Thanks to my amazing co-authors for their help! This project emerged from my research stay at Yale’s CANDLab and I could not be more grateful to the lab for welcoming me, supporting this project and for making research genuinely fun! 🙃
Very excited to share that our paper “Symptom-specific links between internalizing problems and functional connectivity in adolescents: a network analysis” has been published in European Child & Adolescence Psychiatry doi.org/10.1007/s007...
❗New Preprint! “Within-person prospective associations between youth psychopathology and white matter development and the moderating role of parental mental health” doi.org/10.31234/osf...
A summary can be found here:
We found small symptom-specific cross-domain associations linking self-reported internalizing problems to within-network connectivity of the Frontoparietal, Default, and Salience Network, as well as between-network connectivity between the Default and Salience network.
In this preregistered study we use random-intercept cross-lagged panel models to disentangle between- and within-person associations between youth psychopathology and white matter trajectories. We also examined whether these associations differ for youth with high vs low parental psychopathology.
Our findings indicate that the heterogeneity of internalizing problems might be partially reflected in functional connectivity patterns.
In this collaborative work, we merged symptom networks with functional connectivity networks and examined symptom-specific associations between internalizing problems in youth and functional connectivity.
An overview of the findings can also be found on this poster:
Thank you, thank you, thank you to my amazing co-authors who made this project so much fun! @danibeck.bsky.social @cktamnes.bsky.social @omidvebrahimi.bsky.social @ludvigdb.bsky.social @ireneteulings.bsky.social @niamhmacsweeney.bsky.social @eiraaksnes.bsky.social