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Alan Anticevic, PhD

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Glenn H. Greenberg Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Associate Professor of Psychology

Titles

Director, Division of Neurocognition, Neurocomputation, and Neurogenetics (N3), Psychiatry

About

Titles

Glenn H. Greenberg Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Associate Professor of Psychology

Director, Division of Neurocognition, Neurocomputation, and Neurogenetics (N3), Psychiatry

Biography

Dr. Anticevic trained in Clinical Psychology and Cognitive Neuroscience at Washington University in St. Louis where he trained with Drs. Deanna Barch and David Van Essen. Following graduate training, Dr. Anticevic completed his internship in Clinical Neuropsychology at Yale University. After internship, he joined the Yale University Department of Psychiatry as research faculty while concurrently serving as the Administrative Director for the Center for the Translational Neuroscience of Alcoholism. Subsequently, he was appointed as an Assistant Professor of Psychiatry and Psychology at the Yale University School of Medicine, where he directs a clinical neuroimaging laboratory focused on severe mental illness. Dr. Anticevic is a recipient of the NARSAD Young Investigator Award, the International Congress of Schizophrenia Research Young Investigator Award, the NIH Director's Early Independence Award, the NARSAD Independent Investigator Award and the Klerman Prize for Exceptional Clinical Research. He currently serves as the Director of the Division of Neurocognition, Neurocomputation, and Neurogenetics (N3) at Yale School of Medicine.

His group's research focus is centered on computational and cognitive neuroscience of mental illness. Specifically, Dr. Anticevic's group is interested in characterizing neural mechanisms involved in higher order cognitive operations, such as working memory, as well as their interaction with neural systems involved in affective processes, with the aim of understanding how these computations may go awry in the context of severe mental illness . Methodologically, his group uses the combination of task-based, resting-state, pharmacological multi-modal neuroimaging, as well as computational modeling approaches to map neural alterations that lead to poor mental health outcomes. The overarching goal of the group is to develop neurobiologically principled and computationally grounded mapping between neural and behavioral levels of analyses in people to inform personalized and rational treatment design for mental health symptoms.

Appointments

Education & Training

PhD
Washington University School of Medicine (2011)
MS
Washington University School of Medicine (2007)

Research

Overview

Our group's research focus is centered on computational and cognitive neuroscience of mental illness. Specifically, we study at the neural system level mechanisms involved in higher order cognitive operations, such as working memory, as well as their interaction with neural systems involved in affective processes, with the aim of understanding how these computations may go awry in the context of severe mental illness. Methodologically, we use use a combination of tools, such as task-based, resting-state, pharmacological multi-modal neuroimaging, as well as computational modeling approaches to map neural alterations that lead to poor mental health outcomes. The combination of these tools informs a quantitative and personalized 'Computational Psychiatry' framework for development of neuro-behavioral markers that can explicitly inform treatment. The overarching goal of the group is to develop neurobiologically principled and computationally grounded mapping between neural and behavioral levels of analyses in people to inform personalized and rational treatment design for mental health symptoms.


Specific Research Areas

  • Pharmacological Neuroimaging & Computational Modeling
  • Cognition-Affective Computations in Mental Illness
  • Mapping Neuro-behavioral Variation to Inform Mental Health Treatments
  • Computational Informatics Architectures for Multi-modal Imaging

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)

Affect; Cognition; Computational Biology; Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted; Emotions; Memory, Short-Term; Mental Disorders; Neuroimaging; Schizophrenia; Substance-Related Disorders

Research at a Glance

Yale Co-Authors

Frequent collaborators of Alan Anticevic's published research.

Publications

Clinical Trials

Current Trials

Academic Achievements and Community Involvement

  • activity

    Member

  • honor

    A.E. Bennett Research Award

  • honor

    Klerman Prize for Exceptional Clinical Research

  • honor

    NARSAD Independent Investigator Award

  • honor

    Janet Taylor Spence Award For Transformative Early Career Contributions

Get In Touch

Contacts

Mailing Address

Psychiatry

34 Park St., CNRU

New Haven, CT 06519

United States