Josie Geller

Josie Geller

Josie Geller

Associate Professor, UBC Department of Psychiatry, Division of Adult Psychiatry and Mental Health Services

Director of Research, Eating Disorders Program, St. Paul’s Hospital

Scientist, Centre for Health Evaluation and Outcome Sciences (CHÉOS)

Email: jgeller@providencehealth.bc.ca

Short Biography

Dr. Josie Geller obtained her doctoral degree in Clinical Psychology from the University of British Columbia (UBC). She joined the Department of Psychiatry, UBC, initially as Assistant Professor, and promoted to Associate Professor.

Research Focus

Dr. Geller’s research focuses on improving clinical outcomes in individuals with chronic health conditions, particularly individuals with eating disorders, by targeting intra- and interpersonal factors. Her areas of interest include clinician stance, readiness and motivation for change and self-compassion. Her provincially and nationally funded program of research focuses on assessing and enhancing motivation for change, overcoming barriers to self-compassion, and enhancing factors that contribute to the delivery of collaborative, patient-centered care.

Dr. Geller provides workshops to care providers throughout British Columbia as well as secondary and tertiary care eating disorder facilities around the world. The focus of these workshops is on assessing readiness for treatment, overcoming barriers to self-compassion, and on the application of a collaborative, patient-focused model of care to service delivery and policy-making. Although the workshops are primarily based on her research in the eating disorders, she also provides training in the areas of substance use, concurrent disorders, HIV, and obesity. At UBC, Dr. Geller teaches Motivational Interviewing skills to UBC Psychiatry and Psychology residents. 

Clinical Focus

  • Populations: Anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, binge eating disorder, obesity.
  • Treatment modalities: Readiness and motivation therapy, compassion focused therapy, cognitive behaviour therapy, dialectical behaviour therapy.

Significant Accomplishments & Professional Contribution

  • Research Scholar Award, Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research, 2000-2005
  • Research Senior Scholar Award, Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research, 2005-2010
  • Health Professional Investigator Award, Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research, 2019-2023
  • Dr. Geller authored the BC Clinical Practice Guidelines, which provide best practices for children, youth, and adults with eating disorders. A key feature of the BC Guidelines is a tool that she developed, the Short Treatment Allocation Tool for Eating Disorders (STATED). The STATED is unique in its consideration of patients along independent dimensions that capture the full spectrum of eating disorder presentations in children, youth and adults.
  • President, Eating Disorders Association of Canada (2017)
  • Director at Large, Eating Disorders Association of Canada (2013 – 2015)
  • Editorial Board, Journal of Eating Disorders (2012 – 2020)

Sophia Frangou

Professor & President’s Excellence Chair in Brain Health, UBC Department of Psychiatry, Division of Neuroscience and Translational Psychiatry

Associate Head, Research & International Affairs, UBC Department of Psychiatry

Scientific Lead, Early Psychosis Intervention Services, Vancouver Coastal Health

Email: sophia.frangou@ubc.ca

Short Biography

Dr. Frangou, MD, PhD, FRCPsych, FRCPC,  received her master’s degree in Neuroscience and her Ph.D. from the University of London, UK, and completed her psychiatric training at the Maudsley Hospital, UK. Prior to joining UBC, she was Reader in Psychiatry at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology, and Neuroscience, King’s College London (UK) and Professor of Psychiatry at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai (USA), with which she maintains an active affiliation.

Research Focus

Dr. Frangou uses advanced neuroimaging and bioinformatics methods to study brain-behaviour relationships and how they are influenced by genetic and environmental factors. Her work has greatly advanced the understanding of the pathophysiology of mood and psychotic disorders and made groundbreaking contributions to the characterization of brain mechanisms of “resilience”.

Publications

Dr. Frangou has authored more than 240 highly cited papers and has written or contributed to ten books on mental illness and on academic leadership for women.

Significant Accomplishments & Professional Contribution

Dr. Frangou is a fellow of the European Psychiatric Association (EPA), the Royal College of Psychiatrists (UK), the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada, and the American Psychiatric Association.

She is the founding chair of the Neuroimaging Section of the EPA and the Neuroimaging Network of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology. She leads the Lifespan Working Group of the Enhancing NeuroImaging Genetics Through Meta-Analysis (ENIGMA) consortium. She is Editor-in-Chief of European Psychiatry and Human Brain Mapping and a member of the editorial board of major scientific journals.

She has received multiple awards including the 2019 Colvin Prize for Outstanding Achievement in Bipolar Mood Disorders Research from the Brain and Behavior Research Foundation and the 2020 Educator Award from the Society of Biological Psychiatry. In 2022, the Society awarded her and the Women’s Leadership Group the George Thompson Award for promoting women’s role in academic psychiatry.

Digital Media

Adele Diamond

Professor, UBC Department of Psychiatry, Division of Division of Neuroscience and Translational Psychiatry

Canada Research Chair, Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience

Member, Djavad Mowafaghian Centre for Brain Health

Member, BC Children’s Research Institute

Member, Human Early Learning Partnership (HELP)

Member, Kids Brain Health Network (formerly known as NeuroDevNet)

Founding Fellow, Institute of Mental Health, UBC

Founding Member, UBC Educational Neuroscience and Healthy Child Development Cluster

Founding Member, UBC Centre for Interdisciplinary Research and Collaboration in Autism (CIRCA)

Email: adiamond@mail.ubc.ca

Short Biography

Adele Diamond, PhD, FRSC is the Canada Research Chair Tier I Professor of Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience at the University of British Columbia (UBC), Vancouver, BC, Canada. A member of the Royal Society of Canada, she has been named one of the “2000 Outstanding Women of the 20th Century” and has been listed as one the 15 most influential neuroscientists alive today. She was educated at Swarthmore (BA, Phi Beta Kappa), Harvard (PhD), and Yale Medical School (postdoc).


Prof. Diamond is recognized as a world leader in the field of Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience as evidenced by impact, awards, success in research funding, leadership roles, and abundant invitations to speak across disciplines, professions, and nations. Indeed, she helped found the field. She has held federal research grants continuously for over 30 years (since her first semester as a faculty member) and overseen over $24 million in research funding. She has given over 500 keynote addresses and invited talks, including at the White House as well as in 23 other countries across 5 continents. Her work has been cited over 42,000 times and has an h-index of 69. She heads the Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience Program at UBC, serves on 18 external advisory boards and 8 editorial boards, including those of all 3 major journals in Developmental Psychology.

Research Focus

Prof. Diamond’s specialty is executive functions, which depend on the brain’s prefrontal cortex and interrelated neural regions. Executive functions enable us to resist temptations and automatic impulsive reactions, stay focused, mentally play with ideas, reason, problem-solve, flexibly adjust to changed demands or priorities, and see things from new and different perspectives. Prof. Diamond’s lab studies how executive functions are affected by biological factors (such as genes and neurochemistry) and by environmental ones (for example, impaired by stress or improved by interventions).

She has demonstrated that executive functions emerge and can be assessed as early as the first year of life, and shown that interventions can improve executive functions even in very young children. Her work has demonstrated ways to help children grasp concepts and succeed at tasks long thought beyond their ability and has changed how people think about cognitive development in emphasizing the importance of inhibiting reactions that get in the way of demonstrating knowledge that is already present.

Her work on the unusual properties of the dopamine system in prefrontal cortex led to her identifying the biological mechanism causing EF deficits in children treated for phenylketonuria (PKU) and definitively documenting those deficits, resulting in the guidelines for the medical treatment of PKU changing around the globe. Here is an example of how changing behavior (diet) can affect neurochemistry and brain function. Global changes to clinical practice again followed 2 of her subsequent discoveries.

More recently, Prof. Diamond has derived new principles for how to improve EFs and debunked previously-accepted ones. She offers a markedly different perspective from traditional medical practice in hypothesizing that treating physical health, without also addressing social and emotional health is less efficient or efficacious. Prof. Diamond also offers a markedly different perspective from mainstream education in hypothesizing that focusing exclusively on training cognitive skills is less efficient, and ultimately less successful, than also addressing emotional, social, spiritual, and physical needs. Nowhere is the importance of social, emotional, and physical health for cognitive health more evident than with prefrontal cortex and executive functions. Many issues are not simply education issues or health issues. They are both.

Significant Accomplishment & Professional Contribution

2021 Faculty Merit Award, Faculty of Medicine, UBC

2020 Awarded an Honorary Doctor of Science by Swarthmore College: the #1 ranked small college in the US (24 May) video: https://youtu.be/voJA-b0Wu9M

Voted `Super Duper Neuroscientist of the Year’ by the students in Prof. Kathryn Murphy’s undergraduate neuroscience class at McMaster Univ., Hamilton, ON (08 Dec)

“Executive Functions,” published in the Annual Review of Psychology back in 2013 was among the 10 most downloaded papers in 2020 from all Annual Reviews across all disciplines.

2019 Outstanding Academic Performance (OAP) award by the Dean of Medicine.

The Bernice Grafstein Lecture in Neuroscience, McGill Univ., Montreal, QC

Diamond’s impact ranked as among the top 0.01% of all scientists across all scientific fields according to a new analysis. See: Ioannidis, J. P., Baas, J., Klavans, R., & Boyack, K. W. (2019). A standardized citation metrics author database annotated for scientific field. PLOS Biology, 17,1-6. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.3000384
One of our publications was selected as 1 of the 23 most noteworthy publications in Pediatric Exercise in 2018 and 1 of the 2 most important in Physical Activity & Cognition in 2018 [doi.org/10.1123/pes.2019-0010]. The publication thus honored is: Diamond, A. & Ling, D. S. (2019). Aerobic-exercise and resistance-training interventions… published in Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience [doi.org/10.1016/j.dcn.2018.05.001]

The Bernice Grafstein Lecture in Neuroscience, McGill University, Montreal, QC.

2018 Outstanding Academic Performance Award from UBC Faculty of Medicine

First Annual North America Educateurs sans Frontières Lecture. Crossway Community, Washington, DC.

10th Annual Midsummer Public Lecture. Copenhagen, Denmark (sponsored by Elsass Institute & the University of Copenhagen).

2017 see Keynote Addresses.

2016 Received the International Mind, Brain and Education Society (IMBES) Translation Award

This award recognizes senior scholars who’ve made significant progress towards strengthening links between research and practice translating research into practice in traditional or non-traditional contexts.
(This is the highest award that society gives.)

Recipient, Faculty Merit Award, Faculty of Medicine, UBC

Our article in Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience was the 2nd top-rated paper in the journal

Centennial Niemeyer Lecture. Bank Street School for Children, NYC, NY

Lecture – Performance co-presented with the children of the California Dance Institute at Semel Institute for Neuroscience & Human Behavior, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA

2015 Honorary degree (Doctor of Philosophy Honoris Causa) conferred by Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheva, Israel. video (3 min): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CnL4Ygzepgcbr
video (1 hour 8 min): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jOBge2SbX2k&feature=youtu.be

Zlotowski Neuroscience Lecture, Ben Gurion Univ. of the Negev, Beer Sheva, Israel

2014 Recognized as one of the 15 most influential neuroscientists alive today (Sept.)
https://www.onlinepsychologydegree.info/30-most-influential-neuroscientists-alive-today/
Only woman in the top 23.
One of only two Canadians in the top 30.

Received the Urie Bronfenbrenner Award for Lifetime Contributions to Developmental Psychology in the Service of Science and Society from the American Psychological Association. (Aug.) The Bronfenbrenner Award is given to an individual whose work has, over a lifetime career, contributed not only to the science of developmental psychology, but who has also worked to apply developmental psychology to society.

Elected a Fellow of Division 1 (General Psychology) of the Am. Psychological Assoc. (APA)

2013 Gertrude Weigum Hinsz Lecture, North Dakota State University, Fargo, ND

Visiting Professor. Ben Gurion University, Beer Sheva, Israel

Recipient, Faculty Merit Award, Faculty of Medicine, UBC

2012 Pease Family Scholar Lecture, Dept. of Kinesiology, Iowa State University, Ames, IA

Zangwill Lecture in Experimental Psychology, Univ. of Cambridge, UK

Diamond’s article in Current Directions in Psych. Sci. appeared in Psychology Progress, which alerts the scientific community to breaking journal articles considered the best in psych.research (Dec. 9):
https://web.archive.org/web/20131228110855/http://psychologyprogress.com/activities-and-programs-that-improve-
childrens-executive-functions

Profiled in a textbook titled Child Psychology, 3rd edition, by Alastair J. Younger, Ross Vasta, Scott A. Adler, Scott A. Miller, & Shari Ellis – in the ‘Canadian Contributions’ section – publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Public Address, sponsored by the Dalai Lama Centre, Vancity Theatre, Vancouver, BC
Worldwide Who’s Who: 2012- present

2011 Inaugural speaker in Visiting Distinguished Scholar Program, Virginia Tech Carilion Research Institute & School of Medicine, Roanoke, VA research.vtc.vt.edu/events/2011/dec/01/why-tools-of-the-mind/

Frijda Public Lecture, Cognitive Science Center, Amsterdam, Netherlands

Logan Lecture, Centennial Academy, Montreal, QC

Pickering Lecture, Carleton University, Ottawa, ON

Renewal – seven years – of Tier 1 Canada Research Chair

Recipient, Faculty Merit Award, Faculty of Medicine, UBC

2010 Valedictory Address, “Conference on Science, Spirituality, and Education;” presided over by the Dalai Lama, to advise the Government of Sikkim in its endeavor to overhaul the provincial education system so that they educate not only the head but also the heart, Gangtok, Sikkim, India

Recipient, Faculty Merit Award, Faculty of Medicine, UBC

Jane Holmes Bernstein Lecture in Developmental Neuropsychology, Children’s Hospital, Harvard University, Boston, MA

Robbie Case Memorial Lecture, University of Toronto’s Institute of Child Study, Toronto, ON

Featured at Annual UBC Gala, “Celebrate Research Week,” a short video vignette was created for this on Prof. Diamond and her research:
video: www.devcogneuro.com/videos/Celebrate_Research_2010.mov

2009 Recipient, YWCA Woman of Distinction Award (recognized nationally as an important award for women)

Recipient, Inaugural Distinguished Achievement Award for Service to the University and Community, awarded by the Faculty of Medicine, UBC

Elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada (RSC)

Elected a Fellow of the Society of Experimental Psychologists (SEP), the oldest honorary society for psychology

Recipient, Faculty Merit Award, Faculty of Medicine, UBC

One of three scientists invited to speak on stage with the Dalai Lama and another Nobel Peace Laureate, Mairead Maguire, on “Heart-Mind Education: Enhancing academic, social, and emotional competence” at the Orpheum Theatre, Vancouver; broadcast live worldwide by CTV as part of the Vancouver Peace Summit
https://watch.ctv.ca/2009-peace-summit/vancouver/2009-vancouver-peace-summit-tuesday-september-29th-
2009/#clip217357
video: www.youtube.com/watch?v=kD2cWBGMVAg

One of a handful of scientists invited to meet with the Dalai Lama for a week at his official residence in Dharamsala, India

Featured Researcher at the Board of Governor’s Meeting, University of British Columbia, Vancouver.

Helen H. Molinari Memorial Lecture in Neuroscience, Albany Medical College, Albany, NY

John P. Zubek Memorial Lecture, Department of Psychology, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg

2008 Named a William James Distinguished Lecturer by the Association for Psychological Science

RO Jones Memorial Speaker, Canadian Psychiatric Assoc. Annual Meeting, Vancouver, BC

Birch Lecture, International Neuropsychological Society (INS) Annual meeting, Buenos Aires, Argentina

Recipient, Faculty Merit Award, Faculty of Medicine, UBC

Who’s Who Among Executives and Professionals, and in the 2008-2009 “Honors Edition”

2007 Opening of the Academic Year Address, Maastricht University, Netherlands
video: www.youtube.com/watch?v=uU3RCUWmmHU

Recipient, Faculty Merit Award, Faculty of Medicine, UBC

Research Grant from the Institute of Education Sciences [IES] (term: 2007-2011)

2006 Elected a Fellow of the Association for Psychological Science (APS)

Recipient, Faculty Merit Award, Faculty of Medicine, UBC

Alberta Health FMR Visiting Scholar, Alberta Children’s Hospital, University of Alberta, & Hotckiss Brain Institute, Calgary, AB

Woman of Distinction Finalist, YWCA Vancouver, BC

2005 Elected to the Board of Governors of the International Neuropsychological Society (INS)

Recipient, Faculty Merit Award, Faculty of Medicine, UBC

Brain Awareness Week Lecturer, McMaster University’s Dept. of Psychiatry & Behavioral Neurosciences, Dept. of Psychology, and Brain-Body Institute, Hamilton, ON

Henry Dunn Lecture, the Northwest Pacific Pediatric Neurology Society Annual Meeting

Our paper in the American Journal of Psychiatry was ranked #2 in the Hidden Jewels Top 10 in Neuroscience by the Faculty of 1000.

Hira Panikkar Memorial Lecture, Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, BC Children’s Hospital

2004 Awarded a Tier 1 Canada Research Chair

Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI) Award

Invited Workshop at joint Internat’l Neuropsych. Society/ASSBI conference, Brisbane, Australia

2003 Elected to the Executive Board of the Cognitive Development Society

Visiting Professor, University of California, San Francisco

2002 Invited Workshop on “The Neuropsychology of Treated PKU,” International Neuropsychological Society (INS) Annual Meeting, Toronto, ON

2000 21st Century Award for Achievement, International Biographical Centre, Cambridge, UK, named one of the “2000 Outstanding Women of the 20th
Century,”one of the first so honored.

Zlotowski Neuroscience Lecture, Annual Retreat of the Zlotowski Center for Neuroscience, Ben Gurion Univ.

Named one of the “2000 Outstanding Women of the 20th Century,” IBC, Cambridge, UK.

1999 see Keynote Addresses.

1998 see Keynote Addresses.

1997 Named a Distinguished Scientific Lecturer by the American Psychological Association:

Eastern Psychological Association Annual Meeting, Washington, DC

Western Psychological Association Annual Meeting, Seattle, WA

Elected a Fellow of APA, Division 6 (Behavioral Neuroscience and Comparative Psychology) “in recognition of outstanding & unusual contributions to the science and profession of psychology”

1996 see Keynote Addresses.

1995 Invited Instructor, Am. Academy of Neurology course on Behavioral Neurology, Seattle, WA.
Presented the Master Lecture on Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience at the Society for Research in Child Development Biennial Meeting, Indianapolis, IN.
“A Master Lecture is intended as a sort of tutorial in a particular field….The individuals invited to deliver these major addresses are people who are widely recognized as leaders in their fields….”

1994 Presented day-long workshop on “Child Neuropsychology: Cognitive Development & Disorders,” in Brisbane, at invitation of the Australian Psychological Society

Tjossem Memorial Lecture at the University of Washington, Seattle, WA.

McDonnell-Pew Visiting Fellow at the Salk Institute and UCSD, La Jolla, CA.

1993 Elected a Fellow of APA, Division 7 (Developmental Psychology) “in recognition of outstanding & unusual contributions to the science and profession of psychology”

1992 Harris Visiting Professor, Committee on Developmental Psychology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL.

1991 Invited Instructor at the McDonnell Summer Institute in Cognitive Neuroscience, Hanover, New Hampshire (topic: Attention)

Invited Instructor at the European Training Programme in Brain & Behavior Research, Zuoz, Switzerland (topic: Motor Development)

1990 Invited by NSF to help select the Presidential Young Investigator Award winners

Young Faculty Award of the Natural Science Association, University of Pennsylvania

1989 Convener, Conference on the Development and Neural Bases of Higher Cognitive Functions. Funded by McDonnell Foundation, NIMH (Neuroscience and
Behavioral Research Branches), EPA, & U. of P. New York Academy of Sciences, publisher.
Discussant, Minnesota Symposium in Child Psychology, Minneapolis, MN.

1988-1990 Lilly Foundation Faculty Teaching Fellow

1983-1986 NIMH Postdoctoral Fellowship #F32 MH09007

1983 NSF travel grant to attend a NATO Advanced Study Institute, Lyons, France

1982 Sloan Foundation postdoctoral fellowship award

1981 Radcliffe Grant for Graduate Women

1980 NSF Doctoral Dissertation Grant #BNS 8013-4471978

1977 NIMH Pre-doctoral Traineeship in Cross-Cultural Psychological Res. #MH14088-03

Graduate Student Research Award, Psychology Department

1975 NSF Graduate Fellowship

Danforth Graduate Fellowship

Phi Beta Kappa

Sigma Xi

Graduated with highest honor in Swarthmore College’s course program

Research Grant from the Philadelphia Fellowship Commission

Ann Marie Craig

Ann Marie Craig

Professor, UBC Department of Psychiatry, Division of Neuroscience and Translational Psychiatry

Canada Research Chair in Neurobiology

Member, Djavad Mowafaghian Centre for Brain Health (DMCBH)

Email: acraig@mail.ubc.ca

Short Biography

Dr. Craig completed her BSc in biochemistry at Carleton University and received her PhD from University of Western Ontario. Prior to obtaining her first academic faculty position, she was a postdoctoral fellow in the field of neuroscience at the National Institutes of Health, USA and at the University of Virginia.

Research Focus

Specialized connections between nerve cells, called synapses, are the basic units of communication in the brain. We study how brain cells make synaptic connections and how these connections are altered in neuropsychiatric disorders. We use a range of approaches from molecular manipulations in neuron cultures to electro-physiological recording and serial block face scanning electron microscopy of neural circuits in genetically targeted mouse models to expansion microscopy of human clinical samples. Further, we are working to develop targeted reagents to correct synaptic imbalances in autism, schizophrenia, epilepsy, and Alzheimer’s disease.

To highlight a few examples of our recent research, among the synaptic organizers we identified, LRRTMs are now studied as central to the process of long term potentiation which is thought to be a cellular basis for learning and memory. Our discovery of suppressors of synaptic organizing proteins led to the characterization of MDGA2 haploinsufficient mice with altered excitation/inhibition balance as a new model for autism (https://can-acn.org/ubc-researchers-may-have-found-how-electrical-volume…). In another combined genetic and proteomics screen to identify novel GABA receptor interacting proteins, we identified an unusual regulator that scales inhibitory synaptic strength, which could be harnessed to correct imbalances in excitation/inhibition. Recently, we discovered an essential role for a rare glycan modification in the canonical neurexin-neuroligin synaptic organizing complex implicated in autism and schizophrenia. Remarkably, mice lacking this single sugar modification on neurexin-1 have severe structural and functional deficits in hippocampal synapses and reduced survival. These findings reveal a new set of neurexin interacting proteins, another level of regulation through glycan fine structure, and a novel direction for therapeutic intervention. A current research focus is to understand the role of such post-transcriptional modifications of synaptic organizing complexes in brain development and to harness this knowledge to develop therapeutics for neuropsychiatric disorders. Another current project uses a novel expansion microscopy approach on clinical specimens towards understanding synaptic diversity and its role in epilepsy.

Source

Significant Accomplishments and Professional Contribution

Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada

Trisha Chakrabarty

Trisha Chakrabarty

Assistant Professor, UBC Department of Psychiatry, Division of Neuroscience and Translational Psychiatry

Member, Djavad Mowafaghian Centre for Brain Health

Network Member, CREST.BD

Email: trisha.chakrabarty@ubc.ca

Short Biography

Dr. Chakrabarty is an assistant professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of British Columbia, Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research health professional investigator, and consultant psychiatrist at the Mood Disorders Centre of Excellence at UBC Hospital. Her expertise is in cognitive functioning in mood disorders, with a focus on the etiology, contributors and functional implications of cognitive dysfunction in depression and bipolar disorder.

Research Focus

Dr. Chakrabarty is involved in research to develop novel therapeutic strategies to address mood related cognitive deficits, and is currently principal investigator on a collaborative initiative with the National Research Council Canada to develop a virtual reality cognitive remediation program for use in individuals with mood disorders. She is also interested in understanding the role of cognitive-affective changes in depression and BD, and is co-investigator on studies with researchers at UBC’s Department of Psychology examining alterations in reward sensitivity and avoidance behaviours across the spectrum of mood disorders.

Her research and clinical interests are in cognitive dysfunction, virtual reality cognitive retraining, bipolarity, and psychotherapy approaches for mood disorders.

Mood Disorders Centre

Lori Brotto

Lori Brotto

Professor, UBC Department of Psychiatry and UBC Department of Obstetrics & Gynaecology

Adjunct Professor, Department of Psychology, Simon Fraser University

Director, UBC Sexual Health Laboratory

Executive Director, Women’s Health Research Institute at BC Women’s Hospital

Research Associate, Sociobehavioural Research Centre, BC Cancer Agency

Email: lori.brotto@vch.ca

Short Biography

Dr. Brotto completed her PhD in Clinical Psychology from the University of British Columbia (UBC), followed by a Postdoctoral Fellowship in Reproductive and Sexual Medicine at the University of Washington, where she trained with Dr. Julia Heiman. She is currently a Professor in the UBC Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology with a joint appointment in Psychiatry.

Dr. Brotto has been awarded many scholarships, fellowships and research grants. Dr. Brotto has been awarded many scholarships, fellowships and research grants. A complete list of Dr. Brotto’s credentials, research and funding records

Research Focus

Significant Accomplishments & Professional Contribution

  • Health Professional Book Award, Society for Sex Therapy and Research for Better Sex Through Mindfulness, 2020
  • UBC President’s Award for Public Education through Media, 2020
  • UBC Faculty of Medicine Distinguished Researcher Award in Clinical Science Research, 2020
  • UBC Faculty of Medicine Distinguished Achievement Award for Service to the University and Community, 2019
  • The Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality Distinguished Scientific Achievement Award, 2018
  • Royal Society of Canada, member of the College of New Scholars, Artists and Scientists, 2018
  • The Association of Academic Professionals in Obstetrics and Gynaecology (APOG) Excellence in Research Award, 2017
  • Nominated to receive a Women Influencer Award from the Women’s Collaborative Hub, 2017
  • Fellow of the Canadian Psychological Association, 2016-2021
  • Canada Research Chair in Women’s Sexual Health, Tier 2, 2015
  • The Ira and Harriet Reiss Theory Award for Bogaert & Brotto (2014) “Object of Desire – Self-Consciousness Theory”, Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy, 40, 323-338. Sponsored by the Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality, 2015
  • University of British Columbia Faculty of Medicine Distinguished Achievement Award for Excellence in – – Clinical and Applied Research, 2014
  • Nominated to receive the UBC President’s Award for Public Education through Media, 2014
  • Peter Wall Institute for Advanced Studies, Early Career Scholar, 2011-2012
  • Nominated to receive the YWCA Women of Distinction Award, Health and Active Living Category, 2008
  • International Society for the Study of Women’s Sexual Health, Prize Essay Award Recipient, 2003
  • University of Washington, Nancy Robinson Director’s Prize for excellence in research, teaching, and clinical skill, 2003
  • Morris and Helen Belkin Family Foundation Award for Best Doctoral Dissertation, University of British Columbia, 2002
  • Society for Sex Therapy and Research, Prize Essay Award Recipient International Society for the Study of Women’s Sexual Health, Prize Essay Award Recipient, 2002
  • Stanley Program Research Award, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, 2002
  • Canadian Psychological Association, Section on Women and Psychology, Dissertation Research Award, 2002
  • Sir Izaak Killam Pre-Doctoral Fellowship for Outstanding Doctoral Students, 2001-2002
  • Society for a Science of Clinical Psychology Division 12, APA – Dissertation Grant Award, 2001
  • Vicentini Cultural Society of British Columbia Scholarship, 2000
  • Canadian Sex Research Forum, Ottawa, Ontario, Outstanding Student Paper, 2000
  • Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Pre-Doctoral Fellowship B; $38,200, 1991-2000
  • Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Pre-Doctoral Fellowship A; $31,400, 1997-1999

Digital Media

Clare Beasley

Clare Beasley

Associate Professor, UBC Department of Psychiatry, Division of Neuroscience and Translational Psychiatry

Investigator, BC Children’s Hospital

Researcher, BC Mental Health and Substance Use Services Research (BCMHSUS) Institute

Member, Djavad Mowafaghian Centre for Brain Health

Email: clare.beasley@ubc.ca

Short Biography

Dr. Clare Beasley studied in the United Kingdom. She earned her Ph.D. in neuroscience from the University of Sheffield, with postdoctoral training in neuropathology at the Institute of Psychiatry in London. She joined the UBC Department of Psychiatry as Assistant Professor in 2007 and was promoted to Associate Professor at UBC and heads her own lab www.bcchr.ca/cbeasley. Dr. Beasley is also actively involved in undergraduate medical education including the Summer Immersion Program. She is a member of the Canadian Network for Research in Schizophrenia and Psychoses.

Research Focus

The major aim of Dr. Clare Beasley’s research is to identify changes in the brains of individuals with schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and major depressive disorder that may elucidate the etiology of these disorders and provide clues to novel treatments. Current projects focus on white matter pathology and inflammation. In addition, we study the effects of anti-psychotic medications on the brain.

Significant Accomplishments & Professional Contribution

She has received the Michael Smith New Investigator Award for Research in Schizophrenia and a Brain and Behavior Research Foundation Independent Investigator.

Digital Media

Anthony Bailey

UBC Psychiatry

Professor, UBC Faculty of Medicine, Child & Adolescent, Neurodevelopmental Disorders

Chair of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Institute of Mental Health Chair

Director, Continuing Professional Development, UBC

Contact

Email:

Phone:

Short Biography

Dr. Anthony Bailey became Professor and Chair of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at UBC in July 2010. He came from the University of Oxford where he was the Cheryl and Reece Scott Chair of Psychiatry, the first medical chair devoted to the study of autism. Dr. Bailey’s research has investigated the neurobiological basis of autistic disorders, using genetic, neuropathological and neuroimaging approaches. Until his move to Canada, Dr. Bailey coordinated the International Molecular Genetic Study of Autism Consortium: a large international team of clinicians and scientists brought together to identify susceptibility genes for autism. At Oxford, Dr. Bailey built the first Magneto-encephalographic Centre designed for the study of autism and other neurodevelopmental disorders and investigated the neural basis of language and face processing in ASD. Currently he continues his studies of language using MRI and EEG.

Adapted from: https://languagesciences.ubc.ca/people/faculty/anthony-bailey

Research Focus

Neurobiological basis of autistic disorders, using genetic, neuropathological and neuroimaging approaches

Dr. Bailey’s clinical work focuses on teenagers and able adults with Autism Spectrum Disorders.

Publications

Significant Accomplishments & Professional Contribution

Dr. Bailey also founded Autism Research: the journal of the International Society of Autism Research and served as its Editor-in-Chief until 2015.

Mohamed Abdel-Fattah

Pieter Aartsma