
Lauren K. White
VerifiedUniversity of Pennsylvania · Rehabilitation Medicine
Active 1989–2024
Research topics
- Medicine
- Psychiatry
- Psychology
- Developmental psychology
- Clinical psychology
Selected publications
American Journal of Psychiatry · 2024 · 22 citations
- Psychology
- Clinical psychology
- Medicine
OBJECTIVE: Anxiety disorders are prevalent among youths and are often highly impairing. Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is an effective first-line treatment. The authors investigated the brain mechanisms associated with symptom change following CBT. METHODS: Unmedicated youths diagnosed with an anxiety disorder underwent 12 weeks of CBT as part of two randomized clinical trials testing the efficacy of adjunctive computerized cognitive training. Across both trials, participants completed a threat-processing task during functional MRI before and after treatment. Age-matched healthy comparison youths completed two scans over the same time span. The mean age of the samples was 13.20 years (SD=2.68); 41% were male (youths with anxiety disorders, N=69; healthy comparison youths, N=62). An additional sample including youths at temperamental risk for anxiety (N=87; mean age, 10.51 years [SD=0.43]; 41% male) was utilized to test the stability of anxiety-related neural differences in the absence of treatment. Whole-brain regional activation changes (thresholded at p<0.001) were examined using task-based blood-oxygen-level-dependent response. RESULTS: Before treatment, patients with an anxiety disorder exhibited altered activation in fronto-parietal attention networks and limbic regions relative to healthy comparison children across all task conditions. Fronto-parietal hyperactivation normalized over the course of treatment, whereas limbic responses remained elevated after treatment. In the at-risk sample, overlapping clusters emerged between regions showing stable associations with anxiety over time and regions showing treatment-related changes. CONCLUSIONS: Activation in fronto-parietal networks may normalize after CBT in unmedicated pediatric anxiety patients. Limbic regions may be less amenable to acute CBT effects. Findings from the at-risk sample suggest that treatment-related changes may not be attributed solely to the passage of time.
The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Children’s Conduct Problems and Callous-Unemotional Traits
Child Psychiatry & Human Development · 2021 · 44 citations
- Psychology
- Developmental psychology
- Psychiatry
Recent grants
Relations between attention bias to threat and negative interpretive bias
NIH · $91k · 2009–2012
Frequent coauthors
- 225 shared
Raquel E. Gur
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
- 163 shared
Ran Barzilay
University of Pennsylvania
- 92 shared
Daniel S. Pine
The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley
- 92 shared
Tyler M. Moore
California University of Pennsylvania
- 86 shared
Ruben C. Gur
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
- 84 shared
Barbara H. Chaiyachati
- 79 shared
Megan M. Himes
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
- 78 shared
Kosha Ruparel
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