Lauren B. Alloy Page XXX
Vita
September, 2015
Curriculum Vitae
I. Name: Lauren B. Alloy
Address: Department of Psychology Phone: (215) 204-7326 office
Temple University (610) 527-6095 home
1701 N. 13th St. Email:
Philadelphia, PA 19122
Website: http://www.temple.edu/moodandcognitionlab/
II. Education:
B.A. University of Pennsylvania, Psychology, 1974
Ph.D. University of Pennsylvania, Experimental and Clinical Psychology, 1979
APA-approved Clinical Internship, Hospital of the Univ. of Pennsylvania, 1979
Academic Honors and Awards
B.A. Summa Cum Laude
Phi Beta Kappa
National Science Foundation Predoctoral Fellowship, 1974-1977
National Institute of Mental Health Predoctoral Fellowship (NRSA/F31), 1977-1979
University of Pennsylvania Dissertation Year Fellowship, 1977-1978
NIMH Psychopathology and Clinical Biology Review Panel, 1982-1986
* 1984 American Psychological Association's (APA) Young Psychologist's Award
Northwestern University Faculty Honor Roll for Distinguished Teaching, 1982-1989
* Northwestern University College of Arts & Sciences Great Teacher Award, 1988.
Member of DSM IV Work Group on GAD and Mixed Anxiety-Depression, 1988-1993
1996 Finalist, NARSAD Established Investigator Award.
1996 Keynote Speaker at Australian Association for the Advancement of Behavior Therapy
1996 Elected Fellow of American Psychological Association (APA) Division 12 (Clinical)
1997 Elected Fellow of Association of Psychological Science
1998 Elected Fellow of American Psychological Association Division 3 (Experimental)
2001 NIMH Workgroup on Neural and Behavioral Substrates of Mood Regulation
* 2001 Paul W. Eberman Faculty Research Award, Temple University
* 2002 American Psychological Association Master Lecturer in Psychopathology Award
2002 Keynote Speaker at British Association of Behavioural and Cognitive Psychology
* 2002 Finalist for Grawemeyer Award for Best Theoretical Idea in Psychology
* 2003 American Psychological Association Division 12 (Clinical Psych.) Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award
* 2003 Society for a Science of Clinical Psychology Distinguished Scientist Award
* 2004 Named the Joseph Wolpe Distinguished Faculty in Psychology, Temple Univ.
2004-present Named to Temple University Million Dollar Research Awards Club
AWARDS CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
Academic Honors and Awards continued
* 2009 Association for Psychological Science (APS) James McKeen Cattell Award for
Lifetime Achievement in Applied Psychological Research
2009 Elected Fellow of American Psychopathological Association (APPA)
2009 Elected Fellow of the Society of Experimental Social Psychology (SESP)
2009-present American Men and Women of Science
· 2014 Society for Research in Psychopathology (SRP) Joseph Zubin Award for Lifetime Achievement in Psychopathology Research
· 2014 Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies (ABCT) Career/Lifetime Achievement Award
* 2014 Excellence in Mentorship Award, Department of Psychology Honors Program, Temple University
· 2015 Named a Laura H. Carnell Professor, Temple Univ. – Endowed Chair
· Top 1% of Most Cited Authors in Psychology – Thomson Reuters’ Essential Science
Indicators
· 2015 Named Fellow of Association of Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies
Professional Associations
American Psychological Association, Division 3, 8, and 12; Fellow of Divisions 3 and 12
Association for Psychological Science, Fellow
Eastern and Midwestern Psychological Associations
Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies
American Psychopathological Association, Fellow
Society for Research in Psychopathology
Society for a Science of Clinical Psychology
Psychonomic Society
Society of Experimental Social Psychology, Fellow
Society of Personality and Social Psychology
International Society for Bipolar Disorders
Anxiety and Depression Association of America
Society for Research in Adolescence
International Society for Research in Child and Adolescent Psychopathology
III. Employment:
Academic/Research Positions
*1989-present Professor of Psychology, Temple University
2004 – present Joseph Wolpe Distinguished Faculty in Psychology
2007 – present Director of Clinical Training, Psychology
1990-1997 Adjunct Research Professor in Psychiatry, MCP Hahnemann University
1990-1997 Senior Research Scientist, Dave Garroway Laboratory for the Study of
Depression, Institute of Pennsylvania Hospital
1986-1989 Professor of Psychology, Northwestern University
1983-1986 Associate Professor of Psychology, Northwestern University
1979-1983 Assistant Professor of Psychology, Northwestern University
1978-1979 Research Associate. To Professor Martin E. P. Seligman, University of Pennsylvania
1977-1979 Predoctoral Fellowship Trainee. National Institute of Mental Health, Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania
1977-1978 Dissertation Year Fellow. Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania
1974-1977 Predoctoral Fellowship Trainee. National Science Foundation, Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania
1973-1974 Research Assistant. To Professor Philip N. Hineline, Temple University
Clinical Positions
1978-1979 Clinical Internship. Psychiatric outpatient service.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania.
Directors: Drs. Henry Bachrach and Philip Mechanick.
1974 Clinical Externship. Philadelphia General Hospital and Hospital of the
University of Pennsylvania. Supervisor: Dr. Maria Kovacs.
IV. Research:
Research Support
National Science Foundation Predoctoral Fellowship (SM-76 22871). University of
Pennsylvania, 1974-1977.
University of Pennsylvania Dissertation Year Fellowship. 1977-1978. $3,000.
National Institute of Mental Health National Research Service Award (F31 Grant) Predoctoral Fellowship (MH 07284). University of Pennsylvania, 1977-1979. $3,000 Uncontrollability, learned helplessness, and depression.
NIH Biomedical Research Support Grant (RR 07028-13). 1979-1981. $11,000.
Depression and causal inference.
Northwestern University Research Grant. 1981-1982. $5,000. Depression and causal
inference: A schema approach.
John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Grant. Depression, meaning and
inference: A schema approach. Funded. June 1, 1982 - May 31, 1987. $500,000 (direct costs).
NIH Biomedical Research Support Grant. (2 S07 RR07028). 1986-1989. $60,000.
Cognitive processes in depression.
Northwestern University Research Grant. 1987-1989. $3500. Cognitive styles and
life events as predictors of subsyndromal affective episodes: A pilot project.
NIMH Grant. (R01 MH48216). Negative cognition depression: Etiology and course. Funded. September 1, 1990 - August 31, 1994. $2,504,337.
ORWH Grant. (93-1 Supplement to MH48216). Research on Women's Health Supplement to Negative Cognition Depression: Etiology and Course. Funded. September 1, 1993 - August 31, 1995. $100,000.
NIMH Grant. (R01 MH48216). Renewal of Negative Cognition Depression: Etiology and Course. Funded. September 1, 1994 - August 31, 2001. $2,958,212.
NARSAD Established Investigator Award. Vulnerability Factors in Unipolar and Bipolar Affective Disorders: A Prospective Study of Cognitive and Quantitative EEG Markers. May 1, 1996 - April 30, 1997. $100,000. Finalist.
NIMH Grant. (R01 MH52617). Course of Cyclothymia: Role of Cognition and Stress. Funded. August 1, 1997 - July 31, 2002. $2,634,712.
NIH. Office on AIDS Research. HIV Prevention: Role of Optimism, Stress, and Support.
Funded. September 1, 1997 - August 31, 2000. $257,066.
NIMH Ruth Kirschenstein National Research Service Award (F31 Grant) on behalf of Brandon Gibb. Development of Attributional Style in Children. Funded. 2001-2002. $30,000.
NIMH Grant. (R01 MH48216). Renewal of Negative Cognition Depression: Etiology and Course. Funded. January 1, 2002 - December 31, 2003. $374,937.
NIMH Grant. (R01 MH52617). Renewal of Course of Cyclothymia: Role of Cognition and Stress. New title: BAS and Bipolar Spectrum: Biopsychosocial Integration. Funded. December 1, 2002 - November 30, 2008. $2,228,242.
Adolescent Risk Communication Institute of the Annenberg Public Policy Center. Media Influences on Adjustment and Coping. Funded. June 15, 2004 – June 14, 2006. $82,500.
NIMH Ruth Kirschenstein National Research Service Award (F31 Grant) on behalf of Patricia Walshaw. Inhibition and Impulsivity in Bipolar Disorder and ADHD. Funded. 2005-2006. $30,000.
NIMH Grant. Adolescent Depression: Biocognitive Risk X Stress Model. December 1,
2005 – November 30, 2010. $1,874,995. Submitted March 1, 2005. Received fundable
score, but not funded.
NIMH Grant. Biocognitive Model of Adolescent Depression & Bulimia: Preventive
Implications. April 1, 2006 – March 31, 2011. $1,875,000. Submitted June 1,
2005. Not funded.
NIMH Grant. (R01 MH77908). BAS and Bipolar Disorder: Prospective Biobehavioral High Risk Design. Funded. September 26, 2007 – July 31, 2013. $2,437,500.
NIDA Grant. Bipolar-Substance Use Comorbidity: Prospective BAS Biobehavioral High- Risk Design. November 1, 2007 - October 31, 2012. $7,346,956. Submitted February 5, 2007. Not funded.
NIMH Grant. (R01 MH79369). Depression Surge in Adolescence & Gender Differences: Biocognitive Mechanisms. Funded. June 9, 2008 – March 31, 2014. $3,320,648.
NIMH Ruth Kirschenstein National Research Service Award (F31 Grant) on behalf of Kim Goldstein. Fronto-temporal Connectivity in Borderline and Schizotypal Personality Disorders. Resubmitted 4/8/2010; Outstanding score, but not funded. $60,000.
NIMH Ruth Kirschenstein National Research Service Award (F31 Grant) on behalf of Abigail Jenkins. Predictors of the Developmental Trajectory and Severity of Self-Injury. Submitted 8/8/2010; Not resubmitted. $60,000.
NIMH Ruth Kirschenstein National Research Service Award (F31) Grant on behalf of Elaine Boland. Sleep Disruption in Cognitive and Occupational Functioning in Bipolar Disorder. Submitted 4/8/2011. Resubmitted 12/8/2011. Good score but not funded. $60,000.
NIMH Grant. (R01 MH96478). Fetal Exposure to Maternal Stress and Inflammation: Effects on Neurodevelopment. Co-Investigator (Lauren Ellman, PI). Funded. April 1, 2012 – March 31, 2017. $2,467,890.
NIMH Grant. (R01 MH77908). Risk for Bipolar Disorder: Reward-related Brain Function & Social Rhythms. Funded. July 5, 2013 – June 30, 2018. $3,701,466.
NIMH Ruth Kirschenstein National Research Service Award (F31 Grant) on behalf of Ashleigh Molz. Ecological Study of Symptoms in Bipolar Disorders. Submitted 4/8/2012. $60,000. Not funded.
NIMH Ruth Kirschenstein National Research Service Award (F31 Grant) on behalf of Benjamin Shapero. Stress Reactivity and Cognitive Vulnerability for Depression in Adolescence. $64,000. Funded. 10/1/2012 – 9/30/2014.
NIMH Ruth Kirschenstein National Research Service Award (F31 Grant) on behalf of Jonathan Stange. Inflexibility and Vulnerability to Depression. Submitted $64,000. Funded. 1/1/2013 – 12/31/2014.
NIMH Ruth Kirschenstein National Research Service Award (F32 Grant) on behalf of Malek Mneimne. Common and Distinct Biopsychosocial Indices Related to Mood Disorders. Submitted 8/8/2012. $64,000. Not funded.
NIMH Grant. (R01 MH101168). Risk for Adolescent Depression: Stress, Cognitive Vulnerability, & Inflammation. Funded. July 1, 2013 – June 30, 2018. $3,514,347.
Brain & Behavior Research Foundation. Distinguished Investigator Award. Reward Hypersensitivity and Familial Risk for Bipolar Disorder: An fMRI Study for Fronto-Striatal Activation during Reward Processing. July 1, 2013 – June 30, 2014. $100,000. Not funded.
NIMH Grant. Reward Sensitivity and Impulsivity: Biobehavioral Risk for Full Mood Spectrum. July 1, 2013 – June 30, 2017. $2,309,733. Not funded.
American Foundation for Suicide Prevention. Distinguished Investigator Award. Reinforcement Sensitivity and Life Events in the Selection of Causal Pathways to Suicidality. October 1, 2013 – Sepember 30, 2015. $100,000. Not funded.
NIMH Grant. (R01 MH102310). Social and Circadian Rhythms, Reward Sensitivity, and Risk for Bipolar Disorder. Funded. December 9, 2013 – November 30, 2017. $1,703,862.
NIMH Ruth Kirschenstein National Research Service Award (F31 Grant) on behalf of Elissa Hamlat. Memory Specificity Training to Prevent Depression Recurrence. $64,000. Funded. 8/1/2014 – 7/31/2016.
NIMH Ruth Kirschenstein National Research Service Award (F31 Grant) on behalf of Samantha Connolly. Interplay between stress and rumination in predicting depression: An EMA study. Submitted 4/8/14. $64,000. Funded. 10/1/2014 – 9/30/2016.
NIMH Ruth Kirschenstein National Research Service Award (F31 Grant) on behalf of Jessica Hamilton. Physiological markers of stress generation and affect reactivity in depression. Submitted 4/8/14. $64,000. Funded. 10/1/2014 – 9/30/2016.
NIMH Ruth Kirschenstein National Research Service Award (F31 Grant) on behalf of Lauren Reeves. Co-Sponsor. Cannabis Use and Attenuated Psychotic Symptoms. Submitted 8/8/14. $64,000. Funded. 2/1/15 – 1/31/17.
NIMH Grant. (R01 MH107495). Developmental Changes in Reward Responsivity: Associations with Depression Risk Markers. Co-Investigator (Thomas Olino, PI). October 1, 2015 – September 30, 2020. $3.509,355. Pending. Highly likely to be funded; received a fundable score.
NIMH Grant. (R01 MH107434). Psychosis Risk Screening: A Multi-Site Instrument Development Study. Co-Investigator (Lauren Ellman, PI). March 1, 2016 – February 28, 2021. $1,950,000. Pending.
NIMH Ruth Kirschenstein National Research Service Award (F31 Grant) on behalf of Brooke Ammerman. Co-Sponsor. Acute Effects of Interpersonal Stress on Behavioral Indices of NSSI. Submitted 4/8/15. $64,000. Pending funding; received a 1% score. 10/1/2015 – 9/30/2017.
Publications
· Top 1% of Most Cited Authors in Psychology – Thomson Reuters’ Essential Science
Indicators - 2015
Bersh, P.J., & Alloy, L.B. (1978). Avoidance based on shock intensity reduction with no change in shock probability. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 30, 293-300.
Hineline, P.N., & Alloy, L.B. (1978). Warm-up effects in free-operant avoidance in a shuttlebox. Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society, 12, 447-450.
Alloy, L.B., & Abramson, L.Y. (1979). The judgment of contingency in depressed and nondepressed students: Sadder but wiser? Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 108, 441-485.
Portions reprinted and adapted in Langston, W. (1995). Research Methods Laboratory Manual, Wadsworth/Thompson Learning.
Alloy, L.B., & Bersh, P.J. (1979). Partial control and learned helplessness in rats: Control over shock intensity prevents interference with subsequent escape. Animal Learning & Behavior, 7, 157-164.
Alloy, L.B., & Seligman, M.E.P. (1979). On the cognitive component of learned helplessness and depression. In G.H. Bower (Ed.), The psychology of learning and motivation. (Volume 13). New York: Academic Press.
Abramson, L.Y., & Alloy, L.B. (1980). Judgment of contingency: Errors and their implications. In A. Baum and J. Singer (Eds.), Advances in environmental psychology. (Volume 2). Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.
Alloy, L.B., & Abramson, L.Y. (1980). The cognitive component of human helplessness and depression: A critical analysis. In J. Garber and M.E.P. Seligman (Eds.), Human helplessness: Theory and applications. New York: Academic Press.
Bersh, P.J., & Alloy, L.B. (1980). Reduction of shock duration as negative reinforcement in free-operant avoidance. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 33, 265-273.
Abramson, L.Y., & Alloy, L.B. (1981). Depression, nondepression and cognitive illusions: Reply to Schwartz. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 110, 436-447.
Abramson, L.Y., Alloy, L.B., & Rosoff, R. (1981). Depression and the generation of complex hypotheses in the judgment of contingency. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 19, 35-45.
Alloy, L.B., Abramson, L.Y., & Viscusi, D. (1981). Induced mood and the illusion of control. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 41, 1129-1140.
Portions reprinted and adapted in Langston, W. (1995). Research Methods Laboratory Manual, Wadsworth/Thompson Learning.
Alloy, L.B., & Ehrman, R.N. (1981). Instrumental to Pavlovian transfer: Learning about response-reinforcer contingencies affects subsequent learning about stimulus-reinforcer contingencies. Learning and Motivation, 12, 109-132.
Alloy, L.B. (1982). The role of perceptions and attributions for response-outcome noncontingency in learned helplessness: A commentary and discussion. Journal of Personality, 50, 443-479.
Alloy, L.B., & Abramson, L.Y. (1982). Learned helplessness, depression, and the illusion of control. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 42, 1114-1126.