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Dive into the research topics where Kelsey E. Hudson is active.

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Featured researches published by Kelsey E. Hudson.


Journal of Family Psychology | 2014

Observed parental responsiveness/warmth and children's coping: cross-sectional and prospective relations in a family depression preventive intervention.

Kelly H. Watson; Jennifer P. Dunbar; Jennifer C. Thigpen; Michelle M. Reising; Kelsey E. Hudson; Laura McKee; Rex Forehand; Bruce E. Compas

The current study examined concurrent and prospective relations between observed parenting behaviors and childrens coping strategies in the context of a preventive intervention designed to change both parenting and childrens use of secondary control coping. Questionnaires and direct observations were obtained from parents with a history of depression (N = 180) and their children (ages 9-15 years) at baseline, 6-month (after completion of the intervention), and 18-month follow-up assessments. Cross-sectional analyses indicate that baseline observed parental responsiveness/warmth was significantly associated with composite parent/child reports of childrens baseline primary control, secondary control, and disengagement coping. Using a mixed effects model, prospective mediational analyses indicate that intervention-driven improvements in observed parental responsiveness/warmth from baseline to 6 months significantly accounted for increases in childrens use of secondary control coping strategies from baseline to the 18-month follow-up assessment. No significant mediation effects emerged for primary control coping or disengagement coping. The present findings suggest that it may be possible to improve childrens coping strategies not only through targeted interventions, but also indirectly by improving responsive and warm parenting behaviors. Limitations and strengths are noted and implications for future research are outlined.


Biological Psychiatry | 2017

Inattention and Reaction Time Variability Are Linked to Ventromedial Prefrontal Volume in Adolescents

Matthew D. Albaugh; Catherine Orr; Bader Chaarani; Robert R. Althoff; Nicholas Allgaier; Nicholas D’Alberto; Kelsey E. Hudson; Scott Mackey; Philip A. Spechler; Tobias Banaschewski; Rüdiger Brühl; Arun L.W. Bokde; Uli Bromberg; Christian Büchel; Anna Cattrell; Patricia J. Conrod; Sylvane Desrivières; Herta Flor; Vincent Frouin; Jürgen Gallinat; Robert Goodman; Penny A. Gowland; Yvonne Grimmer; Andreas Heinz; Viola Kappel; Jean-Luc Martinot; Marie-Laure Paillère Martinot; Frauke Nees; Dimitri Papadopoulos Orfanos; Jani Penttilä

BACKGROUND Neuroimaging studies of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) have most commonly reported volumetric abnormalities in the basal ganglia, cerebellum, and prefrontal cortices. Few studies have examined the relationship between ADHD symptomatology and brain structure in population-based samples. We investigated the relationship between dimensional measures of ADHD symptomatology, brain structure, and reaction time variability-an index of lapses in attention. We also tested for associations between brain structural correlates of ADHD symptomatology and maps of dopaminergic gene expression. METHODS Psychopathology and imaging data were available for 1538 youths. Parent ratings of ADHD symptoms were obtained using the Development and Well-Being Assessment and the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ). Self-reports of ADHD symptoms were assessed using the youth version of the SDQ. Reaction time variability was available in a subset of participants. For each measure, whole-brain voxelwise regressions with gray matter volume were calculated. RESULTS Parent ratings of ADHD symptoms (Development and Well-Being Assessment and SDQ), adolescent self-reports of ADHD symptoms on the SDQ, and reaction time variability were each negatively associated with gray matter volume in an overlapping region of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex. Maps of DRD1 and DRD2 gene expression were associated with brain structural correlates of ADHD symptomatology. CONCLUSIONS This is the first study to reveal relationships between ventromedial prefrontal cortex structure and multi-informant measures of ADHD symptoms in a large population-based sample of adolescents. Our results indicate that ventromedial prefrontal cortex structure is a biomarker for ADHD symptomatology. These findings extend previous research implicating the default mode network and dopaminergic dysfunction in ADHD.


Progress in Brain Research | 2016

Response inhibition and addiction medicine: from use to abstinence.

Philip A. Spechler; Bader Chaarani; Kelsey E. Hudson; Alexandra S. Potter; John J. Foxe; Hugh Garavan

Historically, neuroscientific research into addiction has emphasized affective and reinforcement mechanisms as the essential elements underlying the pursuit of drugs, their abuse, and difficulties associated with abstinence. However, research over the last decade or so has shown that cognitive control systems, associated largely but not exclusively with the frontal lobes, are also important contributors to drug use behaviors. Here, we focus on inhibitory control and its contribution to both current use and abstinence. A body of evidence points to impaired inhibitory abilities across a range of drugs of abuse. Typically, studies suggest that substance-abusing individuals are characterized by relative hypoactivity in brain systems underlying inhibitory control. In contrast, abstinent users tend to show either normal or supernormal levels of activity in the same systems attesting to the importance of inhibitory control in suppressing the drug use urges that plague attempts at abstinence. In this chapter, the brain and behavioral basis of response inhibition will be reviewed, with a focus on neuroimaging studies of response inhibition in current and abstinent drug abusers.


Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience | 2015

Cannabis use in early adolescence: Evidence of amygdala hypersensitivity to signals of threat

Philip A. Spechler; Catherine Orr; Bader Chaarani; Kees-Jan Kan; Scott Mackey; Aaron Morton; Mitchell Snowe; Kelsey E. Hudson; Robert R. Althoff; Stephen T. Higgins; Anna Cattrell; Herta Flor; Frauke Nees; Tobias Banaschewski; Arun L.W. Bokde; Robert Whelan; Christian Büchel; Uli Bromberg; Patricia J. Conrod; Vincent Frouin; Dimitri Papadopoulos; Jürgen Gallinat; Andreas Heinz; Henrik Walter; Bernd Ittermann; Penny A. Gowland; Tomáš Paus; Luise Poustka; Jean-Luc Martinot; Eric Artiges

Highlights • Teenagers experimenting with cannabis may be characterized with fMRI.• We report a face processing study of cannabis experimenting teenagers.• Cannabis experimenting teenagers exhibit greater amygdala reactivity to angry faces.• Very low use of cannabis during adolescence may impact healthy emotional development.


Archive | 2016

Response inhibition and addiction medicine

Philip A. Spechler; Bader Chaarani; Kelsey E. Hudson; Alexandra S. Potter; John J. Foxe; Hugh Garavan

Historically, neuroscientific research into addiction has emphasized affective and reinforcement mechanisms as the essential elements underlying the pursuit of drugs, their abuse, and difficulties associated with abstinence. However, research over the last decade or so has shown that cognitive control systems, associated largely but not exclusively with the frontal lobes, are also important contributors to drug use behaviors. Here, we focus on inhibitory control and its contribution to both current use and abstinence. A body of evidence points to impaired inhibitory abilities across a range of drugs of abuse. Typically, studies suggest that substance-abusing individuals are characterized by relative hypoactivity in brain systems underlying inhibitory control. In contrast, abstinent users tend to show either normal or supernormal levels of activity in the same systems attesting to the importance of inhibitory control in suppressing the drug use urges that plague attempts at abstinence. In this chapter, the brain and behavioral basis of response inhibition will be reviewed, with a focus on neuroimaging studies of response inhibition in current and abstinent drug abusers.


Cerebral Cortex | 2018

Ventromedial prefrontal volume in adolescence predicts hyperactive/inattentive symptoms in adulthood

Matthew D. Albaugh; Masha Y. Ivanova; Bader Chaarani; Catherine Orr; Nicholas Allgaier; Robert R. Althoff; Nicholas D’Alberto; Kelsey E. Hudson; Scott Mackey; Philip A. Spechler; Tobias Banaschewski; Rüdiger Brühl; Arun L.W. Bokde; Uli Bromberg; Christian Büchel; Anna Cattrell; Patricia J. Conrod; Sylvane Desrivières; Herta Flor; Vincent Frouin; Jürgen Gallinat; Robert Goodman; Penny A. Gowland; Yvonne Grimmer; Andreas Heinz; Viola Kappel; Jean-Luc Martinot; Marie-Laure Paillère Martinot; Frauke Nees; Dimitri Papadopoulos Orfanos

Youths with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptomatology often exhibit residual inattention and/or hyperactivity in adulthood; however, this is not true for all individuals. We recently reported that dimensional, multi-informant ratings of hyperactive/inattentive symptoms are associated with ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) structure. Herein, we investigate the degree to which vmPFC structure during adolescence predicts hyperactive/inattentive symptomatology at 5-year follow-up. Structural equation modeling was used to test the extent to which adolescent vmPFC volume predicts hyperactive/inattentive symptomatology 5 years later in early adulthood. 1104 participants (M = 14.52 years, standard deviation = 0.42; 583 females) possessed hyperactive/inattentive symptom data at 5-year follow-up, as well as quality controlled neuroimaging data and complete psychometric data at baseline. Self-reports of hyperactive/inattentive symptomatology were obtained during adolescence and at 5-year follow-up using the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ). At baseline and 5-year follow-up, a hyperactive/inattentive latent variable was derived from items on the SDQ. Baseline vmPFC volume predicted adult hyperactive/inattentive symptomatology (standardized coefficient = -0.274, P < 0.001) while controlling for baseline hyperactive/inattentive symptomatology. These results are the first to reveal relations between adolescent brain structure and adult hyperactive/inattentive symptomatology, and suggest that early structural development of the vmPFC may be consequential for the subsequent expression of hyperactive/inattentive symptoms.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2018

The initiation of cannabis use in adolescence is predicted by sex-specific psychosocial and neurobiological features

Philip A. Spechler; Nicholas Allgaier; Bader Chaarani; Robert Whelan; Richard Watts; Catherine Orr; Matthew D. Albaugh; Nicholas D'Alberto; Stephen T. Higgins; Kelsey E. Hudson; Scott Mackey; Alexandra S. Potter; Tobias Banaschewski; Arun L.W. Bokde; Uli Bromberg; Christian Büchel; Anna Cattrell; Patricia J. Conrod; Sylvane Desrivières; Herta Flor; Vincent Frouin; Jürgen Gallinat; Penny A. Gowland; Andreas Heinz; Bernd Ittermann; Jean-Luc Martinot; Marie-Laure Paillère Martinot; Frauke Nees; Dimitri Papadopoulos Orfanos; Tomáš Paus

Cannabis use initiated during adolescence might precipitate negative consequences in adulthood. Thus, predicting adolescent cannabis use prior to any exposure will inform the aetiology of substance abuse by disentangling predictors from consequences of use. In this prediction study, data were drawn from the IMAGEN sample, a longitudinal study of adolescence. All selected participants (n = 1,581) were cannabis‐naïve at age 14. Those reporting any cannabis use (out of six ordinal use levels) by age 16 were included in the outcome group (N = 365, males n = 207). Cannabis‐naïve participants at age 14 and 16 were included in the comparison group (N = 1,216, males n = 538). Psychosocial, brain and genetic features were measured at age 14 prior to any exposure. Cross‐validated regularized logistic regressions for each use level by sex were used to perform feature selection and obtain prediction error statistics on independent observations. Predictors were probed for sex‐ and drug‐specificity using post‐hoc logistic regressions. Models reliably predicted use as indicated by satisfactory prediction error statistics, and contained psychosocial features common to both sexes. However, males and females exhibited distinct brain predictors that failed to predict use in the opposite sex or predict binge drinking in independent samples of same‐sex participants. Collapsed across sex, genetic variation on catecholamine and opioid receptors marginally predicted use. Using machine learning techniques applied to a large multimodal dataset, we identified a risk profile containing psychosocial and sex‐specific brain prognostic markers, which were likely to precede and influence cannabis initiation.


Journal of The International Neuropsychological Society | 2018

Cross-Disorder Cognitive Impairments in Youth Referred for Neuropsychiatric Evaluation

Alysa E. Doyle; Pieter Jelle Vuijk; Nathan D. Doty; Lauren M. McGrath; Brian L. B. Willoughby; Ellen O’Donnell; H. Kent Wilson; Mary K. Colvin; Deanna C. Toner; Kelsey E. Hudson; Jessica E. Blais; Hillary L. Ditmars; Stephen V. Faraone; Larry J. Seidman; Ellen B. Braaten


Biological Psychiatry | 2018

F67. Increased Amygdalar Activation to Angry Faces is Linked to Reduced Prefrontal Cortical Thickness and Hyperactive/Inattentive Symptomatology in Adolescents

Matthew D. Albaugh; Catherine Orr; Philip A. Spechler; Bader Chaarani; Nicholas Allgaier; Robert R. Althoff; Nicholas D'Alberto; Kelsey E. Hudson; Scott Mackey; Claude Lepage; Vladimir Fonov; Louis Collins; Pierre Rioux; Hugh Garavan; Alexandra S. Potter; James J. Hudziak


Biological Psychiatry | 2017

40. Neural Correlates of Adolescent Irritability and Its Comorbidity

Robert R. Althoff; Bader Chaarani; Kees-Jan Kan; Scott Mackey; Phil Spechler; Catherine Orr; Kelsey E. Hudson; Argyris Stringaris; Hugh Garavan

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