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Dive into the research topics where Miranda L. Campbell is active.

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Featured researches published by Miranda L. Campbell.


Journal of Abnormal Psychology | 2013

Biomarkers of Threat and Reward Sensitivity Demonstrate Unique Associations With Risk for Psychopathology

Brady D. Nelson; Sarah Kate McGowan; Casey Sarapas; E. Jenna Robison-Andrew; Sarah E. Altman; Miranda L. Campbell; Stephanie M. Gorka; Andrea C. Katz; Stewart A. Shankman

Two emotional/motivational constructs that have been posited to underlie anxiety and depressive disorders are heightened sensitivity to threat and reduced sensitivity to reward, respectively. It is unclear, though, whether these constructs are only epiphenomena or also connote risk for these disorders (and relatedly, whether they connote risk for separate disorders). Using family history of psychopathology as an indicator of risk, the present study examined whether biomarkers of sensitivity to threat (startle potentiation) and reward (frontal EEG asymmetry) were associated with similar or different familial liabilities. In addition, the present study examined whether these biomarkers were associated with risk independent of proband DSM-IV diagnosis. One-hundred and seventy-three individuals diagnosed with panic disorder (PD), early onset major depressive disorder (MDD), both (comorbids), or controls completed two laboratory paradigms assessing sensitivity to predictable/unpredictable threat (measured via startle response) and reward (measured via frontal EEG asymmetry during a gambling task). Results indicated that across all participants: (a) startle potentiation to unpredictable threat was associated with family history of PD (but not MDD); and (b) frontal EEG asymmetry while anticipating reward was associated with family history of MDD (but not PD). Additionally, both measures continued to be associated with family history of psychopathology after controlling for proband DSM-IV diagnosis. Results suggest that the proposed biomarkers of sensitivity to unpredictable threat and reward exhibit discriminant validity and may add to the predictive validity of the DSM-IV defined constructs of PD and MDD, respectively.


NeuroImage: Clinical | 2016

Shared white matter alterations across emotional disorders: A voxel-based meta-analysis of fractional anisotropy

Lisanne M. Jenkins; Alyssa Barba; Miranda L. Campbell; Melissa Lamar; Stewart A. Shankman; Alex D. Leow; Olusola Ajilore; Scott A. Langenecker

Background White matter (WM) integrity may represent a shared biomarker for emotional disorders (ED). Aims: To identify transdiagnostic biomarkers of reduced WM by meta-analysis of findings across multiple EDs. Method Web of Science was searched systematically for studies of whole brain analysis of fractional anisotropy (FA) in adults with major depressive disorder, bipolar disorder, social anxiety disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder or posttraumatic stress disorder compared with a healthy control (HC) group. Peak MNI coordinates were extracted from 37 studies of voxel-based analysis (892 HC and 962 with ED) and meta-analyzed using seed-based d Mapping (SDM) Version 4.31. Separate meta-analyses were also conducted for each disorder. Results In the transdiagnostic meta-analysis, reduced FA was identified in ED studies compared to HCs in the left inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus, forceps minor, uncinate fasciculus, anterior thalamic radiation, superior corona radiata, bilateral superior longitudinal fasciculi, and cerebellum. Disorder-specific meta-analyses revealed the OCD group had the most similarities in reduced FA to other EDs, with every cluster of reduced FA overlapping with at least one other diagnosis. The PTSD group was the most distinct, with no clusters of reduced FA overlapping with any other diagnosis. The BD group were the only disorder to show increased FA in any region, and showed a more bilateral pattern of WM changes, compared to the other groups which tended to demonstrate a left lateralized pattern of FA reductions. Conclusions Distinct diagnostic categories of ED show commonalities in WM tracts with reduced FA when compared to HC, which links brain networks involved in cognitive and affective processing. This meta-analysis facilitates an increased understanding of the biological markers that are shared by these ED.


International Journal of Psychophysiology | 2011

Effects of Predictability of Shock Timing and Intensity on Aversive Responses

Stewart A. Shankman; E. Jenna Robison-Andrew; Brady D. Nelson; Sarah E. Altman; Miranda L. Campbell

An important characteristic of aversive stimuli that determines emotional responses is whether the stimuli are predictable. Human laboratory studies in this area have typically operationalized predictability as being able to predict the occurrence of aversive events, but animal studies suggest that being able to predict other characteristics of the stimuli may also play a role in aversive responding. To examine this, the present study examined two characteristics: the timing and intensity of aversive stimuli. Specifically, participants were randomly assigned to receive shocks that were either predictable or unpredictable in terms of when they would occur (timing) and/or their intensity. Indicators of aversive emotional responses were EMG startle responses and subjective anxiety ratings. Results revealed that aversive responding was elevated for unpredictable timing and intensity suggesting that the predictability of both characteristics play a role in aversive responding (though the effects for timing were stronger). In sum, the anxiogenic effects of unpredictability may generalize to situations beyond unpredictable timing.


Archive | 2014

The Different Facets of Anhedonia and Their Associations with Different Psychopathologies

Stewart A. Shankman; Andrea C. Katz; Alison A. DeLizza; Casey Sarapas; Stephanie M. Gorka; Miranda L. Campbell

Over the last several decades, there has been increasing interest in the role that anhedonia plays in various psychopathologies, ranging from mood disorders, to eating disorders, to psychotic disorders. The term ‘anhedonia’ (which simply means, without pleasure) has been used to describe a wide range of constructs, affective experiences, and events. Given the breadth of the term, it is likely that different aspects of anhedonia may be related to different psychopathologies in various ways. This review discusses how the literature has parsed anhedonia and how the various components and facets of anhedonia may relate to various psychopathological constructs. In addition, this review takes concepts and theories from the broad affective science literature and identifies additional components of anhedonia that may be critical to the field’s understanding of the construct. Given the importance that anhedonia plays in a multitude of psychopathological constructs, a careful analysis of the various components and facets of anhedonia may provide a conceptual framework for research in this area.


Journal of Psychiatric Research | 2013

Dysfunctional attitudes as a moderator of pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy for chronic depression

Stewart A. Shankman; Miranda L. Campbell; Daniel N. Klein; Andrew C. Leon; Bruce A. Arnow; Rachel Manber; Martin B. Keller; John C. Markowitz; Barbara O. Rothbaum; Michael E. Thase; James H. Kocsis

OBJECTIVE Individuals with chronic depression exhibit heterogeneous responses to treatment. Important individual differences may therefore exist within this particularly difficult to treat population that act as moderators of treatment response. METHOD The present study examined whether pretreatment levels of dysfunctional attitudes (DA) moderated treatment response in a large sample of chronically depressed individuals. Data were taken from the Research Evaluating the Value of Augmenting Medication with Psychotherapy (REVAMP) treatment study--a multi-site treatment and augmentation study of 808 chronically depressed individuals. REVAMP comprised two phases: 1) a 12-week open-label antidepressant trial and 2), a subsequent phase, in which phase 1 non-remitters (N = 491) were randomized to either receive an ongoing medication algorithm alone, medication plus cognitive behavioral analysis system of psychotherapy, or medication plus brief supportive psychotherapy. RESULT In phase 1, compared to the pharmacotherapy response of patients with lower DA scores, the response for patients with higher DA scores was steeper, but leveled off toward the end of the phase. In phase 2, DA predicted a differential response in the medication only arm, but not in the two psychotherapy + medication conditions. Specifically, in the phase 2 medication only condition, patients with higher DA improved while those with lower DA scores did not. CONCLUSION These results indicate that the relation between DA and treatment response in chronic depression is complex, but suggest that greater DA may be associated with a steeper reduction and/or better response to pharmacotherapy.


Cognition & Emotion | 2014

Are individual differences in appetitive and defensive motivation related? A psychophysiological examination in two samples

Casey Sarapas; Andrea C. Katz; Brady D. Nelson; Miranda L. Campbell; Jeffrey R. Bishop; E. Jenna Robison-Andrew; Sarah E. Altman; Stephanie M. Gorka; Stewart A. Shankman

Appetitive and defensive motivation account for a good deal of variance in personality and mental health, but whether individual differences in these systems are correlated or orthogonal has not been conclusively established. Previous investigations have generally relied on self-report and have yielded conflicting results. We therefore assessed the relation between psychophysiological indices of appetitive and defensive motivation during elicitation of these motivational states: specifically, frontal electroencephalogram asymmetry during reward anticipation and startle response during anticipation of predictable or unpredictable threat of shock. Results in a sample of psychopathology-free community members (n=63), an independent sample of undergraduates with a range of internalising symptoms (n=64), and the combination of these samples (n=127) revealed that differences in responding to the two tasks were not significantly correlated. Average coefficients approached zero in all three samples (community: .04, undergraduate: −.01, combined: .06). Implications of these findings for research on normal and abnormal personality are discussed.


Journal of Abnormal Psychology | 2013

The relation between symptoms of bulimia nervosa and obsessive-compulsive disorder: a startle investigation.

Sarah E. Altman; Miranda L. Campbell; Brady D. Nelson; Julianne P. Faust; Stewart A. Shankman

Bulimia nervosa (BN) and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) co-occur at greater rates than chance and may have shared mechanisms of dysfunction. One of these proposed mechanisms is a hyper-responsive aversive system as indicated by heightened startle response to aversive stimuli. The present study examined this hypothesis using 2 types of aversive stimuli: disorder specific (e.g., high-caloric food pictures for BN, contamination pictures for OCD) and nondisorder specific (e.g., knife). Temporal parameters of aversive responding were also examined by assessing startle response in anticipation of and following picture presentation. The sample consisted of 114 undergraduate women selected to have a broad range of BN and/or OCD symptomatology. OCD symptoms were associated with increased startle potentiation during the anticipation and presentation of contamination pictures, and BN symptoms were associated with increased startle potentiation during disorder-related contamination pictures (e.g., sink, toilet). BN symptoms were also associated with increased startle potentiation during and following the presentation of food pictures (though the former effect was only a trend). Additionally, the interaction of BN and OCD symptoms was associated with elevated startle responding during the presentation of contamination and threat stimuli. Overall, the present study provides evidence that BN and OCD symptoms are associated with heightened aversive responding to disorder-specific stimuli, and comorbid BN and OCD symptoms are associated with heightened aversive responding across disorder-specific and nonspecific aversive stimuli. Clinical and theoretical implications are discussed.


Journal of Abnormal Psychology | 2013

A psychophysiological investigation of threat and reward sensitivity in individuals with panic disorder and/or major depressive disorder.

Stewart A. Shankman; Brady D. Nelson; Casey Sarapas; E. Jenna Robison-Andrew; Miranda L. Campbell; Sarah E. Altman; Sarah Kate McGowan; Andrea C. Katz; Stephanie M. Gorka


Journal of Psychophysiology | 2013

Relation Between Respiratory Sinus Arrythymia and Startle Response During Predictable and Unpredictable Threat

Stephanie M. Gorka; Brady D. Nelson; Casey Sarapas; Miranda L. Campbell; Gregory F. Lewis; Jeffery R. Bishop; Stephen W. Porges; Stewart A. Shankman


Journal of Abnormal Psychology | 2012

Frontal brain asymmetry in depression with comorbid anxiety: a neuropsychological investigation.

Brady D. Nelson; Casey Sarapas; E. Jenna Robison-Andrew; Sarah E. Altman; Miranda L. Campbell; Stewart A. Shankman

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Stewart A. Shankman

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Casey Sarapas

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Stephanie M. Gorka

University of Illinois at Chicago

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E. Jenna Robison-Andrew

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Sarah E. Altman

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Andrea C. Katz

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Sarah Kate McGowan

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Alex D. Leow

University of Illinois at Chicago

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