcement Learning (Addicott PI, Adcock Co-Mentor) $393,160 NIH R01 MH094743 Biobehavioral Research Award for Innovative New Scientists, Motivated Memory as a Therapeutic Target $1,585,000

Completed 2009-2015

2009-2014

NIH R01DA027802-01 Brain Imaging Studies of Negative Reinforcement in Humans (Co-I*, LaBar PI) $1,202,450 *Dr. LaBar and I shared equally in writing the grant and conducting the research, but because this grant was not eligible for ESI considerations, I identified as Co-I solely to preserve my Early Stage Investgator status. NIH R01-DA027802-05S1 Motivated Learning and Memory Neuroimaging Data Repository (Co-I*, LaBar PI) 3

R. Alison Adcock, MD, PhD 2009-2011 2008-2013 2008-2013

2008-2012 2008-2010 2008-2009 2006-2009

2003-2006 2002-2005

2002-2003

$99908 NIH RC1 MH088680 From Phenotype to Mechanism: Mapping the Pathways Underlying Risky Choice (Huettel PI) $638,764 Klingenstein Fellowship Award in the Neurosciences $150,000 Singapore National Medical Research Council Translational and Clinical Research Programme Vulnerability, Disease Progression, and Treatment in Schizophrenia and Related Psychoses. (Imaging Core PI) $962,500 Dana Foundation Brain and Immuno-Imaging Program; Skinner’s New Box: Understanding and Exploiting Neural Markers of Motivation to Learn $200,000 Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship $50,000 APIRE/Merck Early Academic Career Research Award $45,000 NARSAD Young Investigator Award; Correlated Activation in Midbrain and Hippocampus as a Predictor of Memory: FMRI in Schizophrenic and Control Subjects $60,000 VAMC Special Fellowship in the Neurosciences NARSAD Young Investigator Award; Speech Processing Networks in Hallucinating Schizophrenics: Functional Connectivity and Response to Retraining. $60,000 Giannini Family Foundation Medical Research Fellowship

Pending 2016-2021 2016-2021

Sylvia O. Conte “Center for Circuit and Behavioral Adaptability,” Role of Frontal Cortical Adaptive Capacity in Behavioral Adaptations (Caron PI, Adcock Project Lead) R01 MH094751A Mechanisms of Motivated Memory (1st round: Priority 32, Percentile 19)

Intramural, Competitive Principal Investigator 2014-2015

Bass Connections Team for “Re-Imagining the Environment”

Investigator 2014-2015 2013-2015

Chancellor’s Program Project Accelerator “Adaptive Responses to Stressors” (Co-I, Caron PI) Institute for Human Education and Development Nutrition and Education (Co-I, Fitzsimons PI) 4

R. Alison Adcock, MD, PhD 2008-2009

Duke Institute for Brain Sciences Incubator Award. Decision-Making Under risk: From Phenotype to Mechanism. (Platt & Huettel Co-PIs)

Intramural, Noncompetitive Principal Investigator 2014

Obtained multi-institute support for “Re-Imagining the Environment” in order to equip and establish Wegner Gallery as a Laboratory of Science Communication. The Gallery Laboratory is supported by Arts & Sciences, Natural Sciences, Nicholas School of the Envrionment, Pratt School of Engineering, and the Duke Institute of Brain Sciences

RESEARCH Publications Peer Reviewed 1. MacInnes JJ*, Dickerson K*, Chen NK, Adcock RA. Cognitive Neurostimulation: Learning to Volitionally Sustain Ventral Tegmental Area Activation. Neuron. In press. 2. Murty VP, Ballard IC, Adcock RA. Hippocampus and prefrontal cortex predict distinct timescales of activation in the human ventral tegmental area. Cerebral Cortex. In press. 3. Murty VP, LaBar KS, Adcock RA. Distinct medial temporal networks encode surprise during motivation by reward versus punishment. Neurobiology of Learning and Memory. In press. 4. McClernon FJ, Conklin CA, Kozink RV, Adcock RA, Sweitzer MM, AddicottMA, Chou Y, Chen N, Hallyburton MB, DeVito AM. Hippocampal and Insular Response to Smoking-Related Environments: Neuroimaging Evidence for Drug Context Effects in Nicotine Dependence. Neuropsychopharmacology. 41(3):87785. 2016. 5. Klauser P, Zhou J, Lim JK, Poh JS, Zheng H, Tng HY, Krishnan R, Lee J, Keefe RS, Adcock RA, Wood SJ, Fornito A, Chee MW. Lack of Evidence for Regional Brain Volume or Cortical Thickness Abnormalities in Youths at Clinical High Risk for Psychosis: Findings From the Longitudinal Youth at Risk Study. Schizophr Bull. 41(6):1285-93. 2015. 6. Kollins SH, Adcock RA. ADHD, altered dopamine neurotransmission, and disrupted reinforcement processes: implications for smoking and nicotine dependence. Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry 3;52:70-8. 2014. 7. Braver TS, Krug MK, Chiew KS, Kool W, Clement NJ, Adcock RA, Barch DM, Botvinick M, Carver CS, Cools R, Custers R, Dickinson AR, Dweck CS, Fishbach A, Gollwitzer PM, Hess TM, Isaacowitz DM, Mather M, Murayama K, Pessoa L, Samanez-Larkin GR, Somerville LH, for the MOMCAI group. Mechanisms of

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R. Alison Adcock, MD, PhD Motivation-Cognition Interaction: Challenges and Opportunities. Cognitive Affective and Behavioral Neuroscience. 14(2):443-72. 2014. 8. Clark K, Cain MS, Adcock RA, Mitroff SR. Context Matters: The structure of task goals affects accuracy in multiple-target visual search. Applied Ergonomics. 45(3):528-33. 2014. 9. Murty VP, Shermohammed M, Smith DV, Carter RM, Huettel SA, Adcock RA. Resting-state analysis of the ventral tegmental area and substantia nigra reveals differential connectivity with the prefrontal cortex. Neuroimage. 100:580-9. 2014. 10. Dandash O, Fornito A, Lee J, Keefe RS, Chee MW, Adcock RA, Pantelis C, Wood SJ, Harrison BJ. Altered Striatal Functional Connectivity in Subjects With an At-Risk Mental State for Psychosis. Schizophrenia Bulletin. 40(4):904-13. 2013. 11. Murty VP, Ballard IC, MacDuffie K, Krebs RM, Adcock RA. Hippocampal networks habituate as novelty accumulates. Learning and Memory. 20: 229-235. 2013. 12. Yaakub SN, Dorairaj K, Poh JS, Asplund CL, Krishnan R, Lee J, Keefe RSE, Adcock RA, Wood SJ, Chee MWL. Preserved working memory, altered brain activation in persons at risk of schizophrenia. American Journal of Psychiatry. 170(11):1297307. 2013. 13. Murty VP, Adcock RA. Reward motivation organizes cortical networks to enhance hippocampal encoding of unexpected events. Cerebral Cortex. 24(8):2160-8. 2013. 14. Libertus K, Gibson J, Hidayatallah NZ, Hirtle J, Adcock RA, Needham A. Size matters: How age and reaching experiences shape infants' preferences for different sized objects. Infant Behavior and Development. 36(2): 189-198. 2013. 15. Murty V, LaBar KS, Adcock RA. Threat of Punishment Motivates Memory Encoding via Amygdala, not Midbrain, Interactions with the Medial Temporal Lobe. Journal of Neuroscience. 32(26):8969-76. 2012. 16. Murty VP, Ritchey M, Adcock RA, Labar KS. Reprint of: fMRI studies of successful emotional memory encoding: a quantitative meta-analysis. Neuropsychologia. 49(4):695-705. 2011. 17. Ballard IC, Murty VP, Carter RM, Macinnes JJ, Huettel SA, Adcock RA. Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex drives mesolimbic dopaminergic regions to initiate motivated behavior. Journal of Neuroscience. 31(28):10340-6. 2011. 18. Murty V, LaBar KS, Hamilton DA, Adcock RA. Is all motivation good for learning? Dissociable influences of approach and avoidance motivation in declarative memory. Learning and Memory. 18(11):712-7. 2011. 19. Dale CL, Findlay AM, Adcock RA, Vertinski M, Fisher M, Genevsky A, Aldebot S, Subramaniam K, Luks TL, Simpson GV, Nagarajan SS, Vinogradov S. Timing is Everything: Neural Response Dynamics During Syllable Processing and its Relation to Higher-Order Cognition in Schizophrenia and Healthy Comparison Subjects. International Journal of Psychophysiology, 75(2):183-93, 2010.

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R. Alison Adcock, MD, PhD 20. Han S, Huettel SA, Raposo A, Adcock RA, and Dobbins I. Functional Significance of Striatal Responses During Episodic Decisions: Recovery or Goal Attainment? Journal of Neuroscience. 30(13):4767-75. 2010. 21. Whitford TJ, Mathalon DH, Shenton ME, Roach BJ, Bammer R, Faustman WO, Adcock RA, Bouix S, Kubicki M, De Siebenthal J, Rausch AC, Schneiderman JS, Ford JM. Electrophysiological and Diffusion-Tensor Imaging Evidence of Delayed Corollary Discharges in Patients with Schizophrenia. Psychological Medicine. Jul 22:1-11. 2010 22. Murty VP, Ritchey M, Adcock RA, Labar KS. fMRI studies of successful emotional memory encoding: A quantitative meta-analysis. Neuropsychologia. 48(12):345969. 2010. 23. Shohamy D, Adcock RA. Dopamine and adaptive memory. Trends in Cognitive Science 14(10):464-472, 2010. 24. Adcock RA, Dale C, Fisher M, Aldebot S, Genevsky A, Simpson GV, Nagarajan S, Vinogradov S. When Top-Down Meets Bottom-Up: Auditory Training Enhances Verbal Memory in Schizophrenia. Schizophrenia Bulletin, 35(6):1132-41, 2009. 25. Carter RM, MacInnes JJ, Huettel SA, Adcock RA. Activation in the VTA and Nucleus Accumbens Increases in Anticipation of Both Gains and Losses. Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, 3:21, 2009. For commentary: Seo, H Ambivalent Dopamine. Frontiers in Neuroscience, 4, 2010. 26. Adcock RA, Thangavel A, Whitfield-Gabrieli S, Knutson B, and Gabrieli JDE. Reward-Motivated Learning: Mesolimbic Activation Precedes Memory Formation. Neuron, 50(3):507-17, 2006. 27. Knutson B, Adcock RA. Remembrance of Rewards Past. Neuron, 45(3):331-2, 2005. 28. Adcock RA, Constable RT, Gore JC, Goldman-Rakic PS. Functional Neuroanatomy of Executive Processes Involved in Dual-Task Performance. PNAS U S A, 97(7):3567-72, 2000. 29. Adcock RA. Heterarchical Organization of Human Prefrontal Cortex: Evidence from Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging. Doctoral Thesis, Yale University. 1999. 30. Lane JD, Adcock RA, Burnett RE. Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia and Cardiovascular Responses to Stress. Psychophysiology, 29(4):461-70, 1992. 31. Lane JD, Adcock RA, Williams RB, Kuhn CM. Caffeine Effects on Cardiovascular and Neuroendocrine Responses to Acute Psychosocial Stress and their Relationship to Level of Habitual Caffeine Consumption. Psychosomatic Medicine, 52(3):32036, 1990.

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R. Alison Adcock, MD, PhD Under Review 1. Sumner, EB, Yaakub SN, Dorairaj K, Poh JS, Asplund CL, Krishnan R, Lee J, Keefe RSE, Wood SJ, Chee MWL, Adcock RA. Neutral Facial Expressions Activate ThreatValuation Networks in Individuals at Risk for Psychosis: Findings from the Longitudinal Youth at Risk Study (LYRIKS). Schizophrenia Bulletin 2. Stanek JK, Murty VP, Adcock RA. Mesolimbic and cortical networks differentiate novelty versus surprise. Journal of Neuroscience. RESEARCH Invited Talks (External) International 1. September 2015 Decision-Making Research Seminar, University of Bristol, UK 2. May 2007 “Motivated Memory Formation: Leverage on Learning.” Radboud University, The Netherlands 3. May 2007 “Real-time fMRI during Cognitive Behavioral Therapy: Methodology, Initial Results and Potential Applications.” Applied Neuroscience Conference, Nijmegen, The Netherlands 4. May 2007 “Real-time fMRI as a Tool for Optimizing Learning.” Maastricht University, The Netherlands National 1. June 2016 “Autonomous Neural Contexts for Learning,” Affective Neuroscience Symposium, Dartmouth. 2. May 2016 “Learning from Deep Brain Neurofeedback: Multiple Paths and Therapeutic Mechanisms,” Association for Psychological Science, Chicago. 3. May 2015 “Changing neurobiology with behavior: How expectation of reward and punishment influence learning and remembering via distinct brain systems," B. F. Skinner Lecture, Association for Behavior Analysis International. 4. May 2015 “Neural Contexts for Adaptive Memory Formation,” Advances in Memory Systems Meeting, New York University. 5. May 2014. “How Motivation Shapes Memory: Insights from human neuroscience and implications for mental health risk, trajectory and treatment.” UCSF Dept Psychiatry Distinguished Lecture Series 6. May 2014 “Behavioral Neurostimulation: Creating Neural Contexts for Adaptive Memory.” Changing Neurobiology with Behavior Symposium, Association for Psychological Science. 7. October 2013. “How Motivation Shapes Memory.” Departmental Colloquium, Stony Brook Universsity, Stony Brook, NY. 8. September 2013. “How Motivation Shapes Memory: When Is a Carrot Not a Carrot?” Harnessing Neuroplasticity for Behavior Change, NIMH Science of Behavior Change Symposium.

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R. Alison Adcock, MD, PhD 9. May 2013 “Motivational Control of Long-Term Memory” Mechanisms of Motivation, Cognition, and Aging Interactions Meeting, Washington DC. 10. March 2013 “Carrots are not Sticks: Motivation in Model-Based Learning.” Entertainment Software and Cognitive Neurotherapeutics Society, Los Angeles, CA. 11. March 2013 “How Motivation Shapes Memory.” Departmental Colloquium, Columbia University, New York, NY. 12. June 2012 “If I Could Take Good Advice, I Wouldn’t Need a Prescription.” National Academy of Sciences Seymour Benzer Distinctive Voices Lecture, Irvine, CA. 13. November 2011 “ Motivated Memory as Therapeutic Target.” NIMH BRAINS Ceremony, Washington DC. 14. April 2011 “Adaptive Memory: Targeting Motivational Control of Hippocampal Function for Therapeutic Gain.” Cognition and Its Disorders Seminar, Duke University. 15. December 2010 “Motivated Memory: Affective Neuromodulation and Mnemonic Salience Maps.” Departmental Symposium, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC. 16. October 2010 “Motivated Memory: Affective Neuromodulation and Mnemonic Salience Maps.” National Science Foundation Symposium on Learning, Brandeis, Boston, MA. 17. November 2009 “Exploiting Neural Markers of Motivation to Learn.” Osher LifeLong Learning Institute, Durham, NC. 18. October 2008 “Integrative Neuroscience: Transcription, Translation, and Translocation.” Duke Institute for Brain Sciences Workshop 19. June 2008 “Motivated Memory: Behavior, Circuits, and Clinical Implications.” Departmental Symposium, Duke Neurobiology 20. January 2008 “Midbrain and Memory.” Departmental Symposium, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC. 21. February 2006 “Cognitive Control, Memory Formation, and Reward: Neurobiological Mechanisms and Clinical Implications.” Invited talk, Vanderbilt University 22. February 2006 “Motivated Memory: Neurobiological Mechanisms and Clinical Implications.” Invited talk, Duke University 23. February 2006 “Motivated Memory: Neurobiological Mechanisms and Clinical Implications.” Invited talk, University of Texas, Southwestern 24. March 2006 “Motivated Memory: Neurobiological Mechanisms and Clinical Implications.” Invited talk, University of Pennsylvania 25. March 2006 “Motivated Memory: Neurobiological Mechanisms and Clinical Implications.” Invited talk, University of Rochester 9

R. Alison Adcock, MD, PhD 26. May 2006 “Motivated Memory: Neurobiological Mechanisms and Clinical Implications.” Invited talk, Cornell University 27. May 2006 “Motivated Memory: Neurobiological Mechanisms and Clinical Implications.” Invited talk, University of California, San Francisco 28. June 2006 “Motivated Memory: Neurobiological Mechanisms and Clinical Implications.” Weill Medical College 29. June 2005 Reward-Motivated Learning: Proactive Mesolimbic Influences on Memory Formation.” Bay Area Memory Meeting, Davis CA. 30. May 2005 “Reward-Motivated Learning: Mesolimbic Activation Precedes Memory Formation.” Yale University FMRI Symposium. RESEARCH Presentations External Conferences 1. Adcock RA, Friedman HR, Goldman-Rakic PS. Co-activation of Hippocampus and Prefrontal Cortex During Working Memory: A 2-deoxyglucose Study of Behaving Rhesus Monkeys. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA 1992. 2. Adcock RA, Constable RT, Gore JC, Goldman-Rakic P. Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Frontal Cortex During Performance of Non-spatial Associative Memory Tasks. 2nd Intl. Conf. on Functional Mapping of the Human Brain, Neuroimage, 3(3), S526, 1996. 3. Adcock RA, Thangavel A., Gabrieli JDE. Functional Architecture of RewardMotivated Learning as Revealed by Event-Related fMRI. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA 2004. 4. Adcock RA, Thangavel A, Knutson B, Gabrieli JDE. Motivation Modulates Memory: Neurally Linking Affect and Cognition. Neuroeconomics Annual Meeting, Kiawah Island, SC 2005. 5. Adcock RA, Lutomski K, MacLeod S, Soneji DJ, Gabrieli JDE, Glover G, Pauly J, deCharms RC. Real-Time fMRI During the Psychotherapy Session: Toward a Methodology to Augment Therapeutic Benefit, Exemplary Data. Human Brain Mapping Annual Meeting, Toronto, 2005. 6. Adcock RA, Thangavel A, Knutson B, Whitfield-Gabrieli S, Gabrieli JDE. RewardMotivated Learning: Mesolimbic Activation Precedes Memory Formation. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Atlanta, 2006. 7. Adcock RA, Desain P, Merzenich M, Vinogradov S. Impaired Temporal and Preserved Spectral Processing of Speech Sounds in Noise in Patients with Schizophrenia. Cognitive Neuroscience Society Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, April 2006. 8. Adcock RA, Thangavel A, Hearst A, Merzenich M, Vinogradov S. Impaired Temporal and Preserved Spectral Processing of Speech Sounds in Noise in Patients 10

R. Alison Adcock, MD, PhD with Schizophrenia. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA 2007. 9. Khatibi K, Findlay AM, Adcock RA, Subramaniam K, Aldebot S, Hearst A, Vertinski M, Marco EJ, Nagarajan S, Vinogradov S. Neuroplasticity-Based Cognitive Training in Schizophrenia Normalizes Magnetoencephalography Auditory Duration Mismatch Responses in Cortex. Cognitive Neuroscience Society Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, April 2008. 10. Adcock RA, Warm H, Thangavel A, Hearst A, Fisher M, Vinogradov S. Impaired Temporal and Preserved Spectral Processing of Speech Sounds in Noise in Patients with Schizophrenia. Cognitive Neuroscience Society Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, April 2008. 11. Han S, Huettel SA, Raposo A, Adcock RA, Dobbins IG. Memory as Reward: GoalDirected Reward Processes during Episodic Recognition. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Washington DC, October 2008. 12. Hinkley LB, Guggisberg AG, Findlay AM, Khatibi K, Adcock RA, Vinogradov S, Nagarajan S. Deviations in Alpha-band Functional Connectivity between Brain Regions of Schizophrenia Patients during Magnetoencepahlogram (MEG) Recordings at Rest. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Washington DC, October 2008. 13. MacInnes J, Rouse E, Figueroa S, Ely S, Adcock RA. Pupillary Indices of Successful Reward-Motivated Learning. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Washington DC, October 2008. 14. Murty VP, Whitfield-Gabrieli S, Gabrieli JDE, Adcock RA. Effective Connectivity of Mesolimbic Regions during Reward-Motivated Learning as Assessed by fMRI. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Washington DC, October 2008. 15. MacInnes J, Carter RM, Adcock RA, Huettel, SA. Rewards Earned for Others – An fMRI Study of the Neural Correlates of Altruism. Cognitive Neuroscience Society Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA April 2009. 16. Dale CL, Adcock RA, Findlay AM, Genevsky A, Vertinski M, Luks TL, Simpson GV, Nagarajan SS, Vinogradov S. Abnormal Response Dynamics During Cognitionrelevant Auditory Information Processing In Schizophrenia. Cognitive Neuroscience Society Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA April 2009. 17. Nagarajan SS, Hinkley L, Guggisberg AG, Findlay AM, Khatibi K, Adcock RA, Vinogradov S. Deviations In Alpha-Band Functional Connectivity Between Brain Regions In Patients With Schizophrenia During Magnetoencepahlogram (MEG) Recordings At Rest. Cognitive Neuroscience Society Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA April 2009. 18. Johnson EB, Adcock RA. Enhancement of Episodic Memory by Prior Reward Experience. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Chicago, October 2009.

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R. Alison Adcock, MD, PhD 19. Murty VP, LaBar KS, Hamilton DA, Adcock RA. The Impact of NegativeReinforcement on Spatial Learning in Humans During a Modified Morris Water Maze. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Chicago, October 2009. 20. Ballard IB, Murty V, MacInnes J, Carter RM, Huettel S, Adcock RA. Network dynamics of the mesolimbic dopamine system during human reward anticipation: A DCM study. Cognitive Neuroscience Society, Montreal, Canada 2010. 21. MacDuffie K, Murty V, Adcock RA. Dissociable effects of reward and punishment motivation on memory precision for semantically-related word lists. Cognitive Neuroscience Society, Montreal, Canada 2010. 22. Murty V, LaBar K, Rainey C, Hamilton D, Adcock RA. The impact of approach and avoidance motivation on spatial learning in humans. Cognitive Neuroscience Society, Montreal, Canada 2010. 23. Johnson EB, Adcock RA. Generalized enhancement of episodic memory by prior reward experience. Society of Biological Psychiatry, New Orleans, LA, 2010. 24. Murty VP, LaBar, KS, Adcock RA. Threat of shock facilitates scene encoding: A neuroimaging study of instrumental declarative learning. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, San Diego CA 2010. 25. MacInnes J, MacDuffie K, Adcock RA. Differential impact of reward on item versus source memory. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, San Diego CA 2010. 26. Adcock RA. Motivated Memory: Reward Anticipation Increases Hippocampal Sensitivity to and Memory for Expectancy Violations. Memory Disorders Research Society, Barcelona, Spain, 2011. 27. Adcock RA. Catalyzing Behavioral Change. National Academy of Sciences Kavli Frontiers of Science Meeting, Irvine, CA 2011. 28. Murty VP, Chong SA, Subramaniam M, Keefe RSE, Kraus MS, Poh J, Dorairaj K, Thong J, Bong YL, Chee MW, Adcock RA. Amygdala reactivity in Singaporeans at ultra-high risk for the development of schizophrenia. Biological Psychiatry, San Francisco, CA, 2011. 29. MacDuffie KE, Johnson EB, Iyengar T, Addis DR, Adcock RA. Reward facilitates construction and later memory of autobiographical episodes. Cognitive Neuroscience Society, San Francisco, CA 2011. 30. MacInnes, J, MacDuffie, KE, Adcock RA. Instructed salience modulates rewardmotivated enhancements in item and relational memory. Cognitive Neuroscience Society, San Francisco, CA 2011. 31. Foerde KE, Pincus M, Wood S, Adcock RA, Shohamy D. Neural mechanisms of flexible generalization of past gains and losses. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Washington DC, 2011.

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R. Alison Adcock, MD, PhD 32. Murty VP, Ballard IC, Krebs RM, MacDuffie K, Rainey C, Adcock RA. Habituation of the human hippocampus to trial-unique, novel scenes. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Washington DC, 2011. 33. Shermohammed M, Murty VP, Smith DV, Carter RM, Huettel SA, Adcock RA. Resting-state analysis of the ventral tegmental area and substantia nigra reveals differential connectivity with the prefrontal cortex. Cognitive Neuroscience Society, Chicago, Il, 2012. 34. Murty VP, Adcock RA. Reward motivation increases hippocampal sensitivity to and memory for expectancy violations (GSA Winner). Cognitive Neuroscience Society, Chicago, Il, 2012. 35. Johnson EB, Wilson J, Poh J, Yaakub S, Dorairaj K, Rapisarda A, Chee M, Chong SA, Subramaniam M, Keefe R, Kraus MS, Lee J, Bong YL, Adcock RA. Midbrain modulation of hippocampus dependent learning in Singaporeans at ultra high risk for the development of schizophrenia. Society of Biological Psychiatry Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 2012. 36. Murty VP, LaBar, KS, Adcock RA. How motivational context shapes mnemonic content: Reward and punishment motivation drive different medial temporal substrates for encoding expectancy violations. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, 2012. 37. Wilson JK, Murty VP, Adcock RA. Dissociable hippocampal mechanisms for encoding of novelty and expectancy violation. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, 2012. 38. Randhawa J. Murty VP, Adcock RA, Bohbot VD. Immediate financial rewards are detrimental to spatial learners and beneficial to response learners tested in a virtual navigation task. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, 2012. 39. Wood S, Foerde K, Pincus M, Adcock RA, Shohamy DS. The influence of gains and losses on learning and hippocampal generalization in humans. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, 2012. 40. Ballard IC, Murty VP, Adcock RA. Distinct hippocampal signals predict fast and slow ventral tegmental area responses to novelty. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, 2012.Clement NJ, Adcock RA. “Move faster to learn better: Exploration speed impacts learning about objects and their locations.” Entertainment Software and Cognitive Neurotherapeutics Society, Los Angeles, CA, 2013. 41. Murty VP, LaBar KS, Adcock RA. The active avoidance of threat enhances neural sensitivity to expectancy violation. Cognitive Neuroscience Society, San Francisco, CA, 2013. 42. Sumner EJ, Duffy KB, Adcock RA. Dopaminergic modulation of Reward-Motivated Memory. Cognitive Neuroscience Society, San Francisco, CA, 2013.

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R. Alison Adcock, MD, PhD 43. Sumner EJ, Wilson, JK, Poh JS, Yaakub SN, Dorairaj K, Rapisarda A, Chee MWL, Chong SA, Subramaniam M, Keefe RSE, Kraus MS, Bong YL, Keong JLC, Adcock RA. “Midbrain Modulation of Hippocampus-Dependent Learning Predicts Performance and Clinical Status in Individuals at Risk for Psychosis.” International Congress on Schizophrenia Research, Grande Lakes, Florida 2013. 44. Clement NJ, Adcock RA. “Move faster to learn better: Exploration speed impacts learning about objects and their locations.” Mechanisms of Motivation, Cognition, and Aging Interactions, Washington, DC, 2013. 45. Dickerson KC*, MacInnes JJ*, Adcock RA. Sustained activation of the human dopaminergic midbrain using real-time fMRI. Mechanisms of Motivation, Cognition, and Aging Interactions, Washington, D.C. 2013. 46. Loiotile RE, Adcock RA, Courtney SM. Test date expectancy affects memory performance. Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA, 2013. 47. Dickerson KC*, MacInnes JJ*, Adcock RA. “Behavioral neurostimulation: Sustained activation of the human dopaminergic midbrain using real-time fMRI.” Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting,, San Diego, CA, 2013. 48. Murty VP, Shermohammed M, Smith DV, Carter RM, Huettel SA, Adcock RA., “Resting-state networks distinguish human ventral tegmental area from substantia nigra.” Society for Affective Science. Washington DC, 2014. 49. Clement NJ, Stanek JK, Adcock RA. “Certainty benefits declarative memory encoding during probabilistic cue learning.” Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Washington DC, 2014. 50. Stanek JK, Clement NJ, Adcock RA. “Reward uncertainty benefits declarative memory encoding at long but not short latencies following probabilistic cue presentation.” Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Washington DC, 2014. 51. Rainey CA, Dickerson KC, Adcock RA. “Interoceptive Signals for Encoding.” Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Washington DC, 2014. 52. Hoscheidt SM, Adcock RA, LaBar KS. “Stressed and motivated: Reward rescues performance from impairing effects of stress.” Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Washington DC, 2014. 53. Vu MT, Sumner EB, Ballard IC, Murty VP, Chee MWL, Chong SA, Subramaniam M, Keong JLC, Keefe RSE, Kraus MS, Poh J, Yaakub S, Dorairaj K, Adcock RA. “How Reward Information Reaches VTA Depends on Task Context: A DCM Study.” Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Washington DC, 2014. 54. Murty VP, Adcock RA, Davachi L. “Reward Specfically Enhances Declarative Consolidation.” Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, Washington DC, 2014. 55. MacInnes, J., Dickerson, K.,Chen, N., Adcock, RA. Cognitive Neurostimulation: Learning to volitionally sustain ventral tegmental area activation. Cell Symposia: Translational Neuroscience, Washington, D.C., 2014.

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R. Alison Adcock, MD, PhD 56. MacInnes, J., Dickerson, K.,Chen, N., Adcock, RA. Cognitive Neurostimulation: Learning to volitionally sustain ventral tegmental area activation. Real-time Functional Imaging and Neurofeedback, Gainesville, Fl, 2015. 57. Chiew, K.S., Hashemi, J., Lerebours, L., Clement, N.J., Vu, M.A., Sapiro, G., Heller, N.E., Adcock, R.A. Motivational framing and individual differences modulate exploration behaviour and subsequent memory for a museum exhibit on human responses to environmental issues. Annual Meeting of the Association for Psychological Science, New York, NY, 2015. 58. Clement, N.J., Stanek, J.K., & Adcock, R.A. Validity of cues predicting reward delivery influences recognition memory for associated novel scenes. Entertainment Software and Cognitive Neurotherapeutics Society, San Francisco, CA, 2015. 59. Dickerson, K., MacInnes, J., Chen, N., Adcock, RA. Cognitive Neurostimulation: Learning to volitionally sustain ventral tegmental area activation. Organization for Human Brain Mapping, Honolulu, HI, 2015. Internal Presentations Psychiatry Department Grand Rounds January 2013 Center for Cognitive Neuroscience Colloquium April 2014 RESEARCH MENTORING K-award recipients 1. Kathryn C. Dickerson, PhD, (2016, Primary Mentor) 2. Meredith Addicott, PhD, (2013, Co-Mentor) 3. Maggie Sweitzer, PhD, (2016, Co-Mentor) Postdoctoral Fellows & Residents (Primary Mentor) 4. Sanghoon Han, PhD, Duke University (2008-2010). Now Assistant Professor, Yonsei University, Korea 5. Thadeus B. Koontz, MD PhD, UAB, (2009 – 2012). Now Medical Director, Idaho State Hospital North 6. Kathryn C. Dickerson, PhD, Rutgers (2011 – current). NIMH NRSA Postdoctoral Fellowship awardee, CTSA K Awardee 7. Krista Alexander, MD, Duke University Psychiatry (2012 – 2013). 8. Kimberly S. Chiew PhD, Washington Univ St. Louis (2013-current), Canadian Institutes of Health Research Postdoctoral Fellowship awardee 9. Ginger Lovingood, MD, Duke University Psychiatry (2014) Graduate Students (Primary Mentor) 1. Dr. Vishnu P. Murty (co-mentor LaBar, Neurobiology 2008-2012); now Assistant Professor, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Department of Psychiatry – Dissociable Influence of Reward and Punishment Motivation on Declarative Memory Encoding and its Underlying Neurophysiology

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R. Alison Adcock, MD, PhD 2. Dr. Elizabeth B. Sumner (Neurobiology, 2008-2014); Duke - Central Regional Hospital Chief Resident, Neurofunctional Characterization of the At-Risk Mental State for Psychosis. 3. Dr. Jeffrey J. MacInnes (Psychology and Neuroscience, 2009-2015); Cognitive Neurostimulation: Learning to Volitionally Invigorate Mesolimbic Reward Network Activation. 4. Dr. Courtnea A. Rainey (Psychology and Neuroscience, 2009-2015); Interoceptive Contributions to Motivational and Affective Modulators of Memory. NSF Awardee 5. 6. 7. 8.

Nathan J. Clement (Psychology and Neuroscience, 2010-present). NSF Awardee Jessica K. Stanek (Psychology and Neuroscience, 2010-present). NSF Awardee Mai-Anh T. Vu (Neurobiology, co-mentor Dzirasa, 2013-present), NSF Awardee Taylor Jackson (Psychology and Neuroscience, 2014-present), NSF Awardee

Graduate Students (Secondary Mentor) 1. Kate McDuffie (Psychology and Neuroscience), NSF Awardee Graduate Students (Rotation/Practicum Advisor) 1. Alex Rosati 2. Deepu Murty 3. Betsy Johnson 4. Courtnea Rainey 5. Jeff MacInnes 6. Bon-mi Gu 7. Nathan Clement 8. Ariel Starr 9. Jessica Wilson 10. Vanessa Punal 11. Mai-Anh Vu 12. Matthew Scult 13. Taylor Jackson 14. Dianna Amasino (with Dan Ariely) 15. Jane Tandler 16. Khoi Vo

Spring 2008 Spring 2008 Fall 2008 Fall 2009 Spring 2009 Spring 2009 Fall 2010 Spring 2011 Summer 2011 Summer 2012 Fall 2012 Summer 2013 Fall 2013 Spring 2014 Fall 2015 Summer 2016

Postbaccalaureate Fellows 1. Jeff MacInnes (BIAC, 2007-2009), now Duke P&N PhD program 2. Kate MacDuffie (BIAC, 2009-2011) now Duke Clinical Psychology PhD program 3. Kristin Duffy (BIAC, 2011-2013), now neuroscience PhD program, UI, UrbanaChampaign 4. Rita Loiotile (BIAC, 2011-2013), now neuroscience PhD program, Johns Hopkins 5. Lee Gans (BIAC, 2013-2015) 6. Laura Lerebours (BIAC, 2015-present) Undergraduate Honors Thesis Students 16

R. Alison Adcock, MD, PhD 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Sora Ely Amish Sheth Ian Ballard Maheen Shermohammad Ryan Zhang

P&N Honors Thesis Biology Honors Thesis Program II Honors Thesis, NSF Awardee Undergraduate Neuroscience Undergraduate Neuroscience

Undergraduate Summer Internships 1. Sora Ely, VIP program 2. Ian Ballard, VIP program 3. Maheen Shermohammad, NPR program 4. Obioma Ekeledo, (University of Georgia), SROP

2009 2010 2011 2012 2016 2008 2010 2011 2013

Undergraduate Research Practica 5. Avni Patel 6. Rory Lubner 7. Maheen Shermohammad 8. Kelsey Short 9. Tara Iyengar 10. Jane Chen 11. Rithi Chandy 12. Sonal Gagrani

Fall 2009 Spring 2010 Spring 2010 Spring 2010 Spring 2011 Fall 2012-Spring 2014 Spring 2013-Fall 2013 Fall 2013

High School Research Practica 1. Eden Rouse NC School of Science and Math 2. Mariya Hussain NC School of Science and Math 3. Brandi Lawrence NC School of Science and Math

2008-2009 2011-2012 2012-2013

Student Thesis Committees Graduate Students 1. Dr. Kristin Pleil 2. Dr. Maureen Ritchey 3. Dr. John Clithero 4. Dr. Sarah Heilbronner 5. Dr. Alex Rosati 6. Dr. Amrita Nair 7. Dr. Becket Ebitz 8. Dr. Kait Clark 9. Dr. Amy Winecoff 10. Dr. Bon-Mi Gu 11. Dr. Lawrence Ngo 12. Geoff Adams 13. Jessica Lake 14. Ariel Starr 15. Shana Hall

Laboratory Williams, P&N Cabeza, P&N Huettel, Economics Platt, Neurobiology Hare, Evol Anthrop Platt, Neurobiology Platt, Neurobiology Mitroff, P&N Huettel, P&N Meck, P&N Huettel, Neurobiology Platt, Neurobiology Labar, P&N Brannon, P&N Rubin, P&N 17

Graduation Year 2010 2011 2011 2012 2012 2013 2013 2014 2014 2014 2014 2014 2014 2015 current

R. Alison Adcock, MD, PhD 16. Kate McDuffie 17. Allison Detloff 18. Matthew Scult 19. Dianna Amasino 20. Caitlin Fang 21. Lori A. Keeling Undergraduate Students 1. Nadia Hidayatallah 2. Nico Bollerslev 3. Summana Kommana 4. Lisa David

Strauman, P&N Strauman, P&N Strauman, P&N Huettel, P&N Rosenthal, P&N Zucker, P&N

current current current current current current

Needham, P&N Brannon, P&N Zucker, P&N Dzirasa, Neurobiology

2008 2010 2012 2014

CAREER MENTORING Duke Scholars in Neuroscience Translational Program 1. Andrew Adler, PhD 2. Lomax boyd PhD 3. Wei Chou Tseng 4. Christy Wilson PhD 5. Rocio Gomez-Pastor Ph.D 6. Xioalin Xu 7. Kathryn C. Dickerson, PhD 8. Spencer McKinstry, PhD 9. Mayssa Mokalled, PhD 10. Zachary Abzug 11. Thomas Pack 12. Mai-Anh Vu 13. John McMahon Undergraduate Advising 1. Ian Ballard 2. Edna Chukwurah 3. Jenny Ngo 4. Lilly Pham 5. Arin Pamukcu 6. Brock Knapp 7. Wendy Xiao 8. Zixaun Yi 9. Rebecca Brenner 10. Won-Ji Lee 11. Joon Hyun Paik 12. Gordon Smilnak 13. William Windham

Program II Neuroscience Neuroscience Neuroscience Neuroscience Neuroscience Neuroscience Neuroscience Neuroscience Neuroscience Neuroscience Neuroscience Neuroscience

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2008-2011 2009-2011 2009-2012 2009-2012 2010-current 2011-current 2012-current 2012-current 2013-current 2013-current 2013-current 2014-current 2014-current

R. Alison Adcock, MD, PhD Advising for Pre-Med Students, UCSF 1. Alexis Armenakis 2. Arul Thangavel 3. Zareen Kasad SERVICE, Disciplinary Memberships in Professional and Scientific Societies Memory Disorders Research Society (elected) American College of Neuropsychopharmacology (elected) Society for Neuroscience Cognitive Neuroscience Society Society of Biological Psychiatry Journal, Grant, and Book Reviewing Grant Reviewer, (NIH) 2013/10 ZMH1 ERB-D (07) Clinical Neuroscience and Entertainment Software Pilot Partnership Program to Develop Neuropsychiatric Interventions (R43/R44) 2014 RFA-AG-14-006 Peer Reviewer American Journal of Psychiatry Archives of General Psychiatry Behavioral Neuroscience Biological Psychiatry Cerebral Cortex Cognitive Affective and Behavioral Neuroscience European Journal of Neuroscience Human Brain Mapping Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience Learning and Memory Neuroimage Neuron Neuropsychologia PLoS PLoS Biology PNAS Science Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience Cognitive Behavioral and Affective Neuroscience National Committee Service

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R. Alison Adcock, MD, PhD 2011 2012

Organizer, National Academy of Sciences Kavli Symposium, “Catalyzing Behavioral Change” Organizer, National Academy of Sciences Kavli Symposium, “Neurostimulation as a tool for Basic Science and Medicine”

SERVICE, Institutional Academic Committees Duke University Search Committee Duke Institute for Brain Sciences Director (2015) Department of Neurobiology Steering Committee (2012-present) Psychiatry Residency Neuroscience Curriculum Committee, (2012-present) Search Committee Joint Neuroscience/Fuqua Faculty (2010) D-CIDES Steering Committee (formerly Center for Neuroeconomic Studies; 2010-present) Center for Cognitive Neuroscience Retreat Program Committee (2009-present) Center for Cognitive Neuroscience Steering & Admissions Committee (2008-present) Duke Institute for Brain Sciences Executive Board (2008-present) Medical Scientist Training Program Admissions Committee (2007-2009) University of California San Francisco Basic Science for Psychiatry curriculum committee (2003-2006) Brain, Mind and Behavior Medical Student curriculum committee (2002- 2004) Psychiatry Cognitive Neuroscience day workshops curriculum committee (2001-2006) Miscellaneous Service 2014 2014 2013

Secured funding and equipped Wegner Gallery Laboratory of Science Communication, April. Department of Psychiatry Mock Study Section Internal Reviewer Faculty Judge AOA RESEARCH SYMPOSIUM poster judge

TEACHING Duke University Organizer/ Primary Instructor Psy362/NB381 Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Psy762/NB881 Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging NB361 Neurobiology of Disease BIOPSY Biological Psychiatry for Residents DSNS Duke Scholars in Neurosciences

2009-2011 2012-2013 2008-present 2012-2013 2012-present

Primary Instructor Psychiatry Outpatient Resident Clinic

2012-present

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R. Alison Adcock, MD, PhD Collaborative Courses PSY 359 PSY 360 BIOPSY

Principles of Cognitive Neuroscience Principles of Cognitive Neuroscience Biological Psychiatry for Residents

I II

2007-present 2008-present 2012-present

Guest lectures PSY 91 PSY 112 PSY 380 NB 320 PSY 105

Biological Basis of Behavior Introduction to Cognitive Neuroscience Behavioral and Computational Neuroscience Concepts II: Systems Neuroscience Abnormal Psychology

2008 2008 2007-2010 2011 2013

Graduate Independent Studies (Special Readings) 1. Jeff MacInnes 2. Nathan Clement

P&N P&N

Spring 2011 Spring 2012

Undergraduate Independent Studies 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.

Sora Ely Amish Sheth Ian Ballard Ian Ballard Maheen Shermohammad Tara Iyengar Ryan Zhang Michael Kontos

P&N Biology Honors Thesis Program II Program II Neuroscience Neuroscience Neuroscience Neuroscience

2008 2009 Spring 2011 Fall 2010 2009-2012 2013 2015 2015

UCSF 2004-2006 2002-2004 2001 2000 1999-2006

Wetware neuroscience lectures for psychiatry residents Group leader, Brain, Mind and Behavior for medical students Neuroanatomy for psychiatry residents Group leader, Neurobiology course for medical students Medical student supervision, inpatient and outpatient psychiatry clinics.

Scientific Symposia and Courses Organized External 2016 Association of Psychological Science, “Learning from Deep Brain Neurofeedback: Multiple Paths and Therapeutic Mechanisms” 2012 National Academy of Sciences Kavli Symposium, “Neurostimulation,” Irvine, CA 2011 National Academy of Sciences Kavli Symposium, “Catalyzing Behavioral Change,” 2010 Symposium, “Dopamine and Adaptive Memory,” Cognitive Neuroscience Society Annual Meeting, Toronto, CA

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R. Alison Adcock, MD, PhD Internal 2016 “Toward a Neuroscience of Change Processes in Psychotherapy: What Does Psychotherapy Do and how Does It Do It?” Duke Institute for Brain Sciences Workshop 2015 CCN Research Retreat, Haw River Ballroom 2013 “Advanced fMRI Methods,“ Journal Club 2013 “Translational Neuroscience at Duke,” Mini-Retreat 2010 “Mechanisms of Behavioral Change,” Duke Institute for Brain Sciences Seminars 2008 “New Directions in Schizophrenia Research,” Duke Institute for Brain Sciences Workshop Outreach Activities 1. Morehead Montessori School, “Brain Science and Your Future,” May 2015. 2. Nicholas School for the Environment, “Re-Imagining the Environment” Inaugural Installation to establish Wegner Gallery Laboratory of Science Communication, April 2014. 3. NAMI, “Neuroplasticity Interventions for Serious Mental Illness” May 2013 4. National Academy of Sciences Seymour Benzer “Distinctive Voices” Lecture June 2012. 5. Duke Brain Awareness Week Inaugural Faculty Sponsor, 2010 & 2011. Lab members conceived, organized and initiated the Duke Brain Awareness Week, which has run annually since 2010. 6. Science Café: “If I could Take Good Advice I Wouldn’t Need Therapy: Neuroscience and How We Change,” March 2010. 7. Osher Lifelong Learning Institute, “Motivated Memory and Brain Plasticity,” 2009. Selected Media Coverage and Interviews – 1. The Lifespan of a Fact, The State of Things, NPR, April 2012 2. How A Sugar Pill Can Treat Mental Illness, The State of Things, NPR, October 2013 3. A Study of Motivation, Dana Foundation Multimedia, January 2016

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