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Browsing OA-APC Award Fund Winners Works by Author "Barendse, Marjolein E. A."
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Item Open Access The impact of depression on mothers’ neural processing of their adolescents’ affective behavior(Oxford Academic, 2022) Barendse, Marjolein E. A.; Allen, Nicholas B.; Sheeber, Lisa; Pfeifer, Jennifer H.Depression affects neural processing of emotional stimuli and could, therefore, impact parent–child interactions. However, the neural processes with which mothers with depression process their adolescents’ affective interpersonal signals and how this relates to mothers’ parenting behavior are poorly understood. Mothers with and without depression (N = 64 and N = 51, respectively; Mage = 40 years) from low-income families completed an interaction task with their adolescents (Mage = 12.8 years), which was coded for both individuals’ aggressive, dysphoric, positive and neutral affective behavior. While undergoing fMRI, mothers viewed video clips from this task of affective behavior from their own and an unfamiliar adolescent. Relative to non-depressed mothers, those with depression showed more aggressive and less positive affective behavior during the interaction task and more activation in the bilateral insula, superior temporal gyrus and striatum but less in the lateral prefrontal cortex while viewing aggressive and neutral affect. Findings were comparable for own and unfamiliar adolescents’ affect. Heightened limbic, striatal and sensory responses were associated with more aggressive and dysphoric parenting behavior during the interactions, while reduced lateral prefrontal activation was associated with less positive parenting behavior. These results highlight the importance of depressed mothers’ affective information processing for understanding mothers’ behavior during interactions with their adolescents.Item Open Access A Researcher’s Guide to the Measurement and Modeling of Puberty in the ABCD Study® at Baseline(Frontiers Media, 2021-05-05) Cheng, Theresa W.; Magis-Weinberg, Lucía; Williamson, Victoria Guazzelli; Ladouceur, Cecile D.; Whittle, Sarah L.; Herting, Megan M.; Uban, Kristina A.; Byrne, Michelle L.; Barendse, Marjolein E. A.; Shirtcliff, Elizabeth A.; Pfeifer, Jennifer H.The Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development℠ (ABCD) Study is an ongoing, diverse, longitudinal, and multi-site study of 11,880 adolescents in the United States. The ABCD Study provides open access to data about pubertal development at a large scale, and this article is a researcher’s guide that both describes its pubertal variables and outlines recommendations for use. These considerations are contextualized with reference to cross-sectional empirical analyses of pubertal measures within the baseline ABCD dataset by Herting, Uban, and colleagues (2021). We discuss strategies to capitalize on strengths, mitigate weaknesses, and appropriately interpret study limitations for researchers using pubertal variables within the ABCD dataset, with the aim of building toward a robust science of adolescent development.