2022 Distinguished Wiley Speaker: 

Norissa Williams, PhD, MSW, Department of Applied Psychology, NYU Steinhardt School of Culture, Education & Human Development, New York, USA

2:30 – 3:30 PM on Friday, November 11, 2022:

Diversifying the Pipeline: Addressing Structural Issues with Structural Interventions

Dr. Norissa Williams holds a doctorate in psychology, a masters in social work and is the CEO of Liberation RPI. Liberation RPI partners with organizations to achieve the aims of liberation through developing their capacity to be anti-racist, anti-oppressive, and develop cultural competence. She accomplishes this through the provision of trainings, needs assessments, strategic action planning, program implementation, facilitation, moderation, coaching and general consultation.  Her scholarship relates to culturally embedded processes of coping socialization, cross cultural differences in mental health help-seeking behaviors, critical consciousness development,  decolonizing and liberating pedagogical and clinical practices, as well as anti-racist/anti-oppressive practices in organizational contexts.

Program Director:
Peter Gerhardstein, Binghamtom University-SUNY

Perinatal Pre-Conference Program Director:
Marion van den Heuvel, Tilburg University, Sponsored by the: International Perinatal Brain and Behavior Network (IPBBN)

Conference Coordinator:
Julie Campbell, Illinois State University

Conference Associate Coordinators:
Christopher Harshaw, University of New Orleans and 
Margaret Whedon, Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School 

PROGRAM

Wednesday, November 9, 2022

10:30 – 11:30 AM Perinatal Pre-Conference Symposium 1 YOU ARE WHAT MOTHER EATS: TRANSLATIONAL AND CLINICAL WORK ON THE INFLUENCE OF PRENATAL MATERNAL NUTRITION ON OFFSPRING NEUROBEHAVIORAL HEALTHElinor L. Sullivan, Associate Professor in Psychiatry, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR (Chair); Elizabeth K. Wood, Ph.D., Post-doctoral Trainee, Psychiatry Department, Oregon Health & Science University (Co-Chair & Discussant) MORE DETAILS

11:30 AM – 12:30 PM Lunch Break on Own

12:30 – 2:15 PM Perinatal Pre-Conference Symposium 2 NOVEL EEG METHODS FOR THE STUDY OF BRAIN FUNCTION ACROSS DEVELOPMENT, Santiago Morales, PhD, Department of Psychology, University of Southern California, USA (Chair), Discussant: George Buzzell, PhD, Florida International University, Miami, USA MORE DETAILS

2:15 – 3:15 PM Perinatal Pre-Conference Poster Pitches in the Kon Tiki Ballroom

2:15 PM PN01     OPENPOSE-BASED MOVEMENT ARTIFACT REJECTION (OMAR) FOR INFANT EEG DATA
Sahana Nagabhushan Kalburgi, Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, Los Angeles, United States

2:20 PM PN02     THE EFFECT OF PRENATAL EXPOSURE TO THC, NICOTINE, AND THE COMBINATION ON EARLY MOTOR DEVELOPMENT IN A RODENT MODEL
Alia Westphal, San Diego State University, San Diego, United States

2:25 PM PN03     MATERNAL PREGNANCY-SPECIFIC ANXIETY AND INFANT OUTCOMES AT 12 MONTHS: THE MEDIATING ROLE OF MATERNAL PRENATAL INFLAMMATION
Gabrielle Rinne, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, United States

2:30 PM PN04     Prenatal Cannabis Exposures and Child Autism Related Outcomes
CHAELA NUTOR, Emory University, Atlanta, United States

2:35 PM PN05     NEURAL MECHANISMS OF FEEDING DYSREGULATION FOLLOWING PRENATAL OPIOID EXPOSURE IN MALE AND FEMALE RATS
Kelsea Gildawie, Tufts University, North Grafton, United States

2:40 PM PN06     GESTATIONAL WEIGHT GAIN AND INFANT EMOTION REGULATION: NEGATIVE EMOTIONALITY AND AFFECT-BIASED ATTENTION AT 6 MONTHS
Chen Su, University of Denver, Denver, United States

2:45 PM PN07     Neurophysiology of Sustained Attention in Early Infancy: Investigating Longitudinal Relations with Recognition Memory
Annie Aitken, New York University, Brooklyn, United States

2:50 PM PN08     CULTURAL VARIABILITY IN PARENT-CHILD INTERACTIONS DURING INFANCY
Claudia Espinoza-Heredia, Columbia University, New York, United States

2:55 PM PN09     SEX DIFFERENCES IN THE MATURATION OF THE GRASP IN INFANCY: A LONGITUDINAL KINEMATIC ANALYSIS
Kaitlyn Campbell, Temple University, Philadelphia, United States

3:00 PM PN10     EARLY EXPOSURE TO INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE AND SALIENCE NETWORK FUNCTIONAL CONNECTIVITY IN SOUTH AFRICAN INFANTS OVER THE FIRST POSTNATAL YEAR
Michal Zieff, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa

3:05 PM PN11     INFANTS PRENATALLY EXPOSED TO SARS-COV-2 SHOW THE ABSENCE OF FIDGETY MOVEMENTS AND ARE AT HIGHER RISK FOR NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS: A COMPARATIVE STUDY
Vania Aldrete, Universidad Panamericana campus Ciudad de M√©xico, Ciudad de Mexico, Mexico

3:10 PM PN12     MATERNAL ART THROUGHOUT PREGNANCY PREVENTS CAUDATE VOLUME REDUCTIONS IN HIV-EXPOSED UNINFECTED NEONATES
Abdulmumin Ibrahim, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa

3:15 – 3:30 PM Break – Registration for ISDP 2022 Hybrid Meeting

3:30 – 5 PM ISDP 2022 Hybrid Meeting Symposium Session 1Columbia University Department of Psychiatry Sponsored Symposium: NEUROBIOLOGICAL MECHANISMS UNDERLYING THE EFFECTS OF ATTACHMENT ON DEVELOPMENT ACROSS SPECIES

Chairs: Camelia E. Hostinar, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, University of California-Davis Psychology Department and Paul D. Hastings, Ph.D., Professor, University of California-Davis Psychology Department)

5:00 – 5:45 PM ISDP Presidential Address, Megan R. Gunnar, PhD, University of Minnesota

5:45 – 7:30 PM Welcome Reception and Poster Session 1 click here

Thursday, November 10, 2022

7:00 – 9:00 AM PST Virtual Poster Session 1 – Session will be held in Gather.Town from 7:00 AM – 9AM in San Diego (in-person presenters can present from the conference area if they wish to discuss the virtual posters with their presenters). More DETAILS

8:00 – 9:00 AM Meeting the Professors Breakfast Meeting (extra registration was required)

8:00 – 9:00 AM Continental Breakfast

9:00 – 10:30 AM Symposium Session 2: YOUNG INVESTIGATOR SYMPOSIUM: SOCIOCULTURAL STRESSORS, PRENATAL STRESS AND BIRTH OUTCOMES AMONG RACIALLY AND ETHNICALLY MARGINALIZED POPULATIONS Sponsored by Wiley
Chair: Özlü Aran, M.S., M.A., graduate student, University of Denver, USA
Discussant: Kimberly D’Anna-Hernandez, Associate Professor of Psychology, Marquette University, USA

10:30 – 11:00 AM Coffee Break, visit the Exhibits & Posters

11:00 AM – 12:00 PM Oral Session 1- Early Life Adversity/Stress

O1:01 PLACENTA LEPTIN DNA METHYLATION LEVELS ARE ASSOCIATED WITH INFANT CORTISOLBrie M. Reid, Brown University, Rhode Island, United States

O1:02 WORTH THE RISK? EFFECTS OF DEVELOPMENT AND EARLY CARE QUALITY ON LATERAL HABENULA INVOLVEMENT ON INFANT SOCIAL BEHAVIOR FLEXIBILITYAnne George, Kennedy Krieger Institute & JHU SOM, Baltimore, United States

O1:03 ALTERATIONS IN PRO/ANTI-INFLAMMATORY MARKERS IN HIPPOCAMPUS AND BLOOD AFTER REPEATED SUCROSE AND PAIN EXPOSURE IN MOUSE PUPSFermin Hoq, University of British Columbia, Canada 

O1:04 IDENTIFYING GROUP-BASED PATTERNS OF ACUTE STRESS REACTIVITY IN SALIVARY ALPHA AMYLASE AND CORTISOL IN YOUNG CHILDREN: ASSOCIATIONS WITH MATERNAL PSYCHOSOCIAL RISK FACTORSOlivia Silke, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA, United States

O1:05 AMNIOTIC FLUID CORTISOL PREDICTS NEONATAL AND INFANT DEVELOPMENT IN NON-STRESSED RHESUS MONKEYSAmanda M. Dettmer, Yale Child Study Center, New Haven, United States

O1:06 STRUCTURAL NETWORK TOPOLOGY OF THE NEONATAL BRAIN FOLLOWING PRENATAL SRI ANTIDEPRESSANT EXPOSURE, AND ASSOCIATIONS WITH INFANT BEHAVIOUR AT 2-YEARSKayleigh S.J. Campbell, University of British Columbia and BC Children’s Hospital Research Institute, Vancouver, Canada

12:00 – 1:30 PM Lunch on Own

1:30 – 3:00 PM Symposium Session 3: PARENTING IN ALTRICIAL SPECIES: IMPLICATIONS FOR CO-EVOLVED AND CO-DEVELOPING PARENT-OFFSPRING SYSTEMS
Chair: Emma Murrugara, Department of Human Development, Cornell University
Co-Chair & Discussant: Emma Murrugara, Department of Human Development, Cornell University

3:00 – 3:30 PM Coffee Break, visit the Exhibits & Posters

3:30 – 4:30 PM Oral Session 2: Stress in Adolescence

O2:01 NEURAL SENSITIVITY TO STRESS PREDICTS ANHEDONIA IN ADOLESCENTSJaclyn S. Kirshenbaum, New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, United States

O2:02 PRECONCEPTION EXPOSURE TO CHRONIC SOCIAL AND UNPREDICTABLE ENVIRONMENTAL STRESSORS IMPAIRS SOCIAL PLAY AND PROMOTES DEPRESSIVE-LIKE BEHAVIOR IN PRAIRIE VOLE OFFSPRING: MEDIATION BY PARENTAL PAIR-BONDING AND PARENTING BEHAVIORSW. Tang Watanasriyakul, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, IL, USA

O2:03 PROBING THE CONTENT OF AFFECTIVE SEMANTIC MEMORY STRUCTURES  FOLLOWING CAREGIVING-RELATED EARLY ADVERSITIESAnna Vannucci, Columbia University, New York, United States 

O2:04 STRESS AND THE EPIGENOME: A ROLE FOR BEHAVIORAL INTERVENTIONSTaylor S. Campbell, University of Delaware, United States 

O2:05 LONELINESS AND ADJUSTMENT IN YOUNG ADULTS: RESPIRATORY SINUS ARRHYTHMIA AND SLEEP DISTURBANCES AS MODERATORSJiaxin Chen, Colgate University, Hamilton, United States

O2:06 ASSOCIATIONS BETWEEN ENVIRONMENTAL TOXINS AND INFLAMMATION IN ADOLESCENCETiffany S. Chen, University of California Davis, Davis, United States

4:30 – 5:30 PM ISDP Awards Session

5:30 – 7:00 PM Poster Session 2 & Poster Reception click here

8:00 – 9:30 PM PST Virtual Poster Session 2 – Session will be held in Gather.Town from 8PM-9:30PM IN San Diego (in-person presenters can present from the conference area if they wish to participate after the in-person poster session reception if they wish to discuss the virtual posters with their presenters). More DETAILS

Friday, November 11, 2022

8:00 – 9:00 AM Meet the Professors (tentative) and Continental Breakfast

9:00 – 10:30 AM Symposium Session 4: GOLDEN SLUMBERS – THE IMPORTANCE OF EARLY LIFE SLEEP FOR NEUROBIOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT AND BEHAVIOR
Nora Moog, Ph.D., Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany (Chair); Katharina Pittner, Ph.D, Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany (Co-Chair)

10:30 – 10:45 AM Coffee Break, visit the Exhibits

10:45 – 11:45 AM Oral Session 3: Parental Exposure Effects

O3:01 LONG-TERM ASSOCIATION OF IN-UTERO MATERNAL EXPOSURE TO SUBSTANCES AND EEG BRAIN FUNCTIONING AT 4-, 5-, 7-, 9-, AND 11-YEARS-OF-AGENicolò Pini, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York, United States

O3:02 THE ROLE OF PARENTAL SELF-EFFICACY AND CURRENT ADVERSITY IN THE INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSMISSION OF PARENTAL ADVERSE CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCESDeborah Han, University of Denver, Denver, United States

O3:03 EXPERIENCES OF DISCRIMINATION REPORTED DURING PREGNANCY AND INFANT EMERGING EFFORTFUL CONTROLKenia M. Rivera, University of Denver, Denver, United States

O3:04 ELEVATED MARENTAL PTSD SYMPTOMS PRIOR TO CONCEPTION AND INFLAMMATION IN PREGNANCY PREDICT SHORTER BUCCAL CHILD TELOMERE LENGTHGabrielle R. Rinne, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, United States

O3:05 EXAMINING THE RELATIONS BETWEEN PRESCHOOL CHILDREN’S VAGAL FLEXIBILITY ACROSS SOCIAL STRESSOR TASKS AND PARENT- AND CLINICIAN-RATED ANXIETYNicholas J. Wagner, Boston University, Boston, United States

O3:06 CHARACTERIZATION OF AUTONOMIC NERVOUS SYSTEM FUNCTION IN FETUSES EXPOSED TO GESTATIONAL DIABETES MELLITUSShayan Chowdhury, Columbia University, New York, United States 

11:45 AM – 1:00 PM Lunch on Own

1:00 – 2:30 PM Symposium Session 5: INFUSING COMMUNITY-ENGAGED METHODS WITH DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOBIOLOGICAL SCIENCE
Chair: Arianna M. Gard, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Psychology and the Neuroscience and Cognitive Neuroscience Program, University of Maryland, College Park
Co-Chair: Natalie H. Brito, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Developmental Psychology, New York University
Moderator: Koraly Perez-Edgar, Ph.D., McCourtney Professor of Child Studies and Professor of Psychology, The Pennsylvania State University

2:30 – 3:30 PM DEI Presentation and 2022 Wiley Distinguished Speaker: Norissa Williams, PhD, MSW, Department of Applied Psychology, NYU Steinhardt School of Culture, Education & Human Development, New York, USA

“Diversifying the Pipeline: Addressing Structural Issues with Structural Interventions”

3:30 – 3:45 PM Coffee Break

3:45 – 4:55 PM Oral Session 4: Regulation & Cognitive Control 

O4:01 FETAL HEART RATE AND HEART RATE VARIABILITY ASSOCIATES WITH BRAINSTEM AND HYPOTHALAMIC CONNECTIVITY IN NEONATESAngeliki Pollatou, Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, NY, United States 

O4:02 PERSISTENT EFFECT OF EARLY LIFE SLEEP DISRUPTION IN PRAIRIE VOLES ON REM SLEEP TIME ARE SEX SPECIFIC AND AGE DEPENDENTNoah E.P. Milman, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, United States (Primary Presenter)

O4:03 Microstates in infancy: Topography parameters and temperament.Kara L. Brown, MS, Washington State University, Pullman, USA, Maria A. Gartstein, PhD, Washington State University, Pullman, USA

O4:04 Identification of longitudinal infant EEG gamma power profiles using Latent Profile AnalysisLara J. Pierce, York University, Toronto, Canada (Primary Presenter); Charles A. Nelson, Boston Children’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, United States

O4:05 NOW AND THEN: THE ROLE OF NEURAL AND COGNITIVE EFFICIENCY DURING BEHAVIORAL CONTROL AND IN SOCIALLY INHIBITED CHILDRENAlana J. Anderson, Washington University School of Medicine, Saint Louis, United States

O4:06 INFANT FUNCTIONAL BRAIN NETWORKS ARE ASSOCIATED WITH FEARFUL TEMPERAMENTCourtney A. Filippi, National Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda, United States 

O4:07 ASSOCIATIONS BETWEEN MATERNAL PARENTING BEHAVIOR AND INFANT BRAIN ACTIVITY AMONG FAMILIES EXPERIENCING POVERTYMelissa A. Giebler, Teachers College, Columbia University, New York, United States

4:55 — 5:15 PM ISDP Business Meeting

5:15 PM Invitation to ISDP 2023 Hybrid Meeting in Utrecht (Amsterdam), Netherlands, Summer, 2023

5:20 PM Adjourn